Police vs cartels in the high-tech battle to stop cybercrime
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Law enforcement goes high-tech to keep up with criminals
- More international co-operation needed to tackle borderless crime
- Cybercrime costs the global economy an estimated $400 billion a year
CNN's coverage of Web Summit, in Dublin, looks at how technology is changing the world.
(CNN) -- Cybercrime costs the global economy an estimated $400 billion a year, and as it grows in scale and sophistication, law enforcement is having to do the same.
The U.S. secret service helped prevent over $1 billion in fraud losses from cybercrime last year, but it is up against skilled and organized international crime networks.
Ed Lowery, a special
agent at the U.S. Secret Service Investigative Division, has witnessed
the criminals becoming increasingly sophisticated. "What we've seen
develop over the last 10 to 15 years has been cartel behavior from
individuals who ... have developed a very, very intricate criminal
conspiracy or criminal consortium to commit crimes against assets of the
United States, ex-filtrate data and then monetize that data around the
world," he says.
With hackers driven by a
desire to make a fast buck, or by political motives, cybercrime and
geopolitical tension often go hand in hand. Whether it is China or
Russia, this is a major challenge for law enforcement.
We need to up our game in terms of developing our digital forensics skills.
Rob Wainwright, director Europol
Rob Wainwright, director Europol
"We've developed our
expertise dealing with the East European, Russian-language speaking
cyber criminals," says Lowery. "Over the course of the last decade it's
become very apparent that those individuals are the highest caliber, the
most prolific and probably the most damaging cyber criminals that are
out there.
"They are operating from
many places where the U.S. and international law enforcement does not
have the same level of cooperation."
Rob Wainwright, the
director of European law enforcement agency Europol, agrees. "It's fine
for the U.S. and Europe to work together, but where a lot of
cybercriminals work, according to the community themselves, is in other
parts of the world where relations are much more tense with the West,"
he says.
From its base in the Netherlands, Europol is spearheading Europe's cyber policing. Its Cybercrime Center,
which opened in January 2013, aims to be a focal point for gathering
data and developing tools to detect and prosecute cybercrime. But much
more needs to be done to tackle what has become a truly global problem,
according to Wainwright.

"We need to up our game
in terms of developing our digital forensics skills, and certainly in
terms of our international coordination," he says. "Here at Europol
we've succeeded in bringing together some of the major agencies across
the globe, including those in the United States, to help us fight the
biggest syndicates here, but we need much greater international
cooperation."
He adds: "It's not the
first time, of course, that certain geopolitical circumstances can
impede the way in which we can operate against criminal terrorist
groups. That's a fact of life and it's something we rely on our
political leaders to deal with, and it's important we establish
effective police-to-police channels of cooperation."
One way that policing can stay ahead is through consistency -- one set of laws for everyone who uses the Internet.
This is obviously a unique skillset and it takes years to develop that skillset.
Ed Lowery, U.S. Secret Service Investigative Division
Ed Lowery, U.S. Secret Service Investigative Division
"There's one other thing
that's very important here and that's making sure that we have an
up-to-date and modern legislative framework that can allow us to fight
criminals online in the same way that police fight criminals in the real
world," says Wainwright.
"At the moment the
legislation which allows us, for example, to detect the criminals online
and allows us to decrypt the way in which they're working, is pretty
deficient, actually, and certainly not aligned across different
jurisdictions."
The challenge for
policing isn't just at the macro level of international co-operation and
legal frameworks; a shortage of law enforcement officers with the right
expertise in specialized cyber skills is still a problem.
"This is obviously a unique skillset and it takes years to develop that skillset," says Lowery.
But even in this world
of high-tech criminality matched by high-tech policing, old-fashioned
investigative skills still have their part to play.
"You need a very highly
skilled cadre, you still need to be able to develop evidence that will
stand up in a court of law," says Lowery. "We have to be sure that the
individual that we are going to charge with that crime is absolutely the
individual that committed the crime. To do that takes a lot of
old-school detective work."
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