CHAPTER
ONE GENERAL INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
Although only a few would deny that the internet has had
a major impact upon criminal behavior, there is much less consensus as to what
that impact has been. Even when Nations agree that cybercrimes are a problem
there appears to be no overall consensus about how to deal with them
collectively1. All too often claims about the prevalence of
Cybercrimes lack clarification as to what it is that is particularly “cyber”
about them.
Indeed, when so called cases of cybercrime are
closely examined they often have the familiar ring of the “traditional” rather
than the “cyber” about them. These offences typically comprises: hacking2,
fraud, pornography, pedophilia and the likes. Some of these are already part of
existing criminal justice regimes in Nigeria. Perhaps more confusing is the
contrast between the many hundreds or thousands of incidents that are
supposedly reported each year and the relatively small number of known
prosecutions. “Is this a case of the absence of evidence not being evidence”,
as per secretary of state, Donald Rumsfeld”3. “Or should we be
asking if there are actually such things as cybercrimes?”4 Other
authors5 have questioned whether cybercrimes are actually categories
of crime in need of new theory, or whether they are understood better by
existing theories.
The reason why it is called cyber crime is still not understood. What is clear
is that the word cyber crime was first coined by an American writer of Science
fiction, William Gibson in(1982) and then popularized on his 1984 novel „Necromancer‟: the term
cyberspace became a popular descriptor of the mentally constructed virtual
enviroment within which networked computer activity takes place “cybercrime”
broadly describes the crimes that take place within the space and the term has
come to symbolize insecurity and risk online.
By itself, cybercrimes is fairly meaningless because
it tends to be used metaphorically and emotively rather than scientifically or
legally. Usually to signify the occurrence of harmful behavior that is somehow
related to the misuse of a networked computer
system6.
Largely an invention of the media,
„cybercrime‟ originally had no specific
reference point in law in the
United Kingdom or United States of America7
The offence that did become associated with the term
was a rather narrow legal construction based upon concerns about hacking. In
fact, many of the so called cybercrimes that have caused concern over the past
decade are not necessarily crimes in criminal law.
If we could turn the clock back in time then perhaps
theterm „cyberspace crime‟ would have been a more precise and accurate
descriptor. However, regardless of its merit and demerits, the term
„cybercrime‟ has entered the public parlance and we are stuck with it.8
Currently, the internet is so news worthy that a
single dramatic incident of cybercrime has the power to shape public opinion
and fuel public anxiety, frequently resulting in (political) demands for
instant‟ and simple solutions to extremely complex situations.
“Indeed, media accounts of cybercrimes still frequently invoke a dramatic
imagery of a vulnerable society being brought to its knees by forces beyond its
control such as an „Electronic Pearl Harbor”9‟ or a „Cyber Tsuname10.
The now defunct Omni magazine, which was published between 1978 and 1998, was one of a range of contemporary publications that combined articles on science fact with short works of science fiction to form popular technology-related narratives. It was, coincidentally, in the pages of Omni magazine, that William Gibson first coined the word „Cyberspace‟ in 1982.
As more aspects of people‟s life move to digital
networks, crime comes with them. People‟s lives increasingly depend on the
internet and digital networks, but these create new vulnerabilities and new
ways for criminal to exploit the digital environment. Not only can many
existing crimes be replicated in online environments, but novel crimes that
exploit specific features of digital networks have emerged as well, with new
crimes, comes new forms of policing and new forms of surveillance and with
these comes new dangers for civil liberties.
At the dawn of the computer age, Marshall McLuham11
predicted that new electronic media would bring the world closer together into
a “global village”. The
internet is the fulfillment of his prophecy. People scattered across the globe
can now all congregate together in cyber space to share idea and information.
Ironically, the global village leads us towards a future that revives part of
the past-life in the small village of several centuries ago. With the
prevalence of cell phone cameras, people can no longer engage in social
infractions without risking being caught in the act. No longer can people hide
in obscurity and escape accountability for their actions. People can readily
document and record each other‟s norm violations, and they can then post them online.