Skip to main content
European Commission logo
français français
CORDIS - Résultats de la recherche de l’UE
CORDIS
CORDIS Web 30th anniversary CORDIS Web 30th anniversary
Contenu archivé le 2024-05-27

Economic impacts of Cybercrime

Final Report Summary - E-CRIME (Economic impacts of Cybercrime)

Executive Summary:
E-CRIME (the economic impacts of cyber crime) is a three year project that started in April 2014 and ended in March 2017. The aim of the project is to reconstruct the spread and development of cyber crime in non-information and communications technology (non-ICT) sectors from the perspective of its economic impact on the key fabrics (i.e. economic and social) and different levels of European society, while also identifying and developing concrete measures to manage and deter cyber crime. E-CRIME aims at paving the way for a gradual shift towards a cyber security thinking that puts increasing resilience, multi-stakeholder co-operation and a comprehensive and integrated approach into the focus of cyber security strategies. In parallel it strives to make a contribution towards the development of comprehensive and economically viable counter-measures supporting the Digital Agenda for Europe, while boosting Europe’s economic performance and single market.

Project Context and Objectives:
E-CRIME focuses on:
1. Mapping the observable developments and effects of cyber crime within and among non-ICT sectors and Member States
2. Assessing existing counter-measures
3. Measuring the economic impact of cyber crime on non ICT-sectors and
4. Developing concrete measures to address cyber crime
E-CRIME does so by adopting an interdisciplinary and multi-level-stakeholder focused approach that fully integrates a wide range of stakeholders’ knowledge and insights into the project.
First, the project develops a detailed taxonomy and inventory of cyber crime in non-ICT sectors and analyses cyber criminal structures and economies by combining the best existing data sources with specialist new insights from key stakeholders and experts.
Second, it assesses existing counter-measures against cyber crime in non-ICT sectors in the form of current technology, best practices, policy and enforcement approaches, and awareness and trust initiatives.
Third, having mapped the ‘as-is’ of cyber crime, the project uses available information and new data to develop a multi-level model to measure the economic impact of cyber crime on non ICT-sectors.
Fourth, it integrates all its previous findings to identify and develop diverse, concrete counter-measures, including enhancement for crime-proofed applications, risk management tools, policy and best practices, and trust and confidence measures.
The final results of E-CRIME are expected to have a positive and durable impact on:
1. Increasing awareness of policy makers
2. Helping business to provide crime-proofed applications
3. Increasing the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications
E-CRIME has ten partners from eight European countries.
Figure 1 offers an overview of the various components of the E-CRIME project.

Project Results:
The E-CRIME project met all of its stated objectives through the course of the project. The table below details the initial 7 objectives and the degree of achievement towards them.

#
Initial Objectives
Degree of achievement
Measurable & verifiable
1
Create a taxonomy and an inventory on crime committed against non-ICT sectors through the use of communication networks.
A taxonomy/inventory has been developed with the help of the ESF, data collection and further desktop research. WP2 will develop taxonomy and an inventory of cyber-crime in non-ICT sectors.
1) Deliverables from WP1 and
WP2.
2) Publications

2
Analyse the criminal structures and economies behind such crimes.
Detailed criminal journeys have been developed from a perpetrators and victim viewpoint. These journeys have been used as the basis to develop the attack scripts and manual as part of the cybersecurity awareness programme.
1) Deliverables from WP2
2) Exploitation output from WP9, including training programme and manual
3) Publications
4) Scripts have been shred with major UK Banks and included in their training programme
5) Presentation in conferences /meetings
3
Measure and analyse the economic impact of cyber-crime on non-ICT sectors (e.g. transport, energy, finance, health, etc.).
An economic model has been developed and has supported the creation of practical tools for exploitation in WP8: risk management tools (e.g. a cost-benefit decision tool for cybersecurity investments and a data-driven tool to identity best actions to respond to fraud in the financial sector)
1. Deliverables from WP4, 5 &6
2. Publications
3. Presentation in conferences and meetings
4. Development of tools in WP8

