English

Cyber security insights into self-proclaimed virtual world hackers

Cryptography and Security 2019-08-30 v1

Abstract

Virtual worlds have become highly popular in recent years with reports of over a billion people accessing these environments and the virtual goods market growing to near 50 billion US dollars. An undesirable outcome to this popularity and market value is thriving criminal activity in these worlds. The most profitable cyber security problem in virtual worlds is named Virtual Property Theft. The aim of this study is to use an online survey to gain insight into how hackers (n=100) in these synthetic worlds conduct their criminal activity. This survey is the first to report an insight into the criminal mind of hackers (virtual thieves). Results showed a clear-cut profile of a virtual property thief, they appear to be mainly aged 20-24 years of age, live in the United States of America, while using virtual worlds for 5-7 hours a day. These and the other key results of this study will provide a pathway for designing an effective anti-theft framework capable of abolishing this cyber security issue.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.11010,
  title  = {Cyber security insights into self-proclaimed virtual world hackers},
  author = {Nicholas Patterson and Michael Hobbs and Frank Jiang and Lei Pan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.11010},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

15 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:59:32.429Z