2014
DOI: 10.1080/01639625.2013.867721
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Hacking in High School: Cybercrime Perpetration by Juveniles

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Cited by 68 publications
(127 citation statements)
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“…A relatively small proportion of respondents reported engaging in hacking behaviors at any time (N = 3,733; 7.3%), and only 25.2% of those individuals (N = 943) were detected (see Table 1). Though the overall rate of self-reported hacking is relatively low, it is consistent with prior rates reported among youth (Holt et al, 2012;Marcum et al, 2014) and late adolescent populations (Skinner and Fream, 1997;Rogers et al, 2006;Bossler and Burruss, 2011;. The relatively small number of individuals who reported being detected for hacking allowed for the construction of a three-item variable: those who did not hack (0), those who hacked and were not discovered (1), and those who hacked and were caught (2).…”
Section: Dependent Variablesupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…A relatively small proportion of respondents reported engaging in hacking behaviors at any time (N = 3,733; 7.3%), and only 25.2% of those individuals (N = 943) were detected (see Table 1). Though the overall rate of self-reported hacking is relatively low, it is consistent with prior rates reported among youth (Holt et al, 2012;Marcum et al, 2014) and late adolescent populations (Skinner and Fream, 1997;Rogers et al, 2006;Bossler and Burruss, 2011;. The relatively small number of individuals who reported being detected for hacking allowed for the construction of a three-item variable: those who did not hack (0), those who hacked and were not discovered (1), and those who hacked and were caught (2).…”
Section: Dependent Variablesupporting
confidence: 73%
“…In fact, multiple correlates of hacking are consistent with predictors of traditional acts of crime and delinquency. To that end, Gottfredson and Hirschi's (1990) general theory of crime has been found to predict individual involvement in hacking behaviors, such as password guessing to access accounts and alter content without permission from the owner (Bossler and Burruss, 2011;Holt et al, 2012Holt et al, , 2019Marcum et al, 2014;Udris, 2016). Gottfredson and Hirschi (1990) argued that crime is a choice derived from weighing the costs and benefits of offending, including the risk of detection.…”
Section: Understanding Computer Hacking and Hacker Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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