2024 Accepted Research Papers

 

24-26 September 2024 

 

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.

 

This Year's Published Papers

 

Hey Google Remind me to be Phished Exploiting the Notifications of the Google AI Assistant on Android for Social Engineering Attacks

 

Marie Weinz, Saskia Laura Schroer, Giovanni Apruzzese Liechtenstein Business School, University of Liechtenstein {marie.weinz, saskia.schroeer, giovanni.apruzzese}@uni.li

 

A Sinister Fattening Dissecting the Tales of Pig Butchering and other Cryptocurrency Scams

 

Marilyne Ordekian Department of Computer Science University College London London, United Kingdom marilyne.ordekian.21@ucl.ac.uk, Enrico Mariconti Department of Security and Crime Science University College London London, United Kingdom e.mariconti@ucl.ac.uk, Antonis Papasavva Department of Security and Crime Science University College London London, United Kingdom antonis.papasavva@ucl.ac.uk, Marie Vasek Department of Computer Science University College London London, United Kingdom m.vasek@ucl.ac.uk 

 

EAGLEEYE Attention to Unveil Malicious Event Sequences from Provenance Graphs

 

Philipp Gysel∗, Candid Wuest∗, Kenneth Nwafor∗†, Otakar Jasek∗, Andrey Ustyuzhanin‡∗, Dinil Mon Divakaran§ ∗Acronis Research, †Constructor Technology, ‡Constructor University, Bremen, §Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R), A*STAR

 

Love Bytes Back Cybercrime Following Relationship Breakdown

 

Quincy Taylor Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom qct20@cantab.ac.uk, Anna Talas Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom anna.talas@cl.cam.ac.uk, Alice Hutchings Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom alice.hutchings@cl.cam.ac.uk 

 

Mod Zoo A Large Scale Study of Modded Android Apps and their Markets 

 

1st Luis A. Saavedra Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom luis.saavedra@cl.cam.ac.uk, 2nd Hridoy S. Dutta Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom hridoy.dutta@cl.cam.ac.uk, 3rd Alastair R. Beresford Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom alastair.beresford@cl.cam.ac.uk, 4th Alice Hutchings Computer Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge, United Kingdom alice.hutchings@cl.cam.ac.uk 

 

Multimodal Large Language Models for Phishing Webpage Detection and Identification 

 

Jehyun Lee∗, Peiyuan Lim†, Bryan Hooi†, Dinil Mon Divakaran‡ ∗Trustwave, †National University of Singapore, ‡Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R), A*STAR Email: jehyun.lee@trustwave.com, peiyuanlim@u.nus.edu , bhooi@comp.nus.edu.sg , dinli_divakaran@i2r.a-star.edu.sg 

 

Risk Assessment Mitigation for Core Security Capabilities 

 

Marc Dupuis School of Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics, University of Washington Bothell, USA https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5303-2511, Karen Renaud Computer and Information Science, University of Strathclyde Glasgow, UK University of South Africa, South Africa https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7187-6531 

 

What To Do Against Ransomware Evaluating Law Enforcement Interventions 

 

Tom Meurs IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands t.w.a.meurs@utwente.nl, Raphael Hoheisel IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands r.hoheisel@utwente.nl, Marianne Junger IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands m.junger@utwente.nl, Abhishta Abhishta IEBIS University of Twente Enschede, Netherlands s.abhishta@utwente.nl, Damon McCoy Department of Computer Science New York University New York, USA mccoy@nyu.edu