Playground Criminal Activity [portable] | Digital

Cybercrimes and Virtual Worlds: A Systematic Literature Review

Combating criminal activity in virtual spaces requires a multi-layered approach involving platform creators, regulatory bodies, and end-users. digital playground criminal activity

Platforms hosting millions of concurrent users generate petabytes of data daily. Human moderation teams cannot review every interaction, and automated AI filters often fail to understand contextual slang, sarcasm, or coded language used by criminals. As virtual assets gain real-world monetary value, they

Simultaneously, regulatory bodies must update consumer protection laws to recognize virtual assets as legally protected property, closing the loopholes that allow virtual money laundering to thrive. Finally, digital literacy programs must evolve. Users of all ages must be taught to recognize that the rules of basic cybersecurity—such as skepticism toward strangers, safeguarding personal data, and verifying third-party links—apply just as strictly inside a virtual sandbox as they do anywhere else online. masking their true identities

As virtual assets gain real-world monetary value, they become primary targets for theft. Cybercriminals deploy phishing links disguised as game modifications ("mods") or cheat codes to hijack user accounts.

Combating criminal activity within these digital ecosystems presents unique hurdles for global law enforcement and corporate developers alike.

Users interact via customizable avatars and aliases, masking their true identities, geographical locations, and ages.

Biometric Market Analysis

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events