danish national cyber crime centre - kim aarenstrup - how to fight cyber crime
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Kim Aarenstrup, Head of CentreDanish National Cyber Crime Centre (NC3)Danish National Police24th October 2016
www.CyberRescue.co.uk
How to combat Cyber Crime the view from Denmark
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National Cyber Crime CentreNational Cyber Crime Centre
How to combat cyber crime anno 2016How to combat cyber crime anno 2016
National Cyber Crime Centre
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Perspective
• Crime development in Denmark• Upgrading the Police• Cyber-challenges• Collaboration is key
National Cyber Crime Centre
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• Traditional crime is decreasing• Cybercrime is going up!
– Financial gain is the motivator– Traditional organized crime– Easier to hide– Easy to complicate legally
(international aspect) – Lower penalties – Lower physical risk
Crime development in Denmark
National Cyber Crime Centre
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ChallengesChallenges
International borderless crime
In constant change – demanding high level of LE agility
Anonymization services (Tor) and the hidden internet (the dark web)
Virtual currencies (a.o. bitcoin) that are somewhat untraceable..
Shifting from IPv4 to IPv6 -> (4.000.000.000 (4 billion) to
340.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000..)
Exploding amounts of mobile devices globally – to hack and exploit
Slow reaction from other authorities – different priorities
CaaS -> Crime as a Service
Challenges wrt. EUROPOL engagement in the future
National Cyber Crime Centre
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Cybercrime of 2016Cybercrime of 2016
Sexual abuse of children
Illegal trade on Dark Web
Ransomware – coming in waves
CEO/BEC fraud is peaking globally
Digital driven fraud in all variants
Harassment, sextortion, hate crime, revenge porn, romance scams, DDoS
Hacktivism (targeting a.o. our politicians)
Theft of critical company IPR - research and development data
Fooling the processes for unrighthful pay-outs (incl. tax authorities)
National Cyber Crime Centre
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NC3 it-engineers in all local police districts + in NC3
A number of innovative process improvements (investigative)
New (IT) investigation technologies – 2016 ->
New national cyber crime education program – 2015 + 2016 -> Servicecentres, investigators, procecutors and IT-analysts
New public cyber crime notification platform – 2016
Research collaboration – special focus on child abuse – 2015 + 2016 ->
NC3skyt – a new PPP between NC3 and the danish private sector – 2015 + 2016 ->
World leading breakthrough on investigating virtual currencies and Darkweb
Police boosting the capacityPolice boosting the capacity
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National Cyber Crime Centre
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Cybercrime combatCybercrime combat= Monitoring, research & background= Strategic activities & initiatives
Type of crime
Modus
Victims research
Perpetrator research
Prevention
Damage mitigation
Disruption
Investigation
Prosecution
• Cybercrime ownership• An individual primary• An individual secondary• Supported by analysis & research• New crime trends swiftly detected• New ownerships• Action prioritization• Funding• Etc..
Victim notification
National Cyber Crime Centre
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NCNC33skytskyt (shelter/protection)(shelter/protection)
Cybercrime increasingly becoming a problem for society and businesses Profitable for the purpetrators = expensive for your business The more they earn, the more crime we will see Increasing burden for the police – global capacity building But we should be preventing crime, rather than investigating it Less weak links = less earnings = less crime
Jointly we are stronger Few or no conflicting interests
NC3 inviteres to collaboration on cybercrime
Email: [email protected]
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National Cyber Crime Centre
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Kim Aarenstruphead of centre
National PoliceNC3National Cyber Crime
CentrePolititorvet 14DK-1780 Copenhagen VDenmark
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