
Cybercrime, Security & Digital Law Enforcement - JURD7330
Faculty: Faculty of Law
School: Faculty of Law
Course Outline: See below
Campus: Sydney
Career: Postgraduate
Units of Credit: 6
EFTSL: 0.12500 (more info)
Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 3
Enrolment Requirements:
Pre-requisite: 36 UOC of JURD courses for students enrolled prior to 2013. For students enrolled after 2013, pre-requisite: 72 UOC of JURD courses.
CSS Contribution Charge: 3 (more info)
Tuition Fee: See Tuition Fee Schedule
Further Information: See Class Timetable
View course information for previous years.
Description
Course Objectives
- Articulate the main elements of various cybercrime offences
- Understand the unique challenges posed to law enforcement agents, policy makers and prosecutors
- Appreciate the level of technical complexity and evolving issues in high tech crime
- To be able to engage in debate on policy reform in the area
- Explain and provide better instruction to a digital forensic specialist
- Completion of an independent research essay of peer-review quality
Main Topics
- Introduction: The nature of cybercrime
- National and international legal and policy frameworks
- The technologies behind cybercrime (domain name system, web-poisoning, web hi-jacking, fast-flux, rock phish, dynamic ip addresses, spam, botnets, irc, p2p, encrypted channels)
- Electronic theft and corporate espionage
- Malware, viruses, hacking
- Cyber-stalking
- Child pornography and child abuse materials
- Criminal enforcement of intellectual property rights (Copyright and illicit p2p fileswapping)
- Security, cyber-terrorism, and attacks to critical infrastructure
- Digital forensics issues
- Hands-on forensics examination (In computer lab)
Assessment
Peer Review of Another Student’s Essay (20%)
Independent Research Essay ( 60%) 6000 words