Litcius/Paper detail

Cybercrime is (often) boring: Infrastructure and alienation in a deviant subculture

Ben Collier, Richard Clayton, Alice Hutchings, Daniel Thomas

2021The British Journal of Criminology48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The boredom and alienation produced by capitalist societies and countervailing forces of attraction and excitement are at the heart of the subcultural account of crime. The underground hacker subculture is no exception, commonly represented as based around exciting, technically skilled practices and high-profile deviance. However, the illicit economy associated with these practices has become industrialized, developing shared infrastructures that facilitate the sale of illicit services rather than skilled technical work. We explore how this shift in the nature of work has shaped the culture and experiences of this subculture. Developing a novel concept—the ‘illicit infrastructure’—and drawing on an extensive analysis of empirical data from interviews and novel data sources such as forums and chat channels, we argue that as they industrialize, deviant subcultures can begin to replicate the division of labour, cultural tensions and conditions of alienation present in mainstream capitalist economies.

Topics & Concepts

AlienationSubculture (biology)Deviance (statistics)MainstreamHackerCybercrimeSociologyCriminologyExtortionPolitical scienceLawThe InternetComputer securityStatisticsWorld Wide WebComputer scienceMathematicsBiologyBotanyCybercrime and Law Enforcement StudiesCrime, Illicit Activities, and GovernanceCrime Patterns and Interventions