Chapter 23 resources for the Cyberlaw book
By John Bandler
This page has resources specific for this chapter.
Looking to navigate to another place?
- Cyberlaw Book Resources (main resources page)
- Cyberlaw main book page
- Udemy course on cyberlaw
- Previous chapter
- Next chapter
Chapter 23 Solving the cybercrime problem
Chapter references, resources, and additional reading
- Chapter 23 resources, https://johnbandler.com/cyberlawbook-resources-ch23/ (this page)
- Solving the cybercrime problem, https://johnbandler.com/solving-the-cybercrime-problem/, to access the PDF file at https://johnbandler.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Bandler-ReutersLN-Cybercrime-Problem-2023-3-21.pdf
- Addressing cybercrime properly, https://johnbandler.com/addressing-cybercrime-properly/
- Cybercrime Investigations (2020 book)
Chapter questions
- Should state and local law enforcement and prosecutors be able to do a reasonable investigation of cybercrime or is that something only federal authorities should handle. Briefly summarize.
- Assume that cybercriminals are motivated by principles of risk, which means they consider the likelihood of being caught, and then the potential punishment if they are caught. Assume there is zero chance that they will be caught, and they know this. Would it matter what the punishment might be?
Links and information
- The book: Cyberlaw: Law for Digital Spaces and Information Systems, by John Bandler
- Cyberlaw Book Resources (main resources page)
- Cyberlaw book FAQ
- Cyberlaw main book page
- Amazon - John's Author page
- Udemy online course on cyberlaw (other online courses too)
- Services
This page is hosted at https://johnbandler.com/cyberlawbook-resources-ch23, copyright John Bandler, all rights reserved.
Originally posted 11/21/2024. Updated 11/24/2024.