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Cybercrime Without Borders: How the Digital World Became a Sanctuary for Criminal Power -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

The cyber terrain did not one day contrive be a sanctuary for criminal strength. That was made into one by a sense of torpor, cutoff and the relentless refusal to govern cyberspace as if it deserves. Unless some states restore authority in that space, the criminal networks will continue to do it for them.

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Cybercrime

For years, cybercrime was regarded by governments and corporations as mild technical nuisance an IT problem to be dealt with by departments focused on compliance or the occasional police raids. That illusion is over. Cybercrime is no longer the sideshow of a digital age. It is among its most profitable and the fastest growing international businesses, leeching economies, crippling hospitals corporations extorting regulars darkening a residents establishing with jet black boxes and exposing an frightening susceptibility of states that made out amongst themselves resulting in how to have access without cooking a real universal regulation system valorising those same factories.

This is not mere hacking. It is organized power.

Pervasive cybercriminal enterprise networks have the new combined neuroplasticity of a multinational corporation and ruthless leanness of cartels. Its levels of cross border recruitment, malware as a service leasing, crypto channel laundering and legal fragmentation exploitation would be awe-inspiring if they were not so grave. You can be continent away and ransomware gangs can cripple a city. Whole life savings of thousands of victims can be drained without a single fraud syndicate member ever even so much as entering the same jurisdiction. Identity ciphers that supply the identity of thieves can be sold en-masse on marketplaces both hidden and visible, but which are at least more efficient then some light legal economy. The digital realm was supposed to turn the world of frictions into frictionless connection. It also delivered frictionless predation.

The most disquieting fact is not that cybercrime exists, but rather that the global system has given it enough time to develop into a refuge of criminal authority. While law enforcement continues to operate within almost mediaeval boundaries, criminals have little regard for borders beyond the graphs that chart their crimes digitally. Investigators have to deal with slow mutual legal assistance mechanisms, conflicting laws and sovereignty disputes as well thunderstorming technical capacity. Unlike this, criminals are machines in speed. Criminal networks are capitalizing on weak jurisdictions, safe havens, proxy servers, anonymous accounts and the chronic ineffectiveness of states to coordinate at the speed that networked crime demands. Globalization prizes impunity if enforcement is fragmented, and cybercrime has in practice discovered this.

On this failure, governments have a live accountability. But too many leaders still treat cybercrime as a technical problem rather than an economic, public safety and democratic trust issue responding with denial instead of vigilance. They advocate strategies, host summits and launch task forces only for victims to sustain ruinous losses as attackers iterate faster than regulators and harassers. These are the same states that need as a matter of priority to invest more in cyber resilience, cross-border intelligence sharing capacity for digital forensics and modern criminal procedure. They constructed the data highways and yet, through those sloppy antitrust outcomes to barely mask cronyism or rent-seeking exist in this case, they left policing of said highway barbaric.

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The problem itself has been compounded by corporate negligence. The majority of the global digital economy still operates on fragile systems, ineffective authentication pressure points and a patching topography within business models rooted in viewing security as an expense rather than collective responsibility. Losses from vital infrastructure like freight delivery, consumer platforms or financial systems not protected by enterprises do not remain on balance sheets. They trickle into hospitals, schools and homes. But after every high profile breach, we seem to go through the same ritual: outcry now using social media platforms like Reddit and Twitter; apology from industry leaders in executive management roles at that company or vendor firm for fallout associated with a patch deploying incorrectly internal investigation by those firms into causes of system vulnerabilities/holes leading breaches amnesia. If this were any other field, such a string of near-misses would be seen as symptomatic negligence.

Behind the technical language, rarely mentioned is a human cost. Cybercrime evaporates savings, delays cancer treatment, disables public services and torments small businesses not to mention trapping normal citizens who fall victim to identity theft in a bureaucratic hellscape. It undermines trust in digital life more broadly. When citizens are being asked to trust systems that remain so prone to abuse by unseen actors off the law, no society can function.

The consumer-friendly fantasy is the idea that cybercrime accompanies innovation. It is not. It is the cost of procrastination on policy making, legal in fighting and commercial apathy. This crisis endures because too many governments think territorially while criminals act globally and because far too many companies monetize connectivity without commensurate liability for security.

We do not need another round of woolly worry now. It is coordinated force. It means faster cross-border evidence sharing, tougher dismantling of ransomware infrastructures, heavy penalties for cornerstone corporate negligence, accountability in protecting critical systems and more international cooperation to facilitate a response that treats cybercrime as what it has become: A systemic danger on the world order.

The cyber terrain did not one day contrive be a sanctuary for criminal strength. That was made into one by a sense of torpor, cutoff and the relentless refusal to govern cyberspace as if it deserves. Unless some states restore authority in that space, the criminal networks will continue to do it for them.

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Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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