Posts Tagged ‘crime’

Do you believe if more kids attended school, there would be less crime? Studying the relationship between school attendance and crime goes back more than 200 years. Many people believe that better crime control measures should involve vigorous police work, or strict law enforcement.

For thousands of years and long before the mandatory school attendance, crime has prevailed. Violence and even references to youth gangs are all refferenced in the Holy Bible.

American’s views about education and crime were referenced in a January 10, 1931 Literary Digest, article entitled “What We Shall Be Like in 1950.”. The article mentioned prophecies made by the National Education Association adapted from a publication called Tomorrow’s Business, which said, “Crime will be virtually abolished by transferring to the preventive processes of the school and education the problems of conduct which police, courts, and prisons now remedy when it is too late.”

One student drops out every 26 seconds in America. One Harvard study found that black students fall behind by the time they are three years old. Three of the one million New York students are a minority, with 70 percent impoverished.

Many experts believe school causes crime more than it prevents it, and this is not necessarily a new belief. Henry Fielding said in his day, “Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality.” Henry Fielding lived from 1707 to 1754.

 

Indian Approach towards the Fight against Cyber Crime

INTRODUCTION

 

Internet in India is growing rapidly. It has given rise to new opportunities in every field we can think of, be it entertainment, business, sports or education. Internet also has its own disadvantages. One of the major disadvantages is Cybercrime – illegal activity committed on the internet. The internet, along with its advantages, has also exposed citizens to security risks that come with connecting to a large network. Computers today are being misused for illegal activities like e-mail espionage, credit card fraud, spam’s, software piracy and so on; criminal activities in the cyberspace are on the rise. As the cases of cybercrime grow, there is a growing need to prevent them.

Legislation   

 

Information Technology Act (IT Act) 2000

 

The government of India introduced the Information Technology Act, on 17th October 2000. Information Technology Act (IT Act) 2000, is the India’s only cyber law. The IT Act is aimed to provide legal recognition for transactions carried out by means of electronic data interchange and other means of electronic communication, commonly referred to as “electronic commerce”.

 

India has done a good job by enacting a cyber law. It is the 12th country of the world having a cyber law. It covers areas like e-governance, e-commerce, cyber contraventions and cyber offences.

Information Technology ACT 2000 Effects in Combating Cyber Crime

 

Copyright (c) 2008 Ed Opperman

With more people using the internet, and the availability of the internet on every street corner, there has been a drastic increase in cyber crime. These can be committed against large companies, and individuals. It is easy for large companies and large wallets to stop cyber crime, but what about those on limited budgets? What is the solution for those who have fallen victim to cyber crimes?

First it is important to understand what cyber crime is. Cyber crime is a crime committed online via emails, or chatrooms or any other form of interaction that can take place online. It does not vary much from the same criminal misconducts committed in real life. The only difference is the fact that it is much harder to pursue these types of criminals, because they transcend the typical borders associated with countries and the jurisdictions of various law enforcement agencies may clash as a result.

Cybercrime can take the form of cyber stalking, where they follow you around into various chat rooms and harass you online. This can also be things like a hacker taking control of your computer or someone stealing your identity online. Everything can be destroyed by cyber criminals. They can wipe entire hard drives, steal your entire life and everything about it and essentially just mess with your entire world.

How can you protect yourself from becoming a victim of cyber crime?

With more people using the internet, and the availability of the internet on every street corner, there has been a drastic increase in cyber crime. These can be committed against large companies, and individuals. It is easy for large companies and large wallets to stop cyber crime, but what about those on limited budgets? What is the solution for those who have fallen victim to cyber crimes?

First it is important to understand what cyber crime is. Cyber crime is a crime committed online via emails, or chatrooms or any other form of interaction that can take place online. It does not vary much from the same criminal misconducts committed in real life. The only difference is the fact that it is much harder to pursue these types of criminals, because they transcend the typical borders associated with countries and the jurisdictions of various law enforcement agencies may clash as a result.

Cybercrime can take the form of cyber stalking, where they follow you around into various chat rooms and harass you online. This can also be things like a hacker taking control of your computer or someone stealing your identity online. Everything can be destroyed by cyber criminals. They can wipe entire hard drives, steal your entire life and everything about it and essentially just mess with your entire world.

How can you protect yourself from becoming a victim of cyber crime?

Yes, I am making the shocking allegation that you are aiding and abetting crime by simply reading the newspaper, but hear me out.

Let me give the background first. There have been at least eighteen victims of knife crime in London over the period of eight months since January 2008. Newspaper reports indicate that the number of people charged with knife crimes have fallen by 50%, and at the same time the number of teenage murders involving knifes have risen dramatically.

A teenager that lives in one of the most dangerous areas in London was quoted as saying “How are the police or the government going to be able to sort this out if we as kids don’t know why this sort of stuff’s going on?” This child is very wise.

The response of the local government is a website called London Against Gun and Knife Crime. Obviously the creators of the website have never heard of the Law of Attraction.

How does this Law of Attraction work? I will give you my understanding of how it works. We think thoughts and these thoughts create waves all around us. The waves resonate with similar waves and then we attract the similar waves to us. The whole process snowball until our thoughts materialise.

Let me give you an example. You read the newspaper. There are articles about crime and bad news and negativity all over the pages. You do not think about this and step back and say “I want love in my life”. You read it all and think “I hope I don’t ever get mugged.”

We are all used to the looks of crime scenes in movies, and there is a standard picture one can easily associate with a wrong-doing: the crime scene tape surrounding a perimeter where access is restricted to unauthorized personnel. Well, the truth is that such scenes are actually imitating the real model, as things are carried on the same way in daily police investigations. So if you’re a simple passer-by and you come across an area surrounded with crime scene tape, you can definitely imagine something went really wrong there. Many people stick around to learn what truly happened, some others merely mind their business, without getting involved in the matter.

Crime scene tape has its specificity: it is usually designed according to a double color pattern mainly relying on contrast. The most common design created for a crime scene tape is the striped black and yellow model, eventually including some warning or message against trespassing. Other types of crime scene tape are designed in silver and red or orange and blue usually depending on the producer’s preferences. Furthermore, it is not uncommon for this kind of tape to also include reflective properties, since it is often used on highways or crowded streets to isolate a perimeter, and visibility of the sector would be a crucial issue.