Cyber and Internet Law — Computer Intrusion

Dear Blog Members: In this first blog I have posted information that was obtained from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s website relating cyber crimes and computer intrusions. As an attorney, I believe that consumers need to be aware of the risks involved in using computers at home or your workplace. Please read the following excerpt and contact me if you have any questions or concerns.

My website is

www.atrizadeh.com
. Thank you!


Every day, criminals are invading countless homes and offices across the nation,—not by breaking down windows and doors, but by breaking into laptops, personal computers, and wireless devices via hacks and bits of malicious code.

The collective impact is staggering. Billions of dollars are lost every year repairing systems hit by such attacks. Some take down vital systems, disrupting and sometimes disabling the work of hospitals, banks, and 9-1-1 services around the country.

Who is behind such attacks? It runs the gamut,—from computer geeks looking for bragging rights,AePto businesses trying to gain an upper hand in the marketplace by hacking competitor websites, from rings of criminals wanting to steal your personal information and sell it on black markets,AePto spies and terrorists looking to rob our nation of vital information or launch cyber strikes.

Today, these computer intrusion cases,—counterterrorism, counterintelligence, and criminal,—are the paramount priorities of our cyber program because of their potential relationship to national security.

Combating the threat. In recent years, we’ve built a whole new set of technological and investigative capabilities and partnerships,—so we’re as comfortable chasing outlaws in cyberspace as we are down back alleys and across continents. That includes:

A Cyber Division at FBI Headquarters “to address cyber crime in a coordinated and cohesive manner”;

Specially trained cyber squads at FBI headquarters and in each of our 56 field offices, staffed with “agents and analysts who protect against investigate computer intrusions, theft of intellectual property and personal information, child pornography and exploitation, and online fraud”;

New Cyber Action Teams that “travel around the world on a moment’s notice to assist in computer intrusion cases” and that “gather vital intelligence that helps us identify the cyber crimes that are most dangerous to our national security and to our economy;”

Our 93 Computer Crimes Task Forces nationwide that “combine state-of-the-art technology and the resources of our federal, state, and local counterparts”;

A growing partnership with other federal agencies, including the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, and others,—which share similar concerns and resolve in combating cyber crime.

See

http://www.fbi.gov/cyberinvest/computer_intrusions.htm

for more information