The Economics of Hacking

K. Hui, Jiali Zhou
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Abstract

Hacking is becoming more common and dangerous. The challenge of dealing with hacking often comes from the fact that much of our wisdom about conventional crime cannot be directly applied to understand hacking behavior. Against this backdrop, hacking studies are reviewed in view of the new features of cybercrime and how these features affect the application of the classical economic theory of crime in the cyberspace. Most findings of hacking studies can be interpreted with a parsimonious demand-and-supply framework. Hackers decide whether and how much to “supply” hacking by calculating the return on hacking over other opportunities. Defenders optimally tolerate some level of hacking risks because defense is costly. This tolerance can be interpreted as an indirect “demand” for hacking. Variations in law enforcement, hacking benefits, hacking costs, legal alternatives, private defense, and the dual-use problem can variously affect the supply or demand for hacking, and in turn the equilibrium amount of hacking in the market. Overall, it is suggested that the classical economic theory of crime remains a powerful framework to explain hacking behaviors. However, the application of this theory calls for considerations of different assumptions and driving forces, such as psychological motives and economies of scale in offenses, that are often less prevalent in conventional (offline) criminal behaviors but that tend to underscore hacking in the cyberspace.
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黑客经济学
黑客行为正变得越来越普遍和危险。对付黑客的挑战往往来自这样一个事实,即我们关于传统犯罪的许多智慧不能直接应用于理解黑客行为。在此背景下,本文从网络犯罪的新特征以及这些特征如何影响经典经济犯罪理论在网络空间中的应用等方面对黑客研究进行了回顾。黑客研究的大多数发现都可以用一个简约的供求框架来解释。黑客们通过计算黑客行为的回报与其他机会之比,来决定是否“提供”黑客行为,以及“提供”多少黑客行为。防御者最好能容忍某种程度的黑客攻击风险,因为防御是昂贵的。这种容忍可以被解释为对黑客的间接“需求”。执法、黑客利益、黑客成本、法律选择、私人辩护和双重用途问题的变化可以不同程度地影响黑客的供应或需求,进而影响市场上黑客的均衡数量。总的来说,这表明经典的犯罪经济学理论仍然是解释黑客行为的一个强有力的框架。然而,这一理论的应用需要考虑不同的假设和驱动力,例如心理动机和犯罪中的规模经济,这些在传统(线下)犯罪行为中通常不那么普遍,但往往强调网络空间中的黑客行为。
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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