Dr.
Ali, My digital forensics investigation lecture during my bachelor degree
argued the UK government to invest on skills and police resources to tackle
cybercrime. He started with the statistics by saying; the cost of cybercrime to
the UK economy is around £27 billion per year, around 2% of national GDP. Some
experts suggest this is too small, excluding as it does important vectors of
cybercrime such as malware.
Computer
security firm Norton estimates that more than 12.5m people in the UK fall
victim to cybercriminals every year – 34,246 cases each day – with an average
loss of £144 each. Again, this is probably an underestimation when one
considers that many people will be victims of hacks or malware without ever
knowing, and so they go unreported.
A
global study conducted by the UN Office of Drugs and Crime reported rates of
cybercrime including hacking leading to theft and fraud at rates of up to 17%,
significantly higher than rates of their conventional equivalents at less than
5%.
Fighting
cybercrime is by no means easy. The wide range of technologies and vectors of
attack available to cyber-criminals and the cross-border nature of these crimes
make investigating them difficult. The fragile nature of digital evidence
complicates matters, tracks and traces that skilled cybercriminals can erase
behind them. And the intrusive nature of investigating cybercrimes – which
typically requires removing computer equipment for analysis – raises privacy
issues that make digital forensics an even more complicated task.
POLICING
CYBERCRIME IN THE UK
In
the context of UK policing, the National Association of Chief Police Officers
(formerly ACPO) Core Investigative Doctrine provides a strategic framework and
good practice guidelines for forensic investigation of e-crimes. Since 2011,
the UK government has adopted a centralised approach as part of its National
Cyber Security Program, with the National Cyber Crime Unit (NCCU), part of the
UK National Crime Agency, the central focus for tackling cybercrime in
partnership with government agencies such as GCHQ and the Home Office.
The
government has committed £650m to the cybersecurity programme to improve the
nation’s cyber-defences and resilience. But considering that around 60% of this
is to go to GCHQ for intelligence activities, this leaves only £260m for
investigation and law enforcement – a figure that does not compare favourably
to the estimated cost (£27 billion) of the crimes the NCCU is to investigate.
According
to the commissioner of City of London Police, Adrian Leppard, there are 800
specialist internet crime officers, yet it’s expected that a quarter of them
will lose their job due to budget cuts in the next two years. Again,
considering Norton’s estimation of 34,246 individuals falling victim to
cybercrime every day in Britain, the remaining 600 investigators would need to
address 57 cases each day of the year – a mission impossible.
SKILLS
NEEDED
So
the imbalance between the capabilities of organised e-crime groups and the
limited capacities of law enforcement agencies is not something that the UK can
resolve in the near future. However, some solutions may narrow the gap and confine
criminals’ opportunities.
Most
obvious is how few university courses there are at undergraduate and especially
at postgraduate level in cybersecurity and e-crime forensics that could train
the skilled investigators required. Tackling the threat of organised criminals
working in cybercrime over the long term requires knowledgeable experts to
profile, track, detect, and ultimately provide the information that can lead to
their arrest.
At
a recent TechUK event attendees suggested the lack of prosecutions under the
Computer Misuse Act in the 25 years since it was introduced suggests the law is
not fit for purpose – and the skills required to bring a prosecution under it
are at the moment in short supply.
While
the lion’s share of resources goes to GCHQ, the targets of its intelligence are
not necessarily the criminal gangs of interest to the police. More resources
for police agencies are necessary to bring investigative capacities up to the
same level of the gangs they’re investigating.
GCHQ
has reported that 80% of cyber-attacks can be prevented through better education
and awareness among users. Developing regional hubs to promote cybersecurity
training and education among general users would be key.
The
fact that the Anonymous self-styled “hacktivists” whose attacks on Paypal cost
the firm £3.5m were sentenced only to seven and 18 months might suggest that
cybercrimes are sentenced lightly. A better understanding among judges and
juries of the serious implications of cybercrimes and greater punishments and
fines for financial crimes could help make cybercrime less rewarding to
criminals.
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