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Computer Crime Research Center | www.crime-research.org |
Vladimir Golubev
2001
The global network Internet, comprising
mullions of computers, Internet, provides unheard-of opportunities to
communicate and obtain information and is increasingly used for criminal
purposes.
The advent of electronic money and virtual
banks, exchanges, and shops, which, however, supply real services and
commodities, is just one factor promoting new crime - "transnational computer
crimes". Today, together with traditional activity, law-enforcement agencies
face new types of crime – "cyber crimes".
Cyber crimes is a new and unusual concept to
law-enforcement agencies, but criminal activities, involving Internet are the
most dangerous to society. And it many states already have understood.
The transnational nature of network crime
suggests that the development of common policies on key issues should be part of
any control strategy. Such common policies are important to prevent the
occurrence of “legal havens”
in jurisdictions where certain activities have not been criminalized, for
example.
In the United States, for example,
Presidential Decision Directive 63 (a white paper on critical infrastructure
protection) states, “Addressing these vulnerabilities will necessarily require
flexible, evolutionary approaches that span both the public and private sectors,
and protect both domestic and international security. … The Federal Government
shall encourage international
In the Decree of the President of Ukraine №
928/2000 from July 31, 2000 Is told, that an overall objective of development of
a national global network Internet in Ukraine is the decision of tasks of
information safety of our state and perfection of legal regulation of activity
of the subjects of the information relations, amplification of the
responsibility for computer crimes.
Certainly, as all other types of offences,
cyber crime presents great threat for people and the extent of such threat, to
our opinion, is not fully recognized and evaluated by the society. However, that
insignificant existing experience in this sphere, not to mention the experience
of leading countries of the world, obviously shows the doubtless vulnerability
of any state. Moreover, the transnational computer crime is not limited by state
borders and criminal is equally capable to threat the information systems
located practically in any place of the world. This crimes, as a rule, are
extraordinary and often present irresolvable problem for legislation in force.
Special concern is problem of investigation the crime, which tracks and
evidences have been erased or terminated by computer criminals. Other
peculiarity of cyber crime, making its investigation even more difficult, is
the use of small-sized satellite systems communications , so such crime may be
committed significantly far from the object of offence within seconds. However,
investigation of such crimes may take weeks, even months, giving criminal the
destroy traces of a crime and to avoid punishment.
For the last few years transnational crimes
have achieved menacing measures. As professor Louisa Shelley mentioned,
“Transnational organized crimes will become one of the main problems governments
will face in the 21st century. It will be the crucial problem for the
21st century, as the cold war for the 20th and colonialism
for the 19th centuries” [2].
In the Viennese declaration “About
criminality and justice: the answers to the challenges of the 21st
century” which was adopted in Vienna at the Tenth Congress of the Organization
of the United Nations, 10-17 April,2000, there was also expressed concern about
transnational organized crimes and intercoupling between various kinds of them
[3].
Due to the prompt development of information
technologies on the basis of Internet network the geographical obstacles which
for a long time restrained the growth of crimes of this kind have disappeared.
Today, transnational crimes connected with the use of the global Internet
network occupy a significant share in the total volume of criminal offences.
Their growth and development are promoted by the very nature of this kind of
crimes characterized by availability of the Internet network and impunity of the
offences because of inadequate preparation of law-enforcement agencies in
investigating such crimes.
To a certain extent, one of the factors
promoting the increase of this new kind of crimes is the absence of proper
interaction within law-enforcement agencies while preventing and investigating
such crimes.
The efficiency of prevention and investigation
of cyber crimes depends much on co-ordinated international approach to the
problem at different levels. At the state level there is required a well
prepared staff, as well as modification of national legislation aimed at
creating legal base to provide with law-enforcement agencies as well as judicial
authorities dealing with offences in information sphere and transnational
computer crimes. At the interstate level investigation of cyber crimes requires
coordinated efforts of national centers dealing with cyber crimes with similar
international centers in other countries.
In order to regulate informational relations
at the state level, there appeared a demand to set legal norms for their
participants so that to make it possible to confront crimes related to global
Internet network.
While interested countries have considered the problems arising from cyber crimes, there has not been much attention paid to it at the interstate level. Reasons for the lack of attention to cyber crimes may include relatively low levels of participation in international electronic communication, low levels of law-enforcement experience and low estimations of the damage to society expected to occur from electronic crimes. In global computer Internet network, the criminal policy of one State has a direct influence on the international community. Cyber criminals may direct their electronic activities through a particular State where that behaviour is not criminal and thus be protected by the law of that country. Read the entire article ...