ABSTRACT

This book was published in 2003.This book is a collection of key texts that have contributed towards, or have reflected, the various debates that have taken place over crime and the internet during that past decade. The texts are organised into three parts. The first contains a number of viewpoints and perspectives that facilitate our broader understanding of cyberspace crime/ cybercrimes. The second part addresses each of the major types of cybercrime - trespass/ hacking/cracking, thefts/ deceptions, obscenities/ pornography, violence - and illustrate their associated problems of definition and resolution. The third and final part contains a selection of texts that each deal with the impact of cyberspace crime upon specific criminal justice processes: the police and the trial process.

part II|325 pages

Cybercrimes

chapter 10|24 pages

A sociology of hackers

chapter 11|29 pages

≫Netcrime

More Change in the Organization of Thieving

chapter 19|14 pages

Cybercrimes v. Cyberliberties 1

part III|131 pages

Criminal Justice Processes

chapter 27|21 pages

Technology’s ways

Information technology, crime analysis and the rationalizing of policing

chapter 28|21 pages

The technological game

How information technology is transforming police practice