NSF-funded cybersecurity project will disrupt illicit virtual supply chains

ATLANTA–Georgia State University’s Evidence-Based Cybersecurity Research Group will examine the supply chain supporting underground markets in a new project designed to disrupt such operations.

The project is supported with a Disrupting Operations of Illicit Supply Networks planning grant of nearly $250,000 from the National Science Foundation.

The first study of its kind, it is led by Yubao Wu, David Maimon and Robert Harrison. They will assemble a research community of academics and researchers drawn from criminology, political science, economics and other scientific disciplines along with law enforcement professionals and financial and health industry partners experienced in the flow of information, banking, and data gathering and analysis.

These experts will examine the operation of illicit supply chains used for virtual products such as credit cards and online identities, counterfeit currency and fraudulent documents. Their work will help policymakers and law enforcement agencies develop ethical and legal interventions for online and virtual criminal markets by suggesting where best to implement the disruptive efforts needed to dismantle these networks.

“Illicit commerce, in both conventional markets and online darknet markets, relies on supply chains that coordinate the production, sales, information and capital flows,” Wu said. “They work much like supply chains for legitimate commerce. We will investigate these network interactions and how well they deal with events like law enforcement interventions, health crises and rival groups’ efforts.”

They will also examine the potential overlap of legitimate and illicit supply chain operations.

“We will generate low-cost but powerful tools to counter the efforts of online offenders who engage in different illegal activities along the various junctions of the online illicit supply chain,” Maimon said. “Additionally, the empirical evidence, expert insights and solid institutional relationships we generate will lay the groundwork for future high-impact projects that impact illicit cyber networks and operations.”

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This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-11/gsu-ncp111020.php

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