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Cybercrime Growing Harder To Prosecute


From: mea culpa <jericho () DIMENSIONAL COM>
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 00:34:22 -0700

Forwarded From: darek.milewski () us pwcglobal com


http://www.ecommercetimes.com/news/articles2000/000121-nb1.shtml

By Martin Stone, Newsbytes
Special to the E-Commerce Times
January 21, 2000

U.S. Justice Department officials reportedly called computer crime a
growing menace to corporations worldwide, and admitted that law
enforcement agents face major hurdles in combating it.

A report by Reuters today said Justice and FBI officials concede there is
no such thing as a completely secure computer system. The warning was
voiced Thursday at a conference on cybercrime sponsored by the Deloitte &
Touche accounting firm, the report said.

 Who Is Vulnerable?

"The issue isn't who is vulnerable because everyone is vulnerable. he
issue is how are companies going to deal with those vulnerabilities,"
Reuters quoted Assistant U.S. Attorney Allison Burroughs as saying.

The report noted that a recent survey found that 62 percent of U.S.
companies reported security breaches in the last 12 months and that
resulting financial damages totaled almost $124 million (US$).

Computer criminals are harder to identify and have a greater reach than
conventional criminals, Burroughs reportedly said, adding that prosecution
of felons outside U.S. borders is complicated.

 Formidable Weapon

Burroughs and FBI Agent Nenette Day warned that encryption, meant to
protect company data, can become a formidable weapon for criminals wary of
leaving electronic footprints, Reuters said.

That statement comes after Attorney General Janet Reno in September said
that the administration would work on making strong encryption exports
easier for US high-tech companies, who traditionally have been hampered in
their efforts to ship the products because of law enforcement concerns.

The relaxed encryption regulations were announced on January 12th.

Day reportedly told the conference there are large numbers of computer
criminals working every day from home trying to defraud or otherwise
damage corporations. She added that corporations are often reluctant to
report computer intrusions, making investigations more difficult, the
report stated.

ISN is sponsored by Security-Focus.COM


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