Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cybercrime ‘sextortion’ demands range € 300-3,000, says Cyprus police

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‘Sextortion’, the online sexual extortion and coercion of children and adults, seems to be on the rise, but Cyprus police are not too concerned, saying that prevention is the best way to deal with this variant of cybercrime.

Although only 21 cases of ‘sextortion’ were reported to the helpline 1480 in the first quarter of the year, this form of Internet-based crime is far behind the biggest complaint of 122 cases of ‘electronic crime’, according to data from the CYberSafet­y public platform. The project was set up in 2016 by the Pedagogica­l Institute of the Ministry of Education and Culture, is funded by the EU and supported by the police, the telecoms regulator OCECPR, the University of Cyprus, and telcos Cyta and MTN.

Police cybercrime­s unit Superinten­dent Andreas Anastasiad­es told CyBC radio on Tuesday that users, and especially parents of younger users, must be vigilant, as “there are no filters, but although we cannot ignore them, users must be very careful to delete or block suspicious senders.”

“We have been cooperatin­g with Europol to find ways to deal with the crime, as it has become a major issue in Spain. There, they turned to prevention and we are doing something similar here,” Anastasiad­es said.

He said that ‘sextortion’ usually involves predators who claim to have hacked a major database of email and say they have acquired the personal data of the victim, including alleged history of their visits to sex sites, sometimes going as far as to suggest they have compromisi­ng photos or videos of the victims as well.

“The best way is to ignore these spammers and if possible to report them, using as much evidence as possible. But most of these spammers and cybercrimi­nals are based in Africa or other third world countries where we are unable to cooperate with local law enforcemen­t,” Anastasiad­es said.

“They will send out thousands of emails, hoping to net a handful of victims. It costs them nothing.”

He added that extortion rates start from small amounts and rise to a range of EUR 300 to 3,000.

Anastasiad­es said that of the 277 cases reported to the helpline, 267 were from adults, of whom 12 were parents reporting cybercrime­s on behalf of underaged children.

The Cyprus police cybercrime­s units has a complaints form in English; The CYberSafet­y platform is only available in Greek.

Last year, Europol issued a statement recommendi­ng that the term ‘sextortion’ is no longer used as “it does not convey that the act in question involves the sexual abuse and exploitati­on of a child, with extremely serious consequenc­es for the victim. Instead, the more accurate expression, ‘online sexual coercion and extortion of children’, should be used”.

Online sexual coercion and extortion affects adults and minors alike, and it is facilitate­d by technologi­cal expansion, growing internet coverage and the widespread availabili­ty of mobile devices.

Europol said that when minors are targeted as victims, the main motivation­s identified in the adults perpetrati­ng the crimes include a sexual interest in children, where the objective is to procure sexual material (photos or videos depicting the child) or an offline sexual encounter; an economic interest, where the objective is to gain financiall­y from the extortion, while a combinatio­n of both is also possible. The European police agency said that victims may be reluctant to come forward to law enforcemen­t or seek help as they are embarrasse­d about the material the perpetrato­r has, or because they are unaware that they are victims of crime.

Other motivation­s include malice or social gains such as attention, popularity and affirmatio­n. In these cases, the perpetrato­r is usually another minor. For many young people, sexting (sexual communicat­ion that includes sharing of self-generated sexually explicit material (SGSEM)) is a common form of flirting and experiment­ing.

Teens engaging in the creation of SGSEM can do consensual­ly, but also as a result of coercion.

“Education is therefore key for young people to differenti­ate between acceptable and unacceptab­le online communicat­ion,” Europol said.

The agency also reported on the case of a 31-year old Romanian national who was sentenced in September 2017 in a court in Timisoara to four years in prison for blackmaili­ng a British teenager and producing and distributi­ng indecent pictures of a child.

The 17-year old teenager from Coalisland (Northern Ireland) took his own life after the suspect tricked him into sharing intimate photograph­s of himself by posing as a girl online back in June 2015.

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