4
Develop concrete measures and methods to deter cybercrime
A list of common opportunities has been identified and practical solutions developed. This includes: the development of risk management tools, including a data-driven tool to identity best actions to respond to fraud in the financial sector and a cost benefit model to support investment decision on countermeasures, recommendation for regulatory interventions including policy impact assessment sector by sector, a guide for best practices sector by sector, guidance and requirements for developing improved crime proofed applications and a high level roadmap supporting the implementation of the E-CRIME output.
1. Deliverables from WP7
& WP8
2. Publications
3. Presentations in conferences and meetings

5
Present effective measures for the management of risks related to cyber- crime and help businesses to provide crime-proofed applications.
Specifically, E-CRIME has developed risk management tools, including an holistic data-driven approach to risk identification to fraud in the financial sector and a cost benefit model to support investment decision on countermeasures, and sector specific guidance and requirements for cyber risk management and mitigation .
1. Deliverables from WP8.
6
Increase the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications.
The consortium work together with a leading bank to develop a data-driven holistic approach to risk quantification to respond to fraud in the financial sector and e-commerce sector. This tool takes in consideration risk of on-line avoidance as result of cybercrime and how to increase trust with end-users. We have also developed guidelines and recommendations on how to improve trust and confidence of end-users.
1. Deliverables from WP5 &
& WP8
2. Publications
3. Presentations in conferences and meetings


7
Increase the awareness of policy- makers, and foster the understanding and the awareness of the non-ICT sectors
Several activities were carried out to support this objective. This includes: developed a training awareness programme, including a manual, the organisation and running of a training event, the dissemination of several policies briefs, the running of validation workshops, liaison and newsletters for the ESF, participation in conferences and external events.
1 Workshops for WP2&3, WP5 , WP7
2. Final conference from WP 9
3. Deliverables from WP9
4. Presentations in meetings and conferences

Specifically ,
WP1: Setting the scene. The E-CRIME team has developed the project handbook, which will be used by the partners as a navigation guide during the development of the project. The team has also developed an extensive contact list of stakeholders and provided an in-depth analysis of their motivations, while setting up the E-CRIME Stakeholder Forum (ESF), comprising 90 members including associated ones. The ESF has supported the working of the project across the three-year plan. Finally, the consortium has agreed a selection methodology and finalised the selection of which representative non-ICT sectors and Member States the project will focuses on.

WP2: Mapping Cybercrime. Objectives for WP2 were to: (1) investigate definitions of cyber crime and provide a conceptual framework and categorisation of cyber crime in non-ICT sectors to be used for the project: (2) develop an inventory of crime committed against non-ICT sectors through the use of communication networks; (3) analyse the structures of cyber crime networks, their interactions and the economies and criminal revenue streams that support these networks; and (4) develop perpetrator and victim “journeys”.

WP3: Assessing existing policies and counter-measures. The objective has been to identify, assess and monitor existing and new counter-measures in the field of regulation, enforcement, technologies and industry best practices. The consortium submitted the report for Task 3.1 titled “Anti-Cybercrime technologies and best practices assessment and monitoring.” The report proposes a set of criteria to assess such anti-cybercrime technologies and industry best practices, which are flexible enough to be adopted for various Non-ICT sector types and all sizes of organisations. A key aspect to this was ensuring that the approaches could be adapted by a wide range of industries and categorisation of crimes. Within the work for this task a desktop analysis of several representative examples of existing anti-cybercrime technologies and best practices were researched and presented. Using a mix of case studies and cyber range replication in a controlled environment, a selection of criminal journeys from WP2 (D2.3) have been explored in order to derive evaluation insights on the selected anti-cybercrime technologies and best practices. The objective of this work is to both define the criteria for the assessment of existing cybercrime practices and anti-cybercrime technologies and best practices and assess the selected anti-cybercrime technologies and best practices via case studies. It assesses the effectiveness of these counter-measures for preventing, deterring and managing cybercrime and includes the on-going monitoring of these counter-measures through the lifespan of the project with a specific focus on non-ICT sectors and will take into consideration relevant output from future Work Packages.

