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Archive for the ‘Crime’ Category

Man faces 5 year prison sentence for reading his wife’s emails

27 Dec

Every so often we hear a major news story about hacking. Some make us chuckle for example when a hacker replaced the face of the leader of the Spanish Socialist Party with that of Mr Bean. Others are more sinister, for example the hacking of Google earlier this year by senior Chinese officials.

Luckily for the most part these stories don’t affect us directly and besides being of fleeting interest at the time we probably give them little thought afterwards.

However, without realising it many of us could easily be accused of being a hacker and in what might seeem like a nightmare scenario find ourselves faced with up to five years in prison. This is what has happened to a husband who suspected his wife of having an affair. Wracked with suspicion he decided to read his wife’s emails to find evidence. When his wife found out she went to the police and he has now been charged under anti-hacking legislation in the U.S.

Yes, ethically what he did was wrong but does the punishment really fit the crime?

Many of us know the log-in details to our partner’s email and social networking accounts. Some of us probably never use them, others, like myself, regularly access their partner’s accounts with their blessing. But, perhaps by doing so we might be leaving ourselves open to criminal charges in the future should our relationship ever turn sour.

Read the full story here

This could be used as a discussion point when looking at hacking, system security, the Computer Misuse Act or the ethical use of ICT.

 
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Posted in Computer Misuse Act, Crime, Hackers, Privacy

 

Italy police warn of Skype threat

15 Feb

skype

In the past many crimes might have been planned down the local pub, but there was always the risk of the conversation being overheard by the wrong person.  Then came the mobile phone which provided an easy method to contact accomplices any time, any place.  But the police made this a less than desirable method of communication with the abiltiy to wire tap calls and obtain complete transcripts from phone companies.

Never let it be said that criminals aren’t able to adapt to new technology.  It seems that many are now using Skype to contact one another over the internet, because as yet, all calls remain encrypted and inaccessible to the police.

Read the full news story here

Questions for students (subscription only)

 
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Posted in Communication, Crime, Internet, Mobile phones, Police

 

Employees, not hackers, cause most corporate data loss

14 Feb

dataloss

Most students automatically assume that the primary cause of data loss for any organisation will be through hackers, malware and other external criminal entities.  But in actual fact, this is not the case.  A report has shown that only 1% of corporate data losses in the previous year were down to hackers.  A report by the Ponemon Institute found that 88% of data breaches were caused by staff negligence.

The reality is that data loss is is far more likely to be due to a disgruntled employee who either wants to get their own back on the company or who sees a fast way of making an extra bit of  ‘cash on the side’.  Kevin Rowney from Symantec said, “in most cases people are motivated by revenge, fear or greed.”

Microsoft has warned that in today’s current economic climate, with employees facing uncertainty over their jobs, that companies should be on the lookout for an increase in “insider” security attacks.

Read the full news story here

Suggestions for use in class and questions for students (subscription only)

 
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Posted in Crime, Hackers, Protecting systems

 

Alarm sounded over wi-fi networks

09 Feb

viruses

Concerns have been raised about the possibility of wireless access points being used by hi-tech criminals to spread viruses and worms.

Researchers have made use of simulation software, which has previously been used to model the spread of diseases, to observe how quickly a worm, once released, would travel throughout wi-fi access points.

Their findings were worrying; they found that within 24 hours of an ‘outbreak’ the majority of vulnerable access points would be hit and within two weeks, 55% of all wi-fi access points would be compromised – meaning tens of thousands of people would be at risk.

Read the full news story here

Suggestions for use in class and questions for students (subscription only)

 

Cybercrime threat rising sharply

01 Feb

cybercrime6

Cybercrime has been around for almost as long as we have had the internet but it now seems to be escalating almost out of control with experts saying that we have seen more in the last year than the past five years combined.

Online theft is now costing in the region of $1 trillion a year and unfortunately this figure is only going to grow because many people do not know how to protect themselves.

read the full news story here

Suggestions for use and questions for students (subscription only)

 
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Posted in Crime