Earticle

The Internet is not Always Malicious : An Empirical Investigation of Socioeconomic Status, Social Capital, and Internet Crime

원문정보

초록

영어
When is the Internet used maliciously for criminal activity? This study examines the conditions under which the Internet is associated with cybercriminal offense. Using comprehensive state-level data in the United States during 2003-2010, our findings demonstrate that there is no clear empirical evidence that Internet penetration is correlated with the Internet crime perpetrators, though the effects of Internet on cybercriminal activities are contingent upon connection speed and socioeconomic factors. Contrary to narrowband, broadband connections are significantly and positively associated with the Internet crime perpetrators. Strikingly, the moderating effects of socioeconomic status are significant only in the absence of social capital. In U.S. states with low social capital, the Internet crime perpetrators increase with the Internet usage when the local economy grew with more education, less unemployment rate, and less population in poverty. Income inequality there also positively moderates the effects of Internet on cybercrime perpetrators. Some implications to reconcile the conflicting consequences of Internet penetration are discussed.

목차

Abstract
 Ⅰ. Introduction
 Ⅱ. Hypothesis Development
  Internet Crime and Socioeconomic Status
  Internet Crime and Social Capital
 Ⅲ. Data
 Ⅳ. Empirical Model
  Internet Penetration, Broadband, and Internet Crime
  The Role of Socioeconomic Status and Social Capital
 Ⅵ. Discussion and Conclusions
 Acknowledgments
 References
 Appendix

저자

  • Jiyong Park [ 한국과학기술원 (KAIST) 경영대학 ]
  • Daegon Cho [ 한국과학기술원 (KAIST) 경영대학 ]
  • Jae Kyu Lee [ 한국과학기술원 (KAIST) 경영대학 ]
  • Byungtae Lee [ 한국과학기술원 (KAIST) 경영대학 ]

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    간행물 정보

    • 간행물
      한국경영정보학회 정기 학술대회 [KMIS Conference]
    • 간기
      반년간
    • 수록기간
      1990~2025
    • 십진분류
      KDC 325 DDC 658