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Over 40 pc of Australian victims fall prey to multiple cybercrimes

By IANS | Updated: October 6, 2025 12:50 IST

Canberra, Oct 6 Over 40 per cent of Australian cybercrime victims in 2024 were the victims of multiple ...

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Canberra, Oct 6 Over 40 per cent of Australian cybercrime victims in 2024 were the victims of multiple forms of cybercrime, according to a new government report.

The Cybercrime in Australia 2024 report, which was published on Monday by the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC), found that 42.1 per cent of all cybercrime victims fell victim to multiple cybercrime types in a single year.

The report looked at four key types of cybercrime: online abuse and harassment, malware, identity crime and misuse, and fraud and scams. It found that 47.4 per cent of Australians reported falling victim to any cybercrime in 2024.

Online abuse and harassment were the most common types of cybercrime, affecting 26.8 per cent of the 10,335 Australians who participated in the AIC survey, followed by identity crime and misuse.

Among all victims, 6.6 per cent were victimised across all four cybercrime types.

Australian Federal Police (AFP) Cyber Commander Graeme Marshall said the report shows that cybercrime prevention needs to be an everyday habit for Australians rather than a one-off effort.

"Cybercriminals don't just move on after one attack. If they find a vulnerability, whether that's a weak password, outdated software or a compromised email, they'll come back again and again -- often in different ways," he said in a statement.

Fraud and scams were the least common type of cybercrime, affecting 9.5 per cent of survey participants in 2024, but the victims were the most vulnerable to other types of cybercrime, Xinhua news agency reported.

Victims of three or more types of cybercrime were at least three times more likely to experience health, financial and legal impacts than victims of one type, the report said.

Cybercrime is a criminal activity that uses computers, computer networks, or networked devices to commit offences like fraud, data theft, harassment, or to damage systems for profit or other motives.

These acts exploit digital vulnerabilities to steal information, disrupt services, or cause financial and reputational damage to individuals, businesses, and governments worldwide. Common examples include hacking, phishing, identity theft, ransomware, and malware attacks.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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