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June 2018, Vol. 20, No. 3

Cybercrime study: Growing economic ecosystem spells trouble

Law enforcement in 12 countries joined forces earlier this year to take down DDoS-for-hire site Webstresser.org. Early reports claimed that distributed denial-of-service activity dropped by as much as 60% in Europe in the days following the arrests of the website's operators in April. That small victory is promising, but more needs to be done. Organized cybercriminals are gaining momentum and profiting from an economic ecosystem of systematic activities and hyper-connected infrastructure. A cybercrime study released in April describes this economy as platform criminality, a term coined by author Michael McGuire, a senior lecturer at University of Surrey, a public research university located in Guildford, U.K. It is similar to platform capitalism, the business model used by companies such Facebook, Google and Amazon to connect individuals with data and tools that benefit them. Crimeware as a service is an example of platform criminality, according to the cybercrime report "Into the Web of Profit," sponsored by Bromium. Walmart ...

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