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Practical Issues in dealing with different types of cybercrime. Overview. Society Crime Types Resources E-Crime (Electronic Crime) Training Offences Jurisdiction Case studies. Society. Society. Internet Usage
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Practical Issues in dealing with different types of cybercrime
Overview • Society • Crime Types • Resources • E-Crime (Electronic Crime) Training • Offences • Jurisdiction • Case studies
Society Internet Usage • 50% of Australian adults accessed the Internet in the 12 months to November 2000 • 37% of Australian households were connected to the Internet • 13% of Australian adults paid bills or transferred funds online • 10% of Australian adults purchased or ordered goods or services via the Internet • the value of Internet e-commerce in Australia at June 2000 was estimated to be $A5.1 billion
Society • 10% of Australian adults purchased or ordered goods or services via the Internet • the value of Internet e-commerce in Australia at June 2000 was estimated to be $A5.1 billion • National Office for the Information Economy report entitled. The Current State of Play 2000
Crime Types • Crimes Reported to AFP 2005-2006 • 38% - Drug Importation cases • 34% - Defraud the commonwealth cases • 25% - Child Sex related cases • 3% - Counterfeit currency/documents cases
Crime Types Electronic Crime Incident Type • 45% - E-Crime • 11% - Interpol • 2% - Counter terrorism • 42% - Others (Fraud, Credit Card, Money Laundering)
Crime types • Breakdown of Computer Forensic Work 35% = Child Pornography 20% = Counter Terrorism 10% = Fraud (against the Commonwealth and private) (includes unauthorised access, hacking, unauthorised use of credit cards, make and use false instruments etc) 8% = Child Grooming (using the internet and mobile phones) 5% = Drug Offences 5% = Property Offences (possess stolen property, theft, burglary, armed robbery) 5% = Regional Assistance (referrals from IDG for Solomons, PNG, East Timor etc) 4% = Family Violence/Sexual Assaults etc 3% = Internal Investigations 2% = Homicides 3% = Other
E-Crime Training • Continuing cybercrime education from recruit level • E-Crime awareness training • Introduction to E-Crime • Investigate E-Crime • Specialist Crime type training
E-Crime Training • Identify the offence • Identify the suspect • Identify witnesses • Identify the victim
Resources • Investigators access to resources • AFP’s IT Infrastructure • Access to computers • Covert internet access
Resources • Development of specialist investigative tools eg. Boot cd’s / logicubes
Resources • Support investigative personnel in increasing their technical and investigative skills • Development of specialised computer crime units • Computer Forensic support
Offences • Is the computer a target of the offence? • Is the computer being used to facilitate the offence?
Jurisdiction • The internet is transnational in nature • Who has jurisdiction?
Case Study 1 Problem of Jurisdiction
Case Study 1 • Background Suspect initially resident in Australia then departed overseas. During his stay in Australia the suspect manages to transfer funds from a victims bank account via internet banking to his Australian bank account. The suspect continues with twenty similar offences targeting Australians from his new country.
Case Study 2 Problem of identity theft
Case Study 2 • In 2003 a disgruntled ex Optus employee hacks into a Optus website called “efulfillment.” This website is used by corporate customers of Optus for ordering mobile phones and telecommunication services.
Case Study 3 Problem of identification
Case Study 3 On the 3rd December 2003 an email, directed to David LOWE was received at the RTA Customer Service Centre. The sender wrote: "Unless all traffice infgringements for speeding incurred during the month of June are cancelled immediately, an explosive will be detonated in one of your major facilities. The cancellation of these infringement notices will be done quietly with no public notification. You have 48 hours. This threat is real".