Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity

Identity theft and related fraudulent activities affect approximately one in twenty-five adults each year across western societies. The Internet provides a new avenue for obtaining identity tokens and identifying information and increases the scale on which identity theft can be perpetrated. Recent...

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Main Authors: Roberts, Lynne, Indermaur, D., Spiranovic, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4887
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author Roberts, Lynne
Indermaur, D.
Spiranovic, C.
author_facet Roberts, Lynne
Indermaur, D.
Spiranovic, C.
author_sort Roberts, Lynne
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Identity theft and related fraudulent activities affect approximately one in twenty-five adults each year across western societies. The Internet provides a new avenue for obtaining identity tokens and identifying information and increases the scale on which identity theft can be perpetrated. Recent research has suggested that fear of these types of crimes now matches or exceeds the fear of traditional place-based crimes, and has the potential to curtail online activities and hinder the further development of e-commerce applications. In this article, we conduct exploratory research identifying predictors of fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activities, based on the analysis of items included in the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes (2007). Fear was predicted by a generalized fear of crime component and a specific Internet exposure component. Traditional predictors of fear of crime were insignificant or weak predictors, highlighting the need for further research.
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publishDate 2013
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-48872017-09-13T14:43:27Z Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity Roberts, Lynne Indermaur, D. Spiranovic, C. Identity theft and related fraudulent activities affect approximately one in twenty-five adults each year across western societies. The Internet provides a new avenue for obtaining identity tokens and identifying information and increases the scale on which identity theft can be perpetrated. Recent research has suggested that fear of these types of crimes now matches or exceeds the fear of traditional place-based crimes, and has the potential to curtail online activities and hinder the further development of e-commerce applications. In this article, we conduct exploratory research identifying predictors of fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activities, based on the analysis of items included in the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes (2007). Fear was predicted by a generalized fear of crime component and a specific Internet exposure component. Traditional predictors of fear of crime were insignificant or weak predictors, highlighting the need for further research. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4887 10.1080/13218719.2012.672275 Routledge fulltext
spellingShingle Roberts, Lynne
Indermaur, D.
Spiranovic, C.
Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title_full Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title_fullStr Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title_full_unstemmed Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title_short Fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
title_sort fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activity
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4887