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(5 reviews)
Author: Will Gragido
ISBN : 1597497401
New from $27.24
Format: PDF
Download for free books Free Blackhatonomics: An Inside Look at the Economics of Cybercrime [Paperback] from with Mediafire Link Download Link
Blackhatonomics explains the basic economic truths of the underworld of hacking, and why people around the world devote tremendous resources to developing and implementing malware. The book provides an economic view of the evolving business of cybercrime, showing the methods and motivations behind organized cybercrime attacks, and the changing tendencies towards cyber-warfare. Written by an exceptional author team of Will Gragido, Daniel J Molina, John Pirc and Nick Selby, Blackhatonomics takes practical academic principles and backs them up with use cases and extensive interviews, placing you right into the mindset of the cyber criminal.
- Historical perspectives of the development of malware as it evolved into a viable economic endeavour
- Country specific cyber-crime analysis of the United States, China, and Russia, as well as an analysis of the impact of Globalization on cyber-crime.
- Presents the behind the scenes methods used to successfully execute financially motivated attacks in a globalized cybercrime economy.
- Provides unique insights, analysis, and useful tools for justifying corporate information security budgets.
- Provides multiple points of view, from pure research, to corporate, to academic, to law enforcement.
- Includes real world cybercrime case studies and profiles of high-profile cybercriminals.
Books with free ebook downloads available Free Blackhatonomics: An Inside Look at the Economics of Cybercrime [Paperback]
- Paperback: 216 pages
- Publisher: Syngress; 1 edition (December 19, 2012)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1597497401
- ISBN-13: 978-1597497404
- Product Dimensions: 0.7 x 7.3 x 9 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Free Blackhatonomics: An Inside Look at the Economics of Cybercrime
"Blackhatonomics" is an ambitious, and indeed a courageous effort, considering the depth and scope of the subject matter, to explain the rise of cyber-crime and cyber-criminality from the earliest days of Phone phreaking to the "Cracking, Hacking, and Hactivism" of today. In a large measure, the authors succeed in their slim, but directly concise offering. Each author brings an individual perspective and a wealth of knowledge and a deep understanding of not only the problems associated with cyber-crime, but many useful solutions as well.
Taking on such a complex, technical, and often controversial subject as Cyber-crime, where often there is no legal consensus, much less a universally accepted definition of what constitutes a "cybercrime" in the first place, is indeed daunting. Experts and lay-persons alike often have their own opinions, informed or not about what cyber-crime is now, and what cyber-crime has been, and what cyber threats hold for the future. The authors themselves are not shy in enumerating the challenges faced by those who are charged with protecting each of us, and all of us from those who would take what they will in property and treasure through deception, fraud, and outright theft by exploiting a host of vulnerabilities found in cyberspace. "Blackhatonomics" should be required reading for anyone interested in cyber-security, if not by all who "surf" the World Wide Web, which has become, in many cases very much the "Wild, Wild West" when it comes to cyber-crime, and cyber-criminals.
Names are named. Exploits revealed, and law enforcement successes recounted. The history of the birth, growth, and expansion of cyberspace, from ARPANET to the WWW we know today is well explained and documented within the pages of this very readable work.
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