Understanding information asymmetry in stolen data markets is essential for acquiring knowledge of the signals that demonstrate a seller is trustworthy, as well as for identifying the formal and informal factors that encourage vendor success. Recognizing the practices of sellers and their influence on buyer reviews can also increase understanding of the social relationships that affect individual's position within the market generally. In turn, the findings may enable identification of the factors that encourage market failure and reduce demand by pushing quality sellers out of the market. The results of zero-inflated Poisson regression models suggest that the sellers may influence their likelihood of receiving feedback by specifying the type of payment mechanism, choosing the advertisement language and selecting the type of market they operate within. The implications of this study for understanding online illicit markets, criminological theory, and policymaking are explored. The findings of this analysis suggest that the conditions within stolen data markets may be manipulated and destabilized through the introduction of information asymmetry. It may be possible to complicate the process of interpreting signals by flooding the market with multiple false posts for products, as well as feedback for sellers. This technique, referred to as a Sybil attack, may be effective in creating too many false signals and increasing the difficulty in determining who is a reliable vendor. 3 table and 51 references (publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- A Low-Cost, Simplified Platform of Interchangeable, Ambient Ionization Sources for Rapid, Forensic Evidence Screening on Portable Mass Spectrometric Instrumentation
- Nanomanipulation-Coupled to Nanospray Mass Spectrometry Applied to Document and Ink Analysis
- Comparison of the Novel Direct Analysis in Real Time time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (AccuTOF-DART) and Signature Analysis for the Identification of Constituents of Refined Illicit Cocaine