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Metacrime and Cybercrime: Exploring the Convergence and Divergence in Digital Criminality

You Zhou, Milind Tiwari, Ausma Bernot, Kai Lin

2024Asian Journal of Criminology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The advent of the metaverse has given rise to metacrime, a novel category of criminal activities occurring in the metaverse, which not only challenges conventional digital criminality but existing law enforcement frameworks. To address the scholarship vacancy, this study examines the intersections and distinctions between metacrime and conventional cybercrime by employing a multi-disciplinary literature review and comparative analysis. We identified five shared characteristics between these two crime types: crime classification , continuous evolution , hyper-spatial-temporality (global reach) , anonymity , and governance challenges . Crucially, our research highlights the distinct epistemological aspects of metacrime through its criminogenic, victimogenic, etiological, ethical, and regulatory dimensions, exemplified by virtual-to-physical attacks , immersive virtual reality attacks, victimization superrealism , complexities of human-avatar interactivity , excessive misuse of biometric data, increasingly vulnerable populations, and avatars’ liability. Our findings underscore the imperative need for tailored and forward-thinking regulatory responses to address the intricate challenges of metacrime, thereby ensuring the security and integrity of evolving digital environments.

Topics & Concepts

CybercrimeMetaverseScholarshipAvatarLaw enforcementCyberspaceAnonymityInternet privacyCriminologyComputer securitySociologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceVirtual realityLawThe InternetWorld Wide WebHuman–computer interactionCybercrime and Law Enforcement StudiesAdvanced Malware Detection TechniquesLaw, AI, and Intellectual Property
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