Comprehensive Review of Cybercrime Detection Techniques

Date

2020-07-22

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

2169-3536

Volume Title

Publisher

IEEE

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Cybercrimes are cases of indictable offences and misdemeanors that involve computers or communication tools as targets and commission instruments or are associated with the prevalence of computer technology. Common forms of cybercrimes are child pornography, cyberstalking, identity theft, cyber laundering, credit card theft, cyber terrorism, drug sale, data leakage, sexually explicit content, phishing, and other forms of cyber hacking. They mostly lead to a privacy breach, security violation, business loss, financial fraud, or damage in public and government properties. Thus, this study intensively reviews cybercrime detection and prevention techniques. It first explores the different types of cybercrimes and discusses their threats against privacy and security in computer systems. Then, it describes the strategies that cybercriminals may utilize in committing these crimes against individuals, organizations, and societies. It also reviews the existing techniques of cybercrime detection and prevention. It objectively discusses the strengths and critically analyzes the vulnerabilities of each technique. Finally, it provides recommendations for the development of a cybercrime detection model that can detect cybercrimes effectively compared with the existing techniques.

Description

© 2020 The Authors. Published by IEEE. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence. The published version can be accessed at the following link on the publisher’s website: https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3011259

Keywords

Security, Cybercrime detection techniques, Neural network, Fuzzy logic, Machine learning, Data mining

Citation

Al-Khater, W.A., Al-Maadeed, S., Ahmed, A.A., Sadiq, A.S. and Khan, M.K. (2020) Comprehensive Review of Cybercrime Detection Techniques. IEEE Access, 8, pp. 137293-137311

Rights

Research Institute