Which is the greater threat to the nation—cyber-crime directed against individuals or terrorist cyber-attacks on national institutions? Which is the greater crime one could ask, a crime against one or the same crime against many? If you are the individual, you whole heartedly believe the greater crime is the one against you. For an individual’s life is turned upside down when they have been the target in a cyber-crime. Furthermore, if one has the resources or the knowhow to fend off personal cyber-crime, one can see that cyber-terror is a much larger and broader crime that can affect from hundreds to millions of people, when targeted. Cyber-crime to the individual can be cyber-bullying, social media hack, identity theft, or many others yet to be defined. Cyber-bullying is bullying of the cyber age. No …show more content…
He/she goes to the internet and posts a meme of you, or he/she attacks you on your social media feed. Cyber-bullying sounds manageable right, but in face to face the only one in action is the ringleader whiles, cyberbullying the onlookers also hurl insults. With the combined additional insults and a constantly connected, to the next generation this is the end of the world for them. It soon will move from the third leading cause of suicide to the leading (Pinto 4-5). Social-media hack could be as simple as FB graph search (Perez). A social-media hack could be defined as a cyber age stalker, if he be not malicious. Using FB graph search, one could search and find a plethora of photographs with a long data history on a person that he/she has become obsessed with; all the while the target completely unaware that he/she has become a target of a stalker. Both previous examples can be side barred and considered trivial and juvenile at the same time, but we can agree that identity theft is catastrophic