{"title":"性侵犯者书评:如何在网上和街上识别他们-如何让你的孩子远离","authors":"Catherine D. Marcum","doi":"10.5281/ZENODO.18283","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"“Before all this, I thought a predator is someone who lurks in the bushes. I didn’t think I was one. But then I realized the computer monitor was my bushes.” The above-referenced quote was made by serial child predator Jake Matthew Clawson in regards to his recognition of his online obsession. It was referenced as a demonstration of the common misconception many of us have regarding the tactics used by child pedophiles to stalk children. The stereotype of the dirty old man hanging out at the school playground in a dingy van waiting and watching for unsuspecting little girls and boys is being replaced by a different type of predator. This is the predator that hides behind false identities and personalities in chat room, instant messages or emails to gain the trust of the same unsuspecting, but now computer-savvy children. The book “Sexual Predators: How to Recognize Them on the Internet and on the Street – How to Keep Your Kids Away,” written by Stephen Dean, is the latest book that provides a wealth of information on these new types of predators and the tactics that they use on the technologically confident youth. Award-winning, investigative journalist Stephen Dean has had years of experience working with authorities investigating crimes against children. His current passion has led him to immerse himself in the world of Internet predators. He has posed as a child in chat rooms during multiple Internet investigations with the Houston Police Department and federal authorities to apprehend online predators. His work has been featured on ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN, as well as many local news stations. With these experiences, he describes in detail in his","PeriodicalId":46103,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Cyber Criminology","volume":"1 1","pages":"155-160"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2007-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Book Review of Sexual Predators: How to Recognize Them on the Internet and on the Street - How to Keep Your Kids Away\",\"authors\":\"Catherine D. Marcum\",\"doi\":\"10.5281/ZENODO.18283\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"“Before all this, I thought a predator is someone who lurks in the bushes. I didn’t think I was one. But then I realized the computer monitor was my bushes.” The above-referenced quote was made by serial child predator Jake Matthew Clawson in regards to his recognition of his online obsession. It was referenced as a demonstration of the common misconception many of us have regarding the tactics used by child pedophiles to stalk children. The stereotype of the dirty old man hanging out at the school playground in a dingy van waiting and watching for unsuspecting little girls and boys is being replaced by a different type of predator. This is the predator that hides behind false identities and personalities in chat room, instant messages or emails to gain the trust of the same unsuspecting, but now computer-savvy children. The book “Sexual Predators: How to Recognize Them on the Internet and on the Street – How to Keep Your Kids Away,” written by Stephen Dean, is the latest book that provides a wealth of information on these new types of predators and the tactics that they use on the technologically confident youth. Award-winning, investigative journalist Stephen Dean has had years of experience working with authorities investigating crimes against children. His current passion has led him to immerse himself in the world of Internet predators. He has posed as a child in chat rooms during multiple Internet investigations with the Houston Police Department and federal authorities to apprehend online predators. His work has been featured on ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN, as well as many local news stations. 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Book Review of Sexual Predators: How to Recognize Them on the Internet and on the Street - How to Keep Your Kids Away
“Before all this, I thought a predator is someone who lurks in the bushes. I didn’t think I was one. But then I realized the computer monitor was my bushes.” The above-referenced quote was made by serial child predator Jake Matthew Clawson in regards to his recognition of his online obsession. It was referenced as a demonstration of the common misconception many of us have regarding the tactics used by child pedophiles to stalk children. The stereotype of the dirty old man hanging out at the school playground in a dingy van waiting and watching for unsuspecting little girls and boys is being replaced by a different type of predator. This is the predator that hides behind false identities and personalities in chat room, instant messages or emails to gain the trust of the same unsuspecting, but now computer-savvy children. The book “Sexual Predators: How to Recognize Them on the Internet and on the Street – How to Keep Your Kids Away,” written by Stephen Dean, is the latest book that provides a wealth of information on these new types of predators and the tactics that they use on the technologically confident youth. Award-winning, investigative journalist Stephen Dean has had years of experience working with authorities investigating crimes against children. His current passion has led him to immerse himself in the world of Internet predators. He has posed as a child in chat rooms during multiple Internet investigations with the Houston Police Department and federal authorities to apprehend online predators. His work has been featured on ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN, as well as many local news stations. With these experiences, he describes in detail in his
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Cyber Criminology (IJCC) is a peer reviewed online (open access) interdisciplinary journal published biannually and devoted to the study of cyber crime, cyber criminal behavior, cyber victims, cyber laws and cyber policy. IJCC is an unique Diamond open access, not for profit international journal, where the author(s) need not pay article processing charges / page charges and it is totally free for both the authors and the audience. IJCC will focus on all aspects of cyber/computer crime: Forms of Cyber Crime, Impact of cyber crimes in the real world, Policing Cyber space, International Perspectives of Cyber Crime, Developing cyber safety policy, Cyber Victims, Cyber Psychopathology, Geographical aspects of Cyber crime, Cyber offender behavior, cyber crime law, Cyber Pornography, Privacy & Anonymity on the Net, Internet Fraud and Identity Theft, Mobile Phone Safety, Human Factor of Cyber Crime and Cyber Security and Policy issues, Online Gambling, Copyright and Intellectual property Law. As the discipline of Cyber Criminology approaches the future, facing the dire need to document the literature in this rapidly changing area has become more important than ever before. The IJCC will be a nodal centre to develop and disseminate the knowledge of cyber crimes primarily from a social science perspective to the academic and lay world. The journal publishes theoretical, methodological, and applied papers, as well as book reviews. We do not publish highly technical cyber forensics / digital forensics papers and papers of descriptive / overview nature.