Havers Benjamin, Tripathi Kartikeya, Burton Alexandra, McManus Sally, Cooper Claudia
Dawes Centre for Future Crime, Department of Security and Crime Science, Faculty of Engineering, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 18;19(12):e0314380. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314380. eCollection 2024.
Younger people are more likely to report cybercrime than older people. As older people spend more time online, this may change. If similarly exposed, risk factors including social isolation and poor health could make older adults disproportionally susceptible. We aimed to explore whether cybercrime risks and their predictors vary between age groups.
We analysed responses from 35,069 participants aged 16+ in the 2019/20 Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW). We investigated, among people who have used the internet in the past year, risks of experiencing any cybercrime, repeat victimisation and associated financial loss across age groups.
Despite being at lower risk of reporting any cybercrime in the past year, people aged 75+ were more likely to report financial loss resulting from cybercrime victimisation (OR 4.25, p = 0.037) and repeat cybercrime victimisation (OR 2.03, p = 0.074) than younger people. Men, those from Mixed or Black ethnic groups, more deprived areas, managerial professional groups, and with worse health were at greater cybercrime risk.
While younger adults are more at risk from cybercrime, older adults disclosed more severe cases (repetitive victimisation and associated financial loss), perhaps due to lesser awareness of scams and reporting options. As most people experience declining health as they age, greater understanding of why poor health predicts cybercrime could inform prevention initiatives that would particularly benefit older age groups and mitigate risks of growing internet use among older adults. Health and social care professionals may be well positioned to support prevention.
年轻人比老年人更有可能报告网络犯罪。随着老年人上网时间增多,这种情况可能会改变。如果面临同样的网络环境,包括社会孤立和健康状况不佳等风险因素可能会使老年人更容易受到伤害。我们旨在探讨网络犯罪风险及其预测因素在不同年龄组之间是否存在差异。
我们分析了2019/20年度英格兰和威尔士犯罪调查(CSEW)中35069名16岁及以上参与者的回复。我们调查了在过去一年中使用过互联网的人群中,不同年龄组遭受任何网络犯罪、重复受害以及相关财务损失的风险。
尽管75岁及以上的人在过去一年中报告任何网络犯罪的风险较低,但与年轻人相比,他们更有可能报告因网络犯罪受害而导致的财务损失(优势比4.25,p = 0.037)和重复网络犯罪受害(优势比2.03,p = 0.074)。男性、来自混合或黑人种族群体、居住在更贫困地区、管理专业群体以及健康状况较差的人面临更大的网络犯罪风险。
虽然年轻人更容易受到网络犯罪的影响,但老年人披露的案件更为严重(重复受害和相关财务损失),这可能是由于对诈骗和报告方式的认识不足。随着大多数人年龄增长健康状况下降,深入了解健康状况不佳为何会预测网络犯罪,可为预防措施提供参考,这些措施将特别惠及老年群体,并降低老年人互联网使用增加带来的风险。健康和社会护理专业人员可能处于支持预防工作的有利位置。