爱情故事在浪漫诈骗中的作用:对欺诈资料的定性分析

IF 0.7 Q4 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Christian Kopp, R. Layton, J. Sillitoe, I. Gondal
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引用次数: 20

摘要

互联网为消费者和企业提供了一个全球市场,这个市场既方便又方便,可以提供各种各样的服务。在这个领域,在线约会就是这样一种服务,它从一开始的边缘兴趣网站发展到现在的主流社会实践,发展得非常快。调查显示,2003年估计有2900万美国人(五分之二的单身人士)使用在线约会服务,到2004年,这一数字将增加到每月4000万在线约会网站的独立访问者(埃德尔森,2003年)。目前,已经发现“在线个人类别”是美国网络上最赚钱的付费内容形式之一,2008年市场价值为6.42亿美元,2012年为19亿美元(Edelson, 2003)。在线约会服务的总利润估计为每年14亿美元(Rege, 2009)。据说这些收入每年以10%的速度增长(Bridges, 2012),并且据说这种社交网络现在已经成为寻找约会或浪漫伴侣的第四大最受欢迎的策略(Valkenburg & Peter, 2007)。肆无忌惮的个人已经认识到网络空间的货币化潜力,传统上通过邮件和电话进行的类似骗局和欺诈行为现在可以在网络、电子邮件和社交网站上找到。这里值得关注的是,这些网络诈骗的范围似乎正在增长(Bergiel, Bergiel, & Balsmeier, 2008)。事实上,考虑到在线约会市场的普及和该领域的重大经济影响,这可能并不奇怪,它已经成为骗子和骗子的重点(Fair, Tully, Ekdale, & Asante, 2009;Rathinaraj & Chendroyaperumal, 2010)。由于互联网的普遍可用性,除了美国以外的国家也不能幸免于这种做法。据估计,仅在澳大利亚的一个州,昆士兰人每月就因“尼日利亚”骗子而损失超过50万美元,这一数字每年以15%的速度增长。此外,墨尔本先驱太阳报报道,澳大利亚人在2011年因在线约会骗局损失了2100万美元(先驱太阳报,2011)。人们对这种行为的担忧越来越多,因为经济损失显然不是爱情骗局造成的唯一损失。它还具有严重的社会和心理方面(Ross & Smith, 2011)。这些浪漫骗局的目标是脆弱的、浪漫的或孤独的人(布坎南和惠蒂,2014)寻找爱和陪伴,骗子采用几种策略,使受害者对他们产生强烈的个人感情。受害者被鼓励与骗子建立一种亲密的虚拟个人关系,在此期间,他们表现出正常的暂时关系行为模式,如分享情感,透露个人信息,如秘密和愿望,并提供个人支持。卷入浪漫骗局的人经常将自己描述为“受害者”,即使他们没有遭受任何经济损失(Whitty, 2013)。在这一地区发生的事件中,只有在建立了深厚的信任之后,骗子才会发出求救和需要钱的电话。这种对经济支持的明显需求在受害者信任虚拟关系期间持续存在。在此期间,受害者将牺牲相当大的经济资源,当所有这些经济资源都用尽时,受害者将开始提出不同的帮助方法,这并不罕见。然而,因为骗子通常对其他援助方式不感兴趣,因为这不会产生经济利益,所以这些建议被拒绝了,正是在这个时候,大多数受害者意识到这段关系是一个骗局,并由受害者或骗子终止。在这一点上,一个重要的观察是,尽管诈骗关系可能被受害者识别并终止,但这并不意味着问题的结束。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Role of Love Stories in Romance Scams: A Qualitative Analysis of Fraudulent Profiles
IntroductionThe internet offers consumers and businesses a global marketplace which is both accessible and convenient for a wide range of services. In this space, one such service is online dating, which has evolved very quickly from its beginnings as a site of marginal interest to now become a mainstream social practice. Surveys indicate that whilst in 2003 there were an estimated 29 million Americans (two out of five singles) who used an online dating service, this would increase by 2004 to 40 million unique visitors to online dating sites each month (Edelson, 2003). Currently, it has been found that the 'online personals category' is one of the most lucrative forms of paid content on the web in the United States, with the market being worth $642 million in 2008 and $1.9 billion in 2012 (Edelson, 2003). The total profit of online dating services is estimated to be $1.4 billion per year (Rege, 2009). These revenues are said to be growing at a rate of 10 percent each year (Bridges, 2012), and it has been claimed that social networking of this kind has now become the fourth most popular strategy in finding a date or a romantic partner (Valkenburg & Peter, 2007).Unscrupulous individuals have recognized the monetizing potential of cyberspace, and the similar scams and frauds that have traditionally been conducted by mail and phone can now be found on the web, email, and social networking sites. Of considerable concern here is that the extent of these cyber scams appears to be growing (Bergiel, Bergiel, & Balsmeier, 2008). Indeed, given the popularity of the online dating market and the significant economic implications of the area, it is perhaps not surprising that this has become a key focus of fraudsters and scammers (Fair, Tully, Ekdale, & Asante, 2009; Rathinaraj & Chendroyaperumal, 2010). Because of the universal availability of the internet, countries other than the United States are not immune to this practice. In one Australian state alone, it has been estimated that Queenslanders are losing over $500K per month to "Nigerian" scammers, a figure that is growing at about 15% per year. In addition, the Melbourne Herald Sun reports that Australians lost $21 million to online dating scams in 2011 (Herald Sun, 2011).Adding to the concern regarding this practice, it is becoming apparent that financial loss is not the only damage caused by romance scams. It also has a serious social and psychological side (Ross & Smith, 2011). These romance scams target vulnerable, romantic or lonely people (Buchanan & Whitty, 2014) looking for love and companionship, and scammers employ several tactics to make the victim develop strong personal feelings for them. The victims are encouraged to build an intimate virtual personal relationship with the scammer, during which they show normal temporal relationship behaviour patterns such as sharing emotions, revealing personal information as secrets and wishes, and also providing personal support. Persons who were involved in the romance scam regularly describe themselves as a 'victim' even if they have not suffered any financial loss (Whitty, 2013).In the flow of events in this area, it is after deep trust has been established, that a call of distress and a need for money comes from the scammer. This apparent need for financial support continues over the period that the victim trusts in the virtual relationship. During this time the victim will sacrifice considerable financial resources, and it is not uncommon that when all these financial resources have been exhausted, the victim will start to suggest different ways to help. However, because the scammer is not usually interested in alternative means of aid since this does not generate financial benefit, these suggestions are rejected, and it is at this time where most victims realise that the relationship is a scam and it is terminated either by the victim or by the scammer.An important observation at this point is that although the scam relationship might be recognized and terminated by the victim, this does not signal the end of the problem. …
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
16 weeks
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.
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