D3.2 assesses the dominant policies, regulatory and enforcement frameworks and best practices concerning cybercrime relevant for the E-CRIME project, taking into account the economic impact on the non-ICT sector, the most relevant threats to the non-ICT sector (WP2) and countermeasures (D3.1) and by focusing on the Council of Europe Cybercrime Convention and EU legal frameworks. D3.2 shows that cyber incidents relevant for the economic impact on the non-ICT sector fall within the categories of cybercrime in the Convention. These cyber incidents in many cases may be prevented before they occur by solid Network and Information Security, meaning by applying countermeasures including best practices and policies as well as technological countermeasures. Not all cyber incidents may be prevented. For those incidents that cannot be prevented, an effective enforcement framework including the necessary investigative powers and procedures, mutual assistance, international cooperation, etc. is necessary in order to combat cybercrime. On a European level, there is a framework regulating cybercrime in place. The Convention is the legal framework of reference and is supported by various EU documents. There are however still a number of limitations or gaps in this framework which have been identified in D3.2 by studying the relevant policies, legislative frameworks and enforcement activities.

WP4 Framework for economic impact and analysis: The higher-level objective of work package 4 is the collection of empirical data for an impact assessment of cyber-crime on non-ICT sectors. We developed a framework of hypotheses and collected data on the views of EU citizens’ and industry stakeholders via a telephone survey and face-to-face expert interviews. The results of the industry interviews and the consumer survey are documented in the form of an executive summary, a policy brief and detailed appendixes in deliverable D4.2. Highlights have also been presented at the validation workshop in The Hague (Jan. 25/26. 2016). Lastly, the empirical findings in WP4 also informed and validated the economic model, which was developed in WP6.
One conference paper has been written and presented at the Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS) 2014, in State College, USA by P4WWU. Based on this early work one journal article has been submitted by P11UIBK and has been accepted for publication by the IEEE journal: Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing (TDSC). The article "Measuring the Influence of Perceived Cybercrime Risk on Online Service Avoidance" analyses consumer reactions to perceived risk of cyber crime in Europe. Existing behavioral models to model decisions of online service usage are integrated and augmented to include perceived risk of cyber crime. The resulting model is using a secondary analysis of a pan-European survey. The article is particularly relevant for the E-CRIME project, as the behavioral models, used in the article, largely informed the consumer survey (D4.1).
A second conference paper has been accepted at the Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS) 2016, in Berkeley, USA. The paper “Estimating the costs of consumer-facing cybercrime: A tailored instrument and representative data for six EU countries” has been jointly written by UIBK and TUD. It analyses the costs of consumer-facing cybercrime based on the data collected in the ECRIME consumer survey.
The results of the industry interviews and the consumer survey have been presented to and discussed with industry stakeholders at the second ECRIME validation workshop in The Hague, Netherlands. Furthermore, they have been presented at the TRESPASS 2016 WINTER SCHOOL ON SECURITY IN SOCIAL-TECHNICAL SYSTEMS in January 2016 and at the BIGS Capacity Building Workshop on "Economics of Cybersecurity: Cost-benefit considerations, Incentives and Business Models" in April 2016.

WP5 Survey Implementation This work package focused on collecting survey data in six selected Member States. The aim was to carry out a survey on the impact of cybercrime on non-ICT sectors. The survey was conducted using the questionnaire designed as part of WP4. The data collected is used in WP6, to calibrate the economic models.
The survey set up has started in June 2015, once the questionnaire was finalised (as part of work package 4). The survey was implemented in six countries: Estonia, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and the UK, through telephone interviews.
The aim was to collect information from internet users in each country. The sampling approach was based on quotas on age, gender and region, representative of the online population in each country.
The main deliverable – D5.1 survey dataset – was provided in November 2015 (unweighted) and December 2015 (weighted). The data was provided in SPSS format.
A total of 6394 interviews were conducted across the six countries. The following table presents the number of interviews carried out in each country:
Number of interviews
Country
Total
Germany
1150
Estonia
1058
Italy
1064
The Netherlands
1032
Poland
1038
The UK
1052
Total
6394

Apart from the main deliverable (D5.1 - final SPSS dataset), the following outputs were produced:
• Interim dataset (with preliminary results, prior to closing fieldwork)
• Excel spreadsheets presenting the aggregated results for each question
• A technical report describing the survey methodology.
The survey results were analysed by UIBK (and presented in deliverable D4.2) and also informed the economic model (presented by TUD in deliverable D6.2).

