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Professor Mark Button features in a round-up of articles looking at cyber security for The Conversation UK.

Mark Button

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We spend a lot of our time online, making us vulnerable to scammers.

Whether we鈥檙e , shopping, banking, studying or working, billions of people around the world spend .

This digital immersion has many benefits 鈥 and plenty of pitfalls, too. Here are just a few of the articles we鈥檝e published by academics who specialise in various aspects of online safety. They鈥檙e packed full of cautionary tales and expert advice for keeping your digital spaces safe.

Identifying online scams

Think it鈥檚 only the digitally unsophisticated who get trapped by online scammers? Think again. Cybersecurity expert Thembekile Olivia Mayayise that even some of the most seasoned internet users she knows have fallen prey to phishing scams. They hand over sensitive information like login credentials and credit card details to 鈥渟easoned and cunning scammers who have honed their skills in the world of phishing over an extended period. Some work alone; others belong to syndicates.鈥

鈥楢cademies鈥 for would-be cybercriminals

Given that some people make a career out of running online scams, it shouldn鈥檛 be a surprise that there鈥檚 a market for training aspirant cyber crooks. Cybercrime scholars Suleman Lazarus and Mark Button on west Africa鈥檚 鈥渉ustle kingdoms鈥, which are becoming common in Ghana and Nigeria. At these informal academies, people are taught to carry out digital scams. Sextortion 鈥 coercing victims into sharing sexually explicit content and threatening to make it public if the scammer is not paid 鈥 is one such strategy.

The psychology of scammers

Luckily, researchers are developing new ways to understand the psychology of online scammers. Rennie Naidoo, a professor of information systems, how behavioural science and data science could join forces to combat cybercrime. While data science can be used to identify patterns that indicate potential cyber threats, he points out, it cannot recognise the human factors that drive cybercriminal behaviour. That鈥檚 where behavioural science comes in.

Truth and lies on the internet

Disinformation and misinformation have become depressingly common in online spaces. Misinformation arises from people unwittingly spreading falsehoods; disinformation involves the deliberate, planned dissemination of lies. Fabrice Lollia鈥檚 experience as a disinformation expert means he鈥檚 well placed to for sorting lies from truth.

Keeping kids safe online

It鈥檚 not just adults who are at risk online. Children are, in many respects, more vulnerable than their parents and caregivers even though they tend to have a better practical grasp of internet technology than previous generations. Lucy Jamieson, Heidi Matisonn and Wakithi Mabaso have researched various aspects of the ethics of new and emerging technologies, with a focus on how children are affected. The trio provide for helping children navigate the risks, identify the ethical pitfalls and enjoy the benefits of social media platforms.

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