canadian clearinghouse on cyberstalking ncfta presentation

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An introduction to the Clearinghouse project, including: a statistical view of cyberstalking in Canada; and common victim and offender characteristics; the common ways of resolving harassment; a view of our objectives and goals; and specific features the final Clearinghouse web site will possess.

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Page 1: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Research Education Self-Help Referral

National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance Canada

Nov. 25, 2010

Page 2: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Randy McCall

President, Victim Assistance Online

Project Manager

Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking

Webmaster and Internet consultant:

• Police Victim Services of British Columbia

•World Society of Victimology

Page 3: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Objective:

To create a bilingual web-based Canadian information and referral

resource, through which to provide information and assistance for adult resource, through which to provide information and assistance for adult

victims of online criminal harassment – as defined by the Criminal Code

of Canada – commonly known as cyberstalking

Page 4: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Goals:

Create a clearinghouse for news, information and research useful to

professionals working with adult cyberstalking victims, in the form of professionals working with adult cyberstalking victims, in the form of

a searchable database linking to publicly available materials

Create public education materials on the crime of cyberstalking

Create a self-help resource for victims of cyberstalking

Create a reference or referral system to connect victims with

assisting agencies, institutions or organizations

Page 5: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Who is producing the Clearinghouse project?

Canadian Resource Centre for

Victims of Crime

Victim Assistance Online

http://www.vaonline.org/Victims of Crime

http://www.crcvc.ca/

http://www.vaonline.org/

Victim’s Fund, Department of Justice

http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/pi/pcvi-

cpcv/proj.html

Page 6: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Defining Terminology

Criminal Harassment

"No person shall … engage in conduct ... that "No person shall … engage in conduct ... that

causes that other person reasonably … to fear

for their safety or the safety of anyone known

to them”

Criminal Harassment §264

Page 7: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Defining Terminology

“…When the Internet, cell phones or other

Cyberbullying

“…When the Internet, cell phones or other

devices are used to send or post text or images

intended to hurt or embarrass another

person.“

US National Crime Prevention Council

Page 8: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Defining Terminology

Cyberstalking

Ongoing criminal harassment via electronic Ongoing criminal harassment via electronic

networks which creates a reasonable fear for

life or safety of person

Page 9: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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How serious is cyberstalking in Canada?

In 2009, 80% of Canadians aged 16 and older,

or 21.7 million people, used the Internet for

personal reasons, up from 73% in 2007 when

the survey was last conducted. the survey was last conducted. Canadian Internet Use Survey, Statscan, 2010

Page 10: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

How serious is cyberstalking in Canada?

34,108,800 population of Canada, 2010

As no statistics on cyberstalking in Canada are

available, we will approximate using statistics from

a country with similar culture, technology and

Stalking Victims = 13.9 per 1000 of general pop.

25% of these suffered some form of cyberstalking

Of the cyberstalked group, 5% reported the use of

electronic monitoring

Of those monitored, 45% reported malware or

hacking, and 9.7% reported being tracked by GPS

a country with similar culture, technology and

Internet penetration: USA Stalking Report 2009

Page 11: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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How serious is cyberstalking in Canada?

34,108,800 population of Canada

By using our population, but applying statistics from

the Special Report, we get rough approximations of

potential levels of electronic harassment in Canada

474,112 victims of stalking in any 12 month period

118,528 potential Canadian victims

5926 potential Canadian electronic monitoring

victims

2667 malware and 574 GPS tracking potential victims

potential levels of electronic harassment in Canada

Page 12: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Literature review: cases constituting criminal cyberstalking?

( Bernard Reyns, 2010)

118,525 potential victims of cyberstalking

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Page 13: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Do these cases constitute cyberstalking?

118,525 potential Canadian victims of electronic harassment

Results of studies which used the most and least stringent test for a case to be

considered criminal, and average of results of the studies. Applying these to

the approximated number of Canadian being harassed online gives:

3.7% of sample (most stringent definition)

7.2% of sample (2nd most stringent)

20% average of samples

31% of sample (loosest definition)

the approximated number of Canadian being harassed online gives:

Page 14: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Do these cases constitute cyberstalking?

118,525 potential Canadian victims of electronic harassment

The number of cases in any 12 month period which, statistically, could fall

within the legal definition of criminal cyberstalking in Canada; incidents which

cause fear of life or safety.

4386 victims of cyberstalking

8534 victims of cyberstalking

23,705 victims of cyberstalking

36,744 victims of cyberstalking

cause fear of life or safety.

