Cybercrime Vandalizing the Information Society
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Average customer review:Product Description
Provides an authoritative introduction and reference to the subject for business decision-makers, IT professionals, academics, and others interested in going beyond the usual hype and sensationalism. Softcover.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2035636 in Books
- Published on: 2001-12-21
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
It's hard to argue that 20th-century law enforcement authorities had any idea how to deal with computer-assisted crime. Hoping to help the sheriffs of the new frontier, British computer security expert Steven Furnell gives a thorough overview of the means and motivations of their prey in Cybercrime: Vandalizing the Information Society.
As a guide to mainstream conceptions of hacking, viral code, and e-fraud, the book is invaluable both for the authorities it targets and its discussion of the antiauthoritarians who want to minimize both cyberharm and electronic oppression. Furnell makes some excellent points, well worth repeating as they're often ignored: computer security is still mostly laughable, most bad-guy hackers are less motivated by greed than other crooks, and traditional law-enforcement techniques are conspicuously irrelevant. For its topic, Cybercrime is comparatively calm and rational--just what we need to beat down the hype. --Rob Lightner
From the Back Cover
The world-wide cost of the Love Bug worm, unleashed in April 2000, was estimated to exceed $7 billion. There are currently over 66,000 strains of computer virus, with new ones appearing at a rate of over 1,000 per month. The number of website defacements recorded in a single week is now more than twice the number recorded for the whole of 1998. A poll of 47,235 elementary level and middle school students in the United States revealed that 48% of them did not consider hacking into systems to be a crime.
Incidents of computer hacking, viruses, and worm programs have become frequent headline news stories in recent years: the existence of cybercrime is inescapable. Cybercrime: Vandalizing the Information Society makes it plain that this is a phenomenon with the potential to affect us all. By raising our awareness of the potential threats and vulnerabilities we face, Steven Furnell equips the reader with the knowledge to make informed decisions about IT security.
Taking a variety of perspectives, he presents an accessible and sober analysis of the specific manifestations of cybercrime, including hacking, viruses and other forms of malicious software. These activities are clearly set in context by consideration of the wider effects for the organizations and society in which they take place.
Issues covered include:
- the origins and extent of the cybercrime problem;
- the implications for and responses from the legal system;
- the reporting of cybercrime incidents in the media;
- the commercial and political evolution of the computer hacker;
- the likely future development of cybercrime.
Cybercrime: Vandalizing the Information Society provides an authoritative introduction and reference to the subject for business decision-makers, IT professionals, academics, and others interested in going beyond the usual hype and sensationalism.
"This is an excellent book: readable, well-researched, and a great addition to the cybercrime literature. It provides a clear assessment of the issues, without playing into the hype or downplaying the threat."
- Dorothy E. Denning, Callahan Family Professor of Computer Science, Georgetown University
"Entertaining and very well researched. Rather than sensationalizing cybercrime and hacking, this book provides information that will help readers reach their own verdict about the threats posed."
- Dieter Gollmann, Microsoft Research and co-editor in chief of the International Journal of Information Security
0201721597B10312001
About the Author
Dr. Steven Furnell is the head of the Network Research Group at the University of Plymouth in the United Kingdom. He specializes in computer security and has been actively researching in the area for nine years. During this time he has contributed to a number of U.K. and European projects, as well as presenting his work and findings at a variety of international events. Dr. Furnell is a member of the British Computer Society (BCS) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and is a U.K. representative in two International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) working groups, relating to Network Security and Information Security Education. He is also a frequent reviewer for a variety of international journals covering Internet and security issues, and has recently acted as an advisor to the London Science Museum in relation to an exhibition exposing the cybercrime problem. 0201721597AB11262001
Customer Reviews
Good overview of the threats of computer crime
Cybercrime - Vandalizing the Information Society is a good book that gives the reader a competent synopsis of why computer crime exists.
Furnell's main point, that computer security is still not resilient enough to deal with the current threats should be taken to heart.
The book is light on the FUD factor (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) and heavy on case histories and statistics. This is turn makes this a good title for the non-technical audience.
Overall, Cybercrime Vandalizing the Information Society is a very readable book with a lot of good information.

