Authors:
Scanlon, Mark; Hannaway, Alan and Kechadi, Tahar
Publication Date:
September 2013
Publication Name:
Pervasive and Ubiquitous Technology Innovations for Ambient Intelligence Environments
Abstract:
The popularity of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Internet communication technologies being exploited to aid cybercrime is ever increasing. P2P systems can be used or exploited to aid in the execution of a large number of online criminal activity, e.g., copyright infringement, fraud, malware and virus distribution, botnet creation and control, etc. P2P technology is perhaps most famous for the unauthorised distribution of copyrighted materials since the late 1990’s, with the popularity of file-sharing programs, such as Napster, etc. In 2004, P2P traffic was accounted for 80% of all Internet traffic and in 2005, specifically BitTorrent traffic accounted for over 60% of the world’s P2P bandwidth usage. This paper outlines a methodology for investigating a documented P2P network, BitTorrent, using a sample investigation for reference throughout. The sample investigation outlined was conducted on the top 100 most popular BitTorrent swarms over the course of a one week period.
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BibTeX Entry:
@inbook{scanlon2013p2pcybercrime,
author={Scanlon, Mark and Hannaway, Alan and Kechadi, Tahar},
title="{Investigating Cybercrimes That Occur on Documented P2P Networks}",
booktitle="{Pervasive and Ubiquitous Technology Innovations for Ambient Intelligence Environments}",
editor={Curran, Kevin},
chapter="10",
year="2013",
month="09",
publisher = {IGI Global},
address = {Hershey, PA, USA},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2041-4.ch010},
doi = {10.4018/978-1-4666-2041-4.ch010},
pages={109–115},
abstract="The popularity of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Internet communication technologies being exploited to aid cybercrime is ever increasing. P2P systems can be used or exploited to aid in the execution of a large number of online criminal activity, e.g., copyright infringement, fraud, malware and virus distribution, botnet creation and control, etc. P2P technology is perhaps most famous for the unauthorised distribution of copyrighted materials since the late 1990’s, with the popularity of file-sharing programs, such as Napster, etc. In 2004, P2P traffic was accounted for 80% of all Internet traffic and in 2005, specifically BitTorrent traffic accounted for over 60% of the world’s P2P bandwidth usage. This paper outlines a methodology for investigating a documented P2P network, BitTorrent, using a sample investigation for reference throughout. The sample investigation outlined was conducted on the top 100 most popular BitTorrent swarms over the course of a one week period."
}