01648nam a22002057a 4500003000900000005001700009008004100026040001300067245008900080260006600169300001000235490001600245500003400261520092700295650002501222650002201247650003001269650002701299856011601326ES-MaBCM20260306152058.0260306s2024 sz |||||s|||| 00| 0 eng d cES-MaBCM00aDisrupting Cybercrime Networks :bA Collaboration Frameworkh[Recurso electrónico] aCologny/Geneva, Switzerlandb : World Economic Forumc , 2024 a23 cm0 aWhite Paper aEn la cubierta: November 2024 aThe internet allows criminals to operate seamlessly across borders, accessing a marketplace of victims anywhere, anytime and at scale. Cybercrime has expanded for the same reasons that drove the mega growth of legal online businesses. At the same time, criminals copy what they see in the legal markets. Think about the advent of subscription model “software-as-a-service” offerings that give businesses access to user-friendly products ranging from video calls to project management and customer service tools. Equally, criminals have their own cybercrime-as-a-service” business model where experienced cybercriminals sell accessible tools and knowledge to help others carry out cybercrimes. This brings more criminals into the cybercrime market by lowering the cost and level of skill needed to be an effective online fraudster and deliver ransomware attacks that can bankrupt businesses and destroy livelihoods. 7aDelito informático 0aCrimen organizado 7aPiratería informática 0aCooperación policial uhttps://mpr.koha.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=efae15159325dcd058d69418ced9e9bfyDESCARGAR DOCUMENTO