WP6 Measuring the direct and indirect economic impact of cyber crime. In WP6 we developed, calibrated and validated a multi-layer model to measure the economic impact of cyber crime on the selected non-ICT sector. As part of the validation, we held a workshop in den Haag with stakeholders from all the relevant non-ICT sectors. Prior to the development of the model, during Task 6.1 and Task 6.2 we argued that estimating the costs of cybercrime is a valuable, and indeed irreplaceable, tool for policy makers and the criminal justice system. However, while the concept of monetizing the impact of cybercrime for many people seems feasible, and maybe even reasonable, such calculations have many disadvantages and generate estimates that are from reality. From the analysis based on the state-of-the-art we identified the drawbacks of current cybercrime studies and described the challenges that have to be addressed before generating cost estimates. Moreover, we have analysed existing data sources depending on the measurement methodology and how different aggregation models have leveraged these data to generate unrealistic costs estimates. Due to the misuse and limitations of existing data sources, the true burden of cybercrime on human society still remains unknown.

To fulfil this information gap, in D6.1 we presented a set of basic economic foundations that serve as basis for our model. We split the cost of cybercrime into different levels: cost of cybercrime to individual agents and cost of cybercrime to society.
In D6.2 and D6.3 we presented: (i) a qualitative assessment of the economic impact of cybercrime on non-ICT sectors based on the model developed in Task 6.2; (ii) a quantitative assessment of the key economic impacts of cybercrime on non-ICT sectors with the data collected through WP4 and 5 and the suitable external data sources as assessed in Task 6.1; and (iii) a comparison of the economic impact of cybercrime across the selected non-ICT sectors. Finally, we concluded that the five non-ICT sectors analysed in this project suffer from cybercrime but to different degrees. The economic impact of cybercrime varies by industry segment, where financial services and energy companies experience higher impact than entities in retail, transport and health care sectors. Moreover, the short-term economic impact is not distributed uniformly across the different categories. Some sectors like financial services and retail have costs across all three categories while other sectors like health care mainly have anticipation costs.
Finally, we validated the qualitative and quantitative assessment in a workshop hosted in January 2016, The Hague. With over 40 stakeholders from the different non-ICT sectors, the results were validated and the feedback incorporate in D6.3.

WP7 Identifying gaps and solutions re cybercrime. The main objective of this work package is to integrate, combine and compare results from previous work packages (WPs 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6), identifying opportunities for deterring and managing cyber crime, including technology, regulation, co-ordination, risk management, and awareness and trust initiatives. These opportunities were validated with stakeholders.

General opportunities to fight cyber crime were identified in D7.1 and validated with a group of stakeholders in Lausanne (M13 and D7.2). Opportunities maps were developed as part of D7.1 which drove and informed the work of WP8. The maps provided the initial perimeter where specific opportunities were selected for development in WP8.

The map identified main high level recommendations within a comprehensive framework. Opportunities were discussed within the awareness/cultural, political, legal, organisational and technical dimensions. D7.1 was based on the state of the art of knowledge on cyber crime. The practical experience of operational stakeholders in the fight against cybercrime and cybersecurity professionals within companies has also been taken into consideration to build those perspectives. The recommendations, seen as an opportunity, seek to remain directly enforceable.

The added value of the opportunity maps come from the consistency of their implementation based on a trans-disciplinary, trans sectorial and integrative understanding. Fighting against cybercrime could not succeed without a strong implication at all political levels. This is turn implies that only solutions combining the efforts of public and private sectors, also including citizens, can succeed. We validated the findings of WP7 and the opportunity maps in a workshop in Lausanne, held in May 2016. We reached our core objective by engaging stakeholders, decision makers and researchers around the key findings of the report and the opportunities and recommendations.

