Exam 10: Policing the Internet
Exam 1: Cybercrime and the Internet an Introduction13 Questions
Exam 2: Researching and Theorizing Cybercrime18 Questions
Exam 3: Hackers, Crackers, and Viral Coders18 Questions
Exam 4: Political Hacking20 Questions
Exam 5: Virtual Pirates21 Questions
Exam 6: Cyber-Frauds, Scams and Cons19 Questions
Exam 7: Illegal, Harmful and Offensive Content Online: From Hate Speech to the Dangers of Pornography18 Questions
Exam 8: Child Pornography and Child Sex Abuse Imagery22 Questions
Exam 9: The Victimization of Individuals Online: Cyberstalking and Paedophilia19 Questions
Exam 10: Policing the Internet17 Questions
Exam 11: Cybercrimes and Cyberliberties: Surveillance, Privacy and Crime Control18 Questions
Exam 12: Looking Toward the Future of Cybercrime6 Questions
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The Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection is an alliance of _______________.?
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A
_______________ involves the collecting analysing and reporting on digital data in a way that is legally admissible.?
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A
In 1998, the Clinton Administration created this organization which was tasked with the management of internet domain names and IP addresses as well as promoting the operational stability of the internet.?
(Multiple Choice)
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From an individual consumer perspective, the greatest investment in Internet policing technologies falls in the areas of _______________.?
(Multiple Choice)
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_______________ is the principle that holds that freedom from criminal predation, and protection from it, is the right of all citizens. This is a principle said to be compromised by the privatization of information security.?
(Multiple Choice)
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In terms of cybercrime units, Willits and Nowacki (2016) state that _______________.?
(Multiple Choice)
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The _______________ in the UK absorbed both the Serious and Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) and the Police Central e-crime Unit (PCeU), which handles cybercrime cases.?
(Multiple Choice)
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This organisation was founded by lawyers, policy analysts, activists, and technologists in 1990 to preserve and defend free speech online and to combat attempts at censorship via litigation against the US government and large corporations.?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is not a challenge law enforcement face in combating and policing cybercrime?
(Multiple Choice)
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Many scholars argue that policing cybercrime has become more 'pluralized,' meaning that _______________.?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is typically not an IT security service offered by 'for-profit,' or private sector entities?
(Multiple Choice)
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This term refers to non-state actors who work to punish or bring others to account in response to a perceived or actual dearth of institutional remedies.?
(Multiple Choice)
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This organisation was founded in 1996 in the UK with an initial intent to combat child pornography, then later expanded to cover both criminally obscene (but non-child-oriented) content and instances of hate speech on the Internet.?
(Multiple Choice)
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This is a form of governance wherein the government is not the central authority within a cooperative, but just one of the actors involved.?
(Multiple Choice)
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Wall (2007) states that cybercrimes may fall into 'the de minimis trap.' In other words, _______________.?
(Multiple Choice)
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