Deterring Cybercrime: Focus on Intermediaries

Aniket Kesari, C. Hoofnagle, Damon McCoy
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

This Article discusses how governments, intellectual property owners, and technology companies use the law to disrupt access to intermediaries used by financially-motivated cybercriminals. Just like licit businesses, illicit firms rely on intermediaries to advertise, sell and deliver products, collect payments, and maintain a reputation. Recognizing these needs, law enforcers use the courts, administrative procedures, and self-regulatory frameworks to execute a deterrence by denial strategy. Enforcers of the law seize the financial rewards and infrastructures necessary for the operation of illicit firms to deter their presence. Policing illicit actors through their intermediaries raises due process and fairness concerns because service-providing companies may not be aware of the criminal activity, and because enforcement actions have consequences for consumers and other, licit firms. Yet, achieving direct deterrence by punishment suffers from jurisdictional and resource constraints, leaving enforcers with few other options for remedy. This Article integrates literature from the computer science and legal fields to explain enforcers' interventions, explore their efficacy, and evaluate the merits and demerits of enforcement efforts focused on the intermediaries used by financially-motivated cybercriminals.
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阻止网络犯罪:关注中介机构
本文讨论了政府、知识产权所有者和技术公司如何利用法律来破坏出于经济动机的网络犯罪分子使用的中介机构。就像合法企业一样,非法企业依靠中介机构来做广告、销售和交付产品、收款和维护声誉。认识到这些需求,执法人员使用法院、行政程序和自我监管框架来执行拒绝战略的威慑。执法人员夺取非法公司运作所必需的财政奖励和基础设施,以阻止它们的存在。通过中间人对非法行为者进行监管引发了正当程序和公平问题,因为提供服务的公司可能不知道犯罪活动,而且执法行动会对消费者和其他合法公司产生影响。然而,通过惩罚实现直接威慑受到管辖权和资源限制,使执法者几乎没有其他补救办法。本文整合了来自计算机科学和法律领域的文献,以解释执法者的干预措施,探讨其有效性,并评估专注于经济动机网络罪犯使用的中介机构的执法工作的优点和缺点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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