The opportunities were also developed, socialised and presented at different venues and forums such as, Lausanne, Financial cyber crime conference (4 Dec 2015), New Delhi, Cyber weapons and cyber power (2 Feb 2016), New Delhi, Is digital privacy and personal safety compatible (3 Feb 2016) and Université Savoie Mont Blanc, France Journée nationale du réserviste – Conférence: Cyber-menaces à l’horizon 2020: enjeux, anticipation et resilience (22 March 2016).
WP8 Enhancement of sector specific risk management counter. The main objective of this work package is to develop sector-specific methods, tools and measures to fight cyber crime.

In Task 8.1 we developed sector-specific methods, tools and risk management frameworks to manage cyber crime risk in the selected non-ICT sectors. This was based from the economic impact model in WP5, findings from WP6 and desk-top analysis of state-of-the- art work on cyber crime risk management. We undertook a survey with PLUSCARD to examine payment card fraud in the financial and retail sector within Germany, building on the results of the citizen survey undertaken in WP5. After discussing the problem during the E-CRIME industry interviews, PLUSCARD, a German payment card processor and stakeholder in the E-CRIME stakeholder forum, offered us the incredible opportunity to collaborate for a behavioral study of their customers, in particular the victims of payment card fraud. UIBK conducted a controlled experiment with approx. 900 participants to measure the victims’ perception of incidents and their reactions after victimisation. Resources for this additional study were approved by the Project Officer. Data collection commenced in M32. Output of this work provided a thorough estimation of the economic impact of payment card fraud to be utilised as the foundation for data-driven cyber risk management tool. The team in TUD led the production of the sector-specific risk management sections and production of the overall risk framework sector by sector. Based on the output of Task 8.1 D8.1 – Executive summary and brief: Sector-specific cyber crime risk management including detailed appendixes on sector specific cyber crime risk management were produced

In Task 8.2 the team applied the opportunities identified in WP6 and findings from WP2 and WP3, to draw up an initial list of business and technological requirements for sector-specific applications in the selected non-ICT sectors. The final requirements provide practical, sector guidance on crime-proofed application advancements, including identification of key functionalities, and other technological counter-measures for the selected non-ICT sector. We also develop guidance on how sector-specific, crime-proofed applications can be developed, tested, assessed and integrated into existing IT infrastructures and business processes.
In addition, 10+ attack scenarios across the sectors and included potential countermeasures to address the attacks were developed. Then we conducted cost-calculation methodology for the countermeasures listed, before indexing the countermeasure and the related cost inside an International framework for cyber security. In this case, the framework is the National Cyber Security Framework of NIST that is the easier to adopt for SMEs. Aimed at Public and Private stakeholders, Large and Small and Medium Enterprise, the developed cost calculation methodology is helpful to present the level of annual cost of information security countermeasures to the top manager of the entities that decide to adopt it. Since the framework in which the expenditures is inserted is an International one, it is very easy to be approached also from stakeholder with a low level of Information Security competencies
The output from Task 8.2 is D8.2 – Report: Sector specific crime-proofed applications and other technological counter-measures.

In Task 8.3 we built from the opportunities in WP6 and the counter-measure assessment in WP3 to identify if new legal and policy measures, as well as new responses, should be adopted at Member States and European level to deter and manage cyber crime in each of the selected non-ICT sectors. Our regulatory innovation focused on developing institutional mechanisms and tools that allow transnational enforcement, support co-operation across European Member States, and beyond, as well as enhance co-ordination and interoperability among different stakeholders.
The output from Task 8.3 is D8.3 – Report: Recommendation for regulatory innovation and measures.

In Task 8.4 we focused on enhancing and developing sector-specific industry best practices in deterring cyber crime in each of the selected non-ICT sectors. The consortium utilised the output from WPs 6 and 7 and employed their cyber range to test the efficacy of counter measures. They also took into account the regulatory measures developed from Task 8.3 with interactive sessions conducted as part of the new training workshop of industry and law enforcement representatives planned for M35. This workshop included cyber law enforcement representatives from MS across Europe, as well as Interpol and Europol reps and selected member of ESF drawn from law enforcement.

