The number of criminal cases involving the use of computers rose 9 percent during the year 2000, according to the Hong Kong Police, which is finding Internet-related crimes increasingly more complex.
Published:
28 January 2001 y., Sunday
Hong Kong's Commercial Crime Bureau (CCB) said it investigated 380 computer-related criminal cases last year. The cases mostly involved hacking, obtaining property by deception, obscene material and criminal damage. The number of such cases increased rapidly during 1999, from only 34 in 1998.
But the CCB says it is having to investigate increasingly "technical and complicated" crimes, especially those involving the Internet. But it maintains that most hacking is simply students showing off to their peers. CCB Senior Superintendent Raymond Lau Chi-keung said that the bureau has had to do a lot of talking with service providers and IT professionals to keep up-to-date with the latest technology developments. Lau also takes part in the Interpol Asia and South Pacific Regional Working Party of IT Crime.
He added that the bureau would expand its Computer Crime Section into a division complete with a forensic computer crime lab and training across the Police force.
Hacking into Web sites can result in prison sentences of up to 10 years in Hong Kong.
Šaltinis:
Newsbytes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Executives at the American Muslim Council are mad as hell.
more »
The foundation of modern computing was something of an accident.
more »
America Online's popular AIM instant messaging application has found a home on cell phone service offered by VoiceStream Wireless.
more »
The deadly attacks of September 11 didn't just give us tighter airport checkpoints, new wiretapping and surveillance laws, and countless metric tons of explosives air-lifted to Afghanistan.
more »
For the price of registering a domain name, a 30-year-old Web designer from Los Angeles has bought a bizarre piece of Internet history.
more »
Japan's NTT DoCoMo has unveiled new weapons in its war against junk e-mail
more »
The use of speech recognition technology in telephone call centers is about to enter the mainstream
more »
The information breach exposed the names and diagnoses of children and teenagers being treated for such conditions as schizophrenia, retardation and depression.
more »
Smart shirts embedded with optic fibers can monitor wearer's condition and transmit data wirelessly.
more »
A computer hacker who vandalized a pro-Israeli group's Web site said law enforcement officials have issued an arrest warrant for the wrong person.
more »