A Snapshot Of Cybercrime In The UK
More than £190,000 a day is lost in the UK by victims of cyber-crime, police statistics show, with more than a third of victims in that period falling prey to the hacking of social media and email accounts.
Action Fraud said £34.6m was reported to be stolen from victims between April and September 2018, a 24% increase on the previous six months. The City of London Police, which runs Action Fraud, has warned people to keep separate passwords for online accounts. The figures show 13,357 people in the UK reported cyber-crimes over six months.
More than 5,000 of those people were hacked via their social media and email accounts, costing victims £14.8m. Commander Karen Baxter said cyber criminals were targeting people's social media accounts "in a bid to make money and steal personal details", adding it could leave victims "at risk of identity theft".
Action Fraud is the reporting centre for people scammed, defrauded or who experienced cyber-crime in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
On example is cybercrime in the UK city of York, which has increased by nearly 85 per cent in the past year, because it is seen as a wealthy area with “less tech-savvy” residents, according to police. Assistant chief constable Ciaron Irvine told a meeting that there had been a “significant increase” in scams, particularly fake emails pretending to be from the council, HMRC or TV Licensing.
A report prepared for the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner meeting revealed that reports of cybercrime in York have jumped by 84.8 per cent since 2017.
Mr Irvine said: “We’re talking about organised criminality that reflects the prosperity of the local environment and the perception of relatively easy pickings in terms of maybe the slightly older population, like the slightly less tech-savvy and vulnerable.” He said the force has begun to create local records of cyber-crime incidents so officers can take faster action to tackle the issue. But he added that unfortunately many of the criminals involved are based in Europe or beyond, so the force is focused on prevention.
Action Fraud says victims across the UK have already lost more than £830,000 to fake TV Licensing emails. And City of York Council warned residents last month about reports of scam messages claiming to be about council tax refunds that try to trick people into sharing confidential data.
The council also announced an extra £75,000 of funding in next year’s budget to invest in its own cyber security measures.
A report says: “Whilst the council fully complies with Government standards, and has significantly invested in security measures, and latest technologies, the scale of the challenge cannot be under estimated given the extensive information, and web based applications the council operates.
“This additional one off funding would allow for further work to be done complimenting existing measures, focused on our digital platforms.”
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