The Deliverable from this Task is D8.4 – Report: Sector-specific enhancements in industry best practices.

In Task 8.5 we have identified sector-specific initiatives across Member States and beyond relating to building awareness, trust and confidence in the selected non-ICT sectors. The partners developed sector-specific recommendations and guidelines at different levels (individual, company, state, civil society, EU) to increase awareness, trust and confidence among end users in the selected non-ICT sectors. We identified actors and stakeholders best suited to implement these sector-specific guidelines and recommendations. This encompasses a broad range of potential actors (e.g. states and industry players to telecommunications operators, ISPs, police, etc.).
This task produced D8.5 – Report on high level roadmap and implementation plans for sector-specific counter-measures.

In Task 8.6 the consortium organised and presented the final findings of the project in a final conference organised in London and produced a final executive summary of the project, Final report (D8.6) including high level roadmaps and implementation plans for the solution put forward in the previous reports.

Through Work package 9 (WP9) partners had particular success in disseminating the results of the E-CRIME project to target stakeholder groups, with the E-CRIME stakeholder forum list boasting 90 members including associate. The E-CRIME project is represented by an engaging and active website, the publication of press releases/newsletters, its social media accounts (Twitter, LinkedIn), by attendance at 3rd party events, E-CRIME events, including the training awareness day, and a number of publications in peer reviewed journals. Novel dissemination techniques were also employed, such as disseminating training manual with project deliverables. As a result, E-CRIME was mentioned in a number of 3rd party newsletters and websites.

Potential Impact:
The E-CRIME impact falls along the following main categories: methodological / empirical impact; knowledge sharing impact, including increasing co-ordination and knowledge sharing among key cyber security stakeholders; policy impact; awareness; industry oriented results and/or impact, including helping business to provide crime-proofed applications; economic/ competitiveness impact; strategic impact and societal impact including increasing the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications and other wider societal implications. The table below details the exploitation activities and outputs produced during the project, provides a brief description of the activities/outputs together with its end-user focus and identifies for each activity and the main impact produced.

Exploitation activities/output
General Approach & End-Users
Impact
Guidelines describing how to use the attack scripts in a cybersecurity awareness training programme. These guidelines were included into a final training manual.


Developing and writing down concrete steps (illustrated with examples) how to use developed attack scripts as a part of a cybersecurity awareness training programme.
Relevant for any institution belonging to one of our five focus categories (transport, retail, finance, healthcare, energy).

• Awareness impact: Increase awareness of policy makers and key industry and stakeholder
• Industry impact: support industry in developing crime-proofed applications
• Economic/ competitiveness: impact: increase the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact: increasing the awareness of citizens and society as a whole in relation to cyber crime

Data-Sets & Interview-Schedule from consumer survey deposited for future use.
The data sets from the victim survey has been deposited in one or more publicly accessible repositories, situated within the EU, at the end of the project.
The data sets from the trans-Europe telephone survey constitute a resource for future analyses, both as a single study and as part of meta-studies. They also constitute a time-stamped sample of opinions and levels of economic cyber crime. The survey schedule provides a standardised set of questions enabling re-sampling within longitudinal studies – this assists in measuring changes in opinions and cyber crime levels/impacts over time. Academics and statisticians are the anticipated end-users.
• Empirical/methodological impact: this is both empirical and methodological since the central empirical result of E-CRIME will provide an empirical benchmarking and methodological toolkit for end-users.
• Societal impact: this helps the overall development of empirical methodology to assess the impact of cybercrime
Crime Scripts for different cyber-criminal journeys . These scripts were included into a final training manual.

