You place your order, make payment, and later notice a small detail: only one letter of the website address was different. This demonstrates how easily you can fall into a cybercriminal trap. If you’re fortunate, the loss is minor, and your bank swiftly refunds the money and reissues your card. However, not everyone is so lucky; in many countries, recovering stolen funds is nearly impossible.
A bankruptcy lawyer informed UN News that a growing number of people are declaring bankruptcy after losing money to cybercrime. Anyone can be a victim, regardless of location, and everyone deserves protection and support.
Many cybercrimes originate from parts of Southeast Asia, like this abandoned fraudulent farm in the Philippines. In some countries, cybercriminal acts do not clearly fall under the legal definition of “cybercrime,” and international legal cooperation is lacking, yet cybercrime itself is rapidly evolving.
What were once isolated attacks by individual hackers are now large-scale operations by organized criminal networks. The Internet and new technologies, including artificial intelligence, allow criminals to act faster and on a larger scale, reach global victims, and commit crimes with minimal human involvement.
From autonomous cyberattacks and fake images using deep-fake technologies to malware and AI-enhanced phishing campaigns, the misuse of new technologies challenges traditional systems for investigating and preventing cybercrime.
Phishing is the most common cybercrime, tricking victims into revealing passwords or financial information through fake websites or emails, even at a local hardware store. Inexperienced criminals can now use ready-made “phishing kits” to create realistic clones of major brand websites and send convincing fraudulent messages.
In recent years, billions of stolen username and password combinations have surfaced on the dark web, used in credential-stuffing attacks, i.e., automated login attempts on thousands of websites at once.
This page of digital history could soon turn. In December 2024, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the United Nations Convention against Cybercrime — the first international treaty on criminal justice in over two decades. The adoption results from five years of negotiations between UN member states, with the participation of experts, civil society, academia, and the private sector.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres called the adoption of the Convention a “decisive step” in global efforts to ensure online safety. On October 25, the Convention will open for signature at an official ceremony in Hanoi, Viet Nam. It will enter into force 90 days after its ratification by 40 states.
The new document establishes a common international framework to combat cybercrime. It introduces unified definitions, investigation standards, and victim assistance mechanisms, including compensation, restitution, and removal of illegal content. States will implement these measures in accordance with their national legislation but within the framework of agreed international principles. Perhaps with this Convention, a new era will begin, where a single incorrect letter in an Internet address will no longer cost you anything.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) leads the United Nations response to cybercrime by providing training and support to countries worldwide. The Vienna-based agency leverages its specialized expertise in criminal justice systems to provide technical assistance in prevention and awareness-raising, legislative reform, reorganization of law enforcement capacities, international cooperation, forensic support, and data collection, research, and analysis on cybercrime.













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