Page 15: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Who is being cyberstalked?

Working to Halt Online Abuse: WHO@ http://www.haltabuse.org/

2009 Victimization Statistics, most common victim type:2009 Victimization Statistics, most common victim type:

Female (78%)

18-30 years old (34%) | 31-40 (30%) | 41+ (32%)

Caucasian (69.5%)

Single (43%) or of unknown status (34%).

Page 16: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Who is being cyberstalked?

Working to Halt Online Abuse: WHO@ http://www.haltabuse.org/

2009 Offender Statistics, most common features:2009 Offender Statistics, most common features:

Male (48%)

Previous connection with victim (64%)

No previous connection (29%)

Offender located outside victim’s

region/country (64%)

Page 17: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Who is being cyberstalked?

Working to Halt Online Abuse: WHO@ http://www.haltabuse.org/

2009 Progression of cases:2009 Progression of cases:

Escalation (66%)

Threats to life or safety (16.5%)

E-mail and web forums were the most common mediums

72% reported offence to some authority before contact WHO@

Page 18: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Who is being cyberstalked?

Working to Halt Online Abuse: WHO@ http://www.haltabuse.org/

2009 Resolution of cases, in order of effectiveness:2009 Resolution of cases, in order of effectiveness:

• Victim changed e-mail address, ISP, username and/or password

• Reported incident to stalker’s ISP(s)

• Victim was referred to law enforcement

• Reported case to web site host / owner

• Reported case to MySpace

• Reported incident to moderator

• Reported to social networking or specialty site

• Referred victim to lawyer

Note that victims could take most actions themselves, if they knew how

Page 19: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Canadian cyberstalking assistance

Organizations for Canadian cyberstalking victims: 0

Canadian websites specifically on cyberstalking : 0

• Crime victim service sites

• Domestic violence agencies

• Internet Service Providers

• Internet information services

Nature of Canadian sites with cyberstalking information

• Law enforcement agencies

• Privacy organizations

• Sexual assault crisis agencies

• Victims rights advocacy organizations

Information presented tended to reference prevention. Little on what to do once

electronic harassment had begun, with exception of reporting threats to police

Page 20: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

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Canadian cyberstalking assistance

• CyberAngels

Most common cyberstalking links on Canadian sites

• CyberAngels

• Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)

• National Center for Victims of Crime Stalking Resource Center

• National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV)

• Online Privacy Alliance

• Wired Safety Cyber911 Emergency

• Working to Halt Online Abuse (WHOA)

Where Canadian sites posted links to assisting organizations, said organizations were

mostly located in – and/or focused on – the USA.

Page 21: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Lessons Learned

There is a need for a Canadian cyberstalking

information and referral service

There is a need for professional resources, for

That cyberstalking ignores borders, so national and international connections

with ISPs, law enforcement, government and direct service agencies are needed

With proper information, victims can stop simple harassment before it

reaches the level of a criminal offence, and – in more serious cases – help

gather evidence to show a pattern of electronic harassment

Where fear for life or safety is created, victims must report to police. They may

be more comfortable in doing so if they understand police and court processes

There is a need for professional resources, for

assisting victims, research, or case resolution

Page 22: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Cyberstalking is entering the public awareness

Page 23: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Elements of the Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking

Research Library

Public Education

Self-Help

Referral

Networking

Page 24: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Elements of the Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking

Research Library: News, information, research article database

Public Education: What is cyberstalking, what are its effects?

Self-Help: Factual information: stopping harassers,

evidence collection, criminal justice process

Referral: Criteria-based referral to assisting agencies

Networking: Multi-disciplinary, international connections

promoting: news and information exchange,

best practices, synergistic effects, co-education,

and input on Clearinghouse development

Page 25: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

ሀϻ

Elements of the Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking

Canadian Clearinghouse on

Cyberstalking Professionals Listserv

Presently our major medium for networking is the

CCC Professionals listserv; an international e-mail

discussion list for all professionals in fields

working with, solving cases for, dealing with

legislation about, or directly assisting victims of

cyberstalking

For information on the listserv, contact us at:

[email protected]

Page 26: Canadian Clearinghouse on Cyberstalking NCFTA Presentation

Contact Us

Randy McCall, Project Manager

[email protected] | [email protected]@cyberstalking.ca | [email protected]

http://www.vaonline.org/

[email protected]

Skype: randy.mccall

SkypeIn: (202) 657 5507