Categories of Computer Crime Smith Strayer University CIS170 Wk2 Professor Masudur Chowdhury July 4‚ 2013 Explain in detail the four common categories of computer crimes and provide at least one example for each. There are many different types of computer crime and multiple ways to categorize them. I will discuss four categories in detail to shine light on how vulnerable people are‚ when we choose to use a personal or publicly used computer to transmit confidential information
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The meaning of crime A crime can be defined as any act or omission of duty that results in harm to society and which is punishable by the state. You should take particular note of the fact that a crime‚ by definition‚ harms society as a whole. For this reason‚ while not undermining the impact that crimes have on particular victims‚ crimes are prosecuted by the state‚ i.e. it is not the role of the victim to prosecute the person(s) committing the crime. Accordingly‚ criminal cases in Australia
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private citizens. The strategy is accomplished through assessment of risks and the manipulation of the environment. For instance a homeowner could remove crime opportunities for a criminal to hack into his home’s Wi-Fi by examining the five mechanisms‚ choosing the mechanism “increase the effort” and then moving down the column and choosing the crime inhibitor “control access to facilities”. The homeowner could choose to control the access by changing the default password to his wireless router to one
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The white-collar crime is one that is financially motivated and is non-violent. The crime is committed by the government and business professionals. According to Edwin Sutherland‚ white-collar crime is committed by the individuals of high social and respectable status‚ in their occupations. Edwin Sutherland was the first sociologist to define white-collar crime. The white-collar kinds of crime include copyright infringement‚ fraud‚ money laundering‚ insider trading‚ cybercrime‚ forgery‚ Ponzi schemes
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Crime remains a hot topic of discussion among many states in the world. Politicians and scholars however‚ have come up with various ideologies on criminology. The perspectives as discussed by Cullen and Gilberts are: conservative‚ liberal and radical ideologies. Conservative view‚ is bent on the notion of limited democracy and free capital market systems. They believe that the two systems work well‚ and are only hampered by individuals and groups who do not succeed in the system. Thus causing
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Provision mapping is a practical strategy‚ usually designed in a table formatting‚ which provides teachers and management (head of years‚ head teachers etc.) to see where extra help is being given in the school and to who‚ what resources are being used and how much the resources cost and any other useful information that is needed‚ such as the pupil’s data‚ the amount of time spent on each child during the interventions‚ and the ratios. It is considered a very concise way of having information at
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the most convicting on why crime happens. In cities that are very disorganized like Detroit‚ more people live in poorer conditions‚ so they don’t have the education that people in richer more organized cities would have. Because they don’t have this organization and education‚ they will not be able to get a job as easily. So in order to make money they join a gang or some other illegal activity group. I would use sociological and psychological to explain violent crime. With the sociological perspective
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SOCY-101 Crime After Crime is an true documentary film‚ story that is totally incredible! While watching this film‚ It gave me a new perspective on life and our justice system. This documentary it is an must watch‚ I recommend it to see because there is a lot of missing out on some really important information that we should all be aware of in ours life. This film is simply unbelievable‚ I wonder how can an D.A’s office
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ON THE ECONOMICS OF ORGANIZED CRIME By Vimal Kumar and Stergios Skaperdas Department of Economics University of California‚ Irvine Irvine‚ CA 92697 Revised: February 13‚ 2008 Prepared for inclusion in: Garoupa‚ Nuno (ed.)‚ Criminal Law and Economics ABSTRACT: The core function of organized crime is the selling of protection. Protection can be real‚ against third-party crime‚ or manufactured by the organized crime groups themselves. Mafias and gangs emerge in areas of weak state control‚ because
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MODELS OF ORGANIZED CRIME Joseph Webb CJA/384 August 18‚ 2014 Earnest Whitten Organized Crime has been a hot topic for many years. Cinema loves gangster style mob bosses who rule their organization with an iron fist. Cinema usually shows a certain type of organized crime‚ like a syndicate family or ruler. Organized crime can actually be broken down into two different models; Bureaucratic and Patron-Client Organizations. Two Theories Bureaucratic organizations operate more like businesses
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