Cybercrime
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Cybercrime is crime enacted over or using the internet. This includes but is not limited to:[1]
- Computer intrusion (i.e. cracking)
- Password trafficking
- Copyright (software, movie, sound recording) piracy
- Trademark counterfeiting
- Counterfeiting of currency
- Child Pornography or Exploitation
- Child Exploitation and Internet Fraud matters that have a mail nexus
- Internet Fraud involving securities fraud
- Internet harassment
- Internet bomb threats
- Trafficking in explosive or incendiary devices or firearms over the Internet
Other SourceWatch Resources
- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF)
- Council of Europe Convention on Cybercrime
- critical infrastructure
- cyberterrorism
- data mining
- Department of Homeland Security
- Electronic Privacy Information Center
- Federal Bureau of Investigation
- Federal Trade Commission
- Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
- globalization
- homeland security
- Homeland Security government agencies and programs
- Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection
- information infrastructure
- information warfare
- internet surveillance
- National Infrastructure Protection Center
- Office of Internet Enforcement (Securities and Exchange Commission)
- Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)
- Patriot Act I
- PROTECT Act
- U.S. Customs Service
- U.S. Postal Inspection Service
- U.S. Secret Service
- VICTORY Act
External links
- Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS) of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice or www.cybercrime.gov. Includes section entitled Dispelling Some of the Myths about the USA Patriot Act.
- CyberCrime, techtv.com.
- Cybercrime, Infowar, and Infosecurity, Georgetown University.
- Cybercrime, ComputerWorld.
- Netlitigation, Case archive.