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SUMMARY:Inside the Business of Cybercrime: Trust and Cooperation among Cybercriminals
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20201103T173000
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LOCATION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:Campus Außerhalb : ONLINE
CONTACT:Herrn Martin  Wolf (Käte Hamburger Kolleg)
DESCRIPTION:Herrn Martin  Wolf (Käte Hamburger Kolleg)
Inside the Business of Cybercrime: Trust and Cooperation among Cybercriminals
37th Käte Hamburger Lecture
How do cybercriminals trust each other when they don’t know whom they are dealing with? On the face of it, they can’t turn up at another criminal’s house and beat them up. They certainly can’t report being ripped off to the police. As a result of such challenges to cooperation, it might be expected that cybercriminals would operate alone or in small groups. Yet, in recent years, collaboration among cybercriminals has grown significantly. In this lecture Jonathan Lusthaus addresses the puzzle of how cybercriminals have overcome this trust problem and built an illicit shadow industry on a grand scale. 

Jonathan Lusthaus, Director of The Human Cybercriminal Project at the Extra-Legal Governance Institute, the Department of Sociology, Oxford University.

Comment: Carolina Aguerre, GCR21 Senior Research Fellow and professor and researcher at the University of San Andrés in Buenos

Moderator: Frank Gadinger, GCR21 Research Group Co-Leader
Tuesday, 3. November 2020
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