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Technology could be "aggravating" factor in sentencing

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Technology could be "aggravating" factor in sentencing. / Prince, Daniel; Hargreaves, Claire.
In: Benchmark, Vol. 1, No. 72, 11.2013, p. 23-24.

Research output: Contribution to specialist publicationArticle

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@misc{2138a3f0614e400b9c038464944bf413,
title = "Technology could be {"}aggravating{"} factor in sentencing",
abstract = "How do we find out about cyber criminals in the UK? This is the question Security Lancaster set out to answer at a workshop with attendees from the face of our legislative and data collection institutions, ranging from solicitors to government agencies and departments.A number of conclusions were drawn from discussions with the attendees, the majority of which indicated that the collation of suitable public data to make rational and justifiable decisions on the cyber criminal impact in the UK should be considerably improved.",
keywords = "Cyber Security, criminal justice, sentencing, cyber crime",
author = "Daniel Prince and Claire Hargreaves",
year = "2013",
month = nov,
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "23--24",
journal = "Benchmark",
publisher = "Courts and Tribunals Judiciary",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Technology could be "aggravating" factor in sentencing

AU - Prince, Daniel

AU - Hargreaves, Claire

PY - 2013/11

Y1 - 2013/11

N2 - How do we find out about cyber criminals in the UK? This is the question Security Lancaster set out to answer at a workshop with attendees from the face of our legislative and data collection institutions, ranging from solicitors to government agencies and departments.A number of conclusions were drawn from discussions with the attendees, the majority of which indicated that the collation of suitable public data to make rational and justifiable decisions on the cyber criminal impact in the UK should be considerably improved.

AB - How do we find out about cyber criminals in the UK? This is the question Security Lancaster set out to answer at a workshop with attendees from the face of our legislative and data collection institutions, ranging from solicitors to government agencies and departments.A number of conclusions were drawn from discussions with the attendees, the majority of which indicated that the collation of suitable public data to make rational and justifiable decisions on the cyber criminal impact in the UK should be considerably improved.

KW - Cyber Security, criminal justice, sentencing, cyber crime

M3 - Article

VL - 1

SP - 23

EP - 24

JO - Benchmark

JF - Benchmark

PB - Courts and Tribunals Judiciary

ER -