The criminal journeys, depicting the identified steps an attacker must complete when undertaking different types of cyber attacks provide an invaluable tool with two primary anticipated benefits. Firstly it provides a clear graphic visualisation of the processes and steps that constitute what are often complex cyber attacks. Secondly, by layering multiple scripts on top of each other, and/or by focussing on the most prolific types of cyber crimes, one can better identify the ‘pinch-points’ for disrupting future attacks. End-users here include industry (both the targets of cyber crime as well as those developing cybercrime mitigation technologies), and law enforcement agencies.
• Awareness impact: Increase awareness of policy makers and key industry and stakeholder
• Industry impact: support industry in developing crime-proofed applications
• Economic/ competitiveness: impact: increase the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact: increasing the awareness of citizens and society as a whole in relation to cyber crime
Awareness Training Program and manual including and the organisation of a training event
Targeted at Cyber Crime LEA units in Europe, where we validate and provide this material to them so they can use it for three purposes:
A - Validate its efficacy for their own internal training program for new officers and trainees
B- Provide them the work as a training manual in order to allow them to become champions and disseminate further
C- Allow them to be able to communicate this work to industry as part of their Protect and Prevent strategies

• Awareness impact: Increase awareness of policy makers and key industry and stakeholder
• Industry impact: support industry in developing crime-proofed applications
• Knowledge sharing impact: knowledge sharing across among relevant stakeholders
• Societal impact: support a knowledge sharing culture within Europe
The development of an holistic approach to risk quantification to respond to fraud in the financial sector
The additional survey were used as the basis for developing a data drive approach on the impact of online fraud in the financial sector measuring the impact of cyber crime for online e-commerce as the result of avoidance activities while supporting the identification of the best action to respond to the fraud.
This is relevant to the financial sector operators, specifically banks.

• Industry impact: support industry in developing crime-proofed applications
• Economic/ competitiveness: impact: increase efficiency and the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact: increasing the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications


The development of a practical cost/ benefit tool/model to support investment decisions on countermeasures
A framework with a cost/benefit calculation methodology and guideline able to monitor the total amount of the expenditures in Information Security, divided in categories and that also represents a method to understand a cost/benefit of each countermeasure put in place.
The result is a list of countermeasures with a cost calculation methodology, inserted in an easy international framework. The industry player in general would be able to understand in that way how much they spend on information security activities and would be also able to identify the percentage of expenditures between the categories.
This applicable across all the E-CRIME sectors. It aimed at Public and Private stakeholders, Large and Small and Medium Enterprise. The cost calculation methodology helps present the level of annual cost of information security countermeasures to the top manager of the entities that decide to adopt it. The framework in which the expenditures will be inserted is an International one, very easy to be approached also from stakeholder with a low level of Information Security competencies.

• Industry impact: support industry in managing cyber crime risk
• Economic/ competitiveness: impact: increase efficiency and the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact: Indirectly by effectively supporting companies in managing cyber crime risk this will increase the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications

A guide for best pratices sector by sector
A practical guide to help industry users to identify/use best pratices in their sector . This is for all the E-CRIME sectors.
• Industry impact: support industry in managing cyber crime risk
• Economic/competitiveness impact: increase efficiency and the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact : Indirectly by effectively supporting companies in managing cyber crime risk this will increase the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications
• Strategic impact: it will have strategic impacts for the European Union, particularly in relation the development of Digital Single Market and in support of the Digital Single Strategy as well as the European cyber security strategy
A guidance and requirements for cyber crime management and mitigation
This is a guide, sector by sector, summarising the key requirements and guidelines to managing cyber crime and mitigate its risk/impact. Industry players in all the E-CRIME sector are the key beneficiary.
• Industry impact: support industry in developing crime-proofed applications
• Economic/competitiveness impact: increase efficiency and the competitiveness of European industry players including security providers
• Societal impact: Indirectly by effectively supporting companies in managing cyber crime risk this will increase the trust and confidence of EU citizens in using cyber applications


Recommendation for regulatory interventions including policy impact assessment sector by sector
This is targeted to policy makers to support their regulatory and policy interventions and actions to improve cyber security in Europe
• Awareness impact: Increase awareness of policy makers
• Policy impact: support policy makers in developing new intervention to improve cyber security in Europe
• Societal impact: create a suitable regulatory and policy environment and culture at the European level
• Strategic impact: it will have strategic impacts for the European Union, particularly in relation the development of Digital Single Market and in support of the Digital Single Strategy as well as the European cyber security strategy

List of Websites:
http://ecrime-project.eu/
final1-e-crime-final-report.pdf
final1-ecrimefinal1.jpg