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The convergence of communications and computing has begun to transform Western industrial societies. Increasing connectivity is accompanied by unprecedented opportunities for crimes of acquisition. The fundamental principle of criminology is that crime follows opportunity, and opportunities for theft abound in the digital age. Electronic Theft names, describes and analyses the range of electronic and digital theft, and constitutes the first major survey of the field. The authors cover a broad list of electronic misdemeanours, including extortion, defrauding governments, telephone fraud,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The convergence of communications and computing has begun to transform Western industrial societies. Increasing connectivity is accompanied by unprecedented opportunities for crimes of acquisition. The fundamental principle of criminology is that crime follows opportunity, and opportunities for theft abound in the digital age. Electronic Theft names, describes and analyses the range of electronic and digital theft, and constitutes the first major survey of the field. The authors cover a broad list of electronic misdemeanours, including extortion, defrauding governments, telephone fraud, securities fraud, deceptive advertising and other business practices, industrial espionage, intellectual property crimes, and the misappropriation and unauthorised use of personal information. They have been able to capture impressively large amounts of data internationally from both scholarly and professional sources. The book poses and attempts to answer some pressing questions to do with national sovereignty and enforceability of laws.

Table of contents:
1 Theft and cyberspace; 2 Stealing funds electronically; 3 Digital extortion; 4 Defrauding governments electronically; 5 Telephone fraud and theft of internet services; 6 Online securities fraud; 7 Electronic 'snake oil': Deceptive and misleading online advertising and business practices; 8 Intellectual property in cyberspace; 9 Industrial espionage in the Digital Age; 10 The electronic misappropriation and dissemination of personal information; 11 The limits of the law in controlling electronic theft

Electronic Theft names, describes and analyses the range of electronic and digital theft. The authors cover a broad list of electronic misdemeanours, including extortion, defrauding governments, telephone fraud, securities fraud, deceptive advertising and other business practices, industrial espionage, intellectual property crimes, and the misappropriation and unauthorised use of personal information.

Electronic Theft names, describes and analyses the range of electronic and digital theft, and constitutes the first major survey of the field.