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Internet Crime Losses More than Double
March 15, 2010 - Eric Chabrow
No single metric shows the Internet's vulnerability to do damage to organizations and individuals. But the FBI late last week issued a report that shows at least in one area, Internet crime, the situation is getting worse, much worse.
Losses from Internet crime more than doubled between 2008 and 2009 to $559.7 million from $265 million, according to the 2009 Internet Crime Report, issued by the Internet Crime Complaint Center, a partnership between the FBI and the National White Collar Crime Center known as IC3. The data could be conservative because they reflect complaints reported to IC3.
Complaints received by IC3 rose 22.3 percent to 336,655 in 2009.
Advanced fee scams that fraudulently employed the FBI's name ranked No. 1 (16.6 percent). Non-delivery of merchandise and/or payment was the second most reported offense (11.9 percent). In a statement accompanying the release of the report, Donald Brackman, director of the National White Collar Criminal Center, said: "Criminals are continuing to take full advantage of the anonymity afforded them by the Internet. They are also developing increasingly sophisticated means of defrauding unsuspecting consumers. Internet crime is evolving in ways we couldn't have imagined just five years ago." Here are highlights from the report:
One takeaway from the IC3 report is a point top administration officials including White House Cybersecurity Coordinator Howard Schmidt, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and FBI Director Robert Mueller made in their keynotes at the RSA Conference 2010 earlier this month: government, business and individuals must work together to successfully battle cyber criminals and other who would do us harm. Close Window |
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