Cyber Crime
By: July • Essay • 277 Words • June 1, 2010 • 1,253 Views
Cyber Crime
Yet, cyberspace is, in the end, a place populated by humans, or perhaps more correctly, by human minds, since it is our intellects that reside and meet one another there. It should come as no surprise, then, that many of the problems of the ‘real’ world carry over into this new realm. Crime is one of them.
The Internet (a term which once referred to a specific set of networked computers which has now increasingly come to mean the global network of computers) is growing so quickly that it is impossible to know at any given moment the actual number of computers connected to it. IT is even less possible to determine the number of people with access to it. But use of the Internet is clearly growing very, very quickly, and so is computer crime and the need to control it.
Some cyberspace crimes, such as unauthorized access to a computer, are new and specific to the online world. Others, such as
fraud or theft of valuables, are familiar from the real world. In either case, the disembodied, often anonymous