2022 Accepted Research Papers

2022 Accepted Research Papers

The Symposium on Electronic Crime Research is an annual event hosted by the APWG. The event’s continuing goal is to promote cybercrime research by providing an venue for university researchers to publish their work. The program has published 100’s of papers specifically focused on fraud and crime in the cyber world.

eCrime_2022_Box_Logo
This Year's Published Papers

Ian W. Gray, New York University
Jack Cable, Independent Researcher
Benjamin Brown, University of Michigan
Vlad Cuiujuclu, Flashpoint
Damon McCoy, New York University

The Role of Extraversion in Phishing Victimisation: A Systematic Literature Review

Pablo Lo ́pez-Aguilar∗, Constantinos Patsakis†, Agusti Solanas‡ ∗Dept. of Research and Innovation, Anti-Phishing Working Group – Europe
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. 0000-0002-9685-9084
†Dept. of Informatics, University of Piraeus, Piraeus, Greece.
Athena Research Center, Marousi, Athens, Greece. 0000-0002-4460-9331 ‡Dept. of Computer Engineering and Mathematics, Universitat Rovira i Virgili Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. 0000-0002-4881-6215

Tom Meurs
IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands t.w.a.meurs@utwente.nl

Marianne Junger
IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands m.junger@utwente.nl

Erik Tews
EEMCS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands e.tews@utwente.nl

Abhishta Abhishta
IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands s.abhishta@utwente.nl

THREAT/crawl: a Trainable, Highly-Reusable, and Extensible Automated Method and Tool to Crawl Criminal Underground Forums

Michele Campobasso m.campobasso@tue.nl
Eindhoven University of Technology Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Luca Allodi l.allodi@tue.nl
Eindhoven University of Technology Eindhoven, The Netherlands

“Invest in crypto!”: An analysis of investment scam advertisements found in Bitcointalk

Gilberto Atondo Siu
Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom jga33@cam.ac.uk

Alice Hutchings
Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom alice.hutchings@cl.cam.ac.uk

Marie Vasek
Department of Computer Science University College London London, United Kingdom m.vasek@ucl.ac.uk

Tyler Moore
School of Cyber Studies & Tandy School of Computer Science The University of Tulsa
Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States tyler-moore@utulsa.ed

The Challenges of Blockchain-Based Naming Systems for Malware Defenders

Audrey Randall
UC San Diego
San Diego, CA, USA aurandal@ucsd.edu

Wes Hardaker
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA, USA hardaker@isi.edu

Geoffrey M. Voelker
UC San Diego
San Diego, CA, USA
voelker@ucsd.edu

Stefan Savage
UC San Diego
San Diego, CA, USA
ssavage@ucsd.edu

Aaron Schulman
UC San Diego
San Diego, CA, USA
schulman@ucsd.edu

“I don’t really give them piece of mind”: User Perceptions of Social Engineering Attacks

Lin Kyi
School of Computer Science Carleton University
Ottawa, Canada lin.kyi@carleton.ca

Elizabeth Stobert
School of Computer Science Carleton University
Ottawa, Canada elizabeth.stobert@carleton.ca

Leaky Kits: The Increased Risk of Data Exposure from Phishing Kits

Bhaskar Tejaswi, Nayanamana Samarasinghe, Sajjad Pourali, Mohammad Mannan, Amr Youssef
Concordia University
Montreal, Canada
{b tejasw,n samara,s poural,mmannan,youssef}@ciise.concordia.ca

Building and Testing a Network of Social Trust in an Underground Forum: Robust Connections and Overlapping Criminal Domains

Dalyapraz Manatova∗, Dewesha Sharma∗, Sagar Samtani†, L. Jean Camp∗ ∗Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering, †Kelley School of Business Indiana University Bloomington
Indiana, USA
dmanato@iu.edu, deweshar@iu.edu, ssamtani@iu.edu, ljcamp@indiana.edu

Cryptocurrency Exchange Closure Revisited (Again)

Arghya Mukherjee
Tandy School of Computer Science The University of Tulsa
Tulsa, USA arghya-mukherjee@utulsa.edu

Tyler Moore
School of Cyber Studies The University of Tulsa
Tulsa, USA tyler-moore@utulsa.edu