Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Collective Behaviour of Crimes In Cyberspace
View through CrossRef
Aim. The Convention of Cybercrimes (ETS No. 185) singned in Budapest, Hungary in 2001 created the unification of cyber-crimes and had impact on national criminal codes across the world. Therefore I started to colaborate with the National Police Headquarters from Warsaw to investigate direct and indirect connections between cyber-crimes defined by the Convention and the Criminal Code in Poland because statistical analysis of cyber-crimes were not thus far satisfactory .
Methods. Statistical analysis of data collected in time series may lead to computer correlation coefficients between crimes and detect a hierarchical structure of selected cyber-crimes
Results. According to correlation coefficients between crimes, the behaviour of independent cyber criminals is collective and might lead to self-organised criticality. Correlations and anticorrelations between crimes are extremely strong. Therefore crimes may exist collectively or may exclude each other
Conclusion. Hierarchical structure of crimes according to the MST seems to be extremely logical and might lead to a perfect crime plans or prevention against cyber-crimes as well. Therefore the sensitive details given by graph of the MST had to be censored.
Title: Collective Behaviour of Crimes In Cyberspace
Description:
Aim.
The Convention of Cybercrimes (ETS No.
185) singned in Budapest, Hungary in 2001 created the unification of cyber-crimes and had impact on national criminal codes across the world.
Therefore I started to colaborate with the National Police Headquarters from Warsaw to investigate direct and indirect connections between cyber-crimes defined by the Convention and the Criminal Code in Poland because statistical analysis of cyber-crimes were not thus far satisfactory .
Methods.
Statistical analysis of data collected in time series may lead to computer correlation coefficients between crimes and detect a hierarchical structure of selected cyber-crimes
Results.
According to correlation coefficients between crimes, the behaviour of independent cyber criminals is collective and might lead to self-organised criticality.
Correlations and anticorrelations between crimes are extremely strong.
Therefore crimes may exist collectively or may exclude each other
Conclusion.
Hierarchical structure of crimes according to the MST seems to be extremely logical and might lead to a perfect crime plans or prevention against cyber-crimes as well.
Therefore the sensitive details given by graph of the MST had to be censored.
Related Results
An Empirical Study on Cyber Crimes Against Women and Children in India
An Empirical Study on Cyber Crimes Against Women and Children in India
The aim of the study is to understand the Cyber-crimes against women and Children in India for a period of five years from 2017 to 2021. The study is based on Secondary data collec...
Parent Training Interventions for Attention Deficity Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in Children Aged 5 to 18 years
Parent Training Interventions for Attention Deficity Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in Children Aged 5 to 18 years
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder. For a child to be diagnosed with ADHD, adults such as parents, carers, healthcare workers or teach...
EVOLUTION OF CYBERSPACE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
EVOLUTION OF CYBERSPACE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
The purpose of the study: to identify the main systems that control cyberspace and the key elements whose management will allow controlling a given segment of cybe...
From cooperation to conflict: The role of collective narratives in shaping group behaviour
From cooperation to conflict: The role of collective narratives in shaping group behaviour
In this paper, we review the concept of collective narratives and their role in shaping group behaviour. We see collective narratives as ‘meta-stories’ embraced by groups that inco...
A wailing wall in cyberspace: Loneliness, censorship, and collective memory – in memory of Dr. Li Wenliang, the whistle blower
A wailing wall in cyberspace: Loneliness, censorship, and collective memory – in memory of Dr. Li Wenliang, the whistle blower
As the whistle blower of the outbreak of Covid-19 in Wuhan, Dr. Li Wenliang was dismissed as the spreader of rumors and punished by the authorities. His later death from the corona...
HATE CRIMES: THE ULTIMATE ANATHEMATIC CRIMES
HATE CRIMES: THE ULTIMATE ANATHEMATIC CRIMES
Hate crimes are grave offences that involve violations of human rights and humanitarian law. Hate crimes are offences which are motivated by bias or prejudice against a person base...
The Utopian Code: Cyberspace as a Democratization of Technology
The Utopian Code: Cyberspace as a Democratization of Technology
[Introduction] William Gibson’s 1984 novel, Neuromancer, declared cyberpunk as a fully realized science fiction subgenre that reverberates into the current time. The text follows a...
The Utopian Code: Cyberspace as a Democratization of Technology
The Utopian Code: Cyberspace as a Democratization of Technology
[Introduction] William Gibson’s 1984 novel, Neuromancer, declared cyberpunk as a fully realized science fiction subgenre that reverberates into the current time. The text follows a...


