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The mind games of cybercrime

Written by Paul Amery on April 23, 2024

More in ACCOUNT:

  • The rise of techno-fascism October 27, 2025
  • Unseen Money 12: Keeping hackers out of your DeFi wallet July 15, 2025
  • Unseen Money 11—a bad bird on your wire May 19, 2025

Cybercrime is often more than just a demonstration of hacking skills.

The attacker could be motivated by money, but equally by nationalism, a search for notoriety or revenge. The victim may be random and innocent, but he/she could have been singled out because of an emotional weak spot. Following the crime, other human emotions, such as guilt or shame, may prevent the attack from being disclosed.

So when addressing cybercrime, we need to focus as much on psychology as on technology.

As internet-enabled fraud reaches ever more alarming proportions, in the latest New Money Review podcast I interview Sarah Armstrong-Smith, author of a new book called “Understand the Cyber Attacker Mindset”.

Sarah Armstrong-Smith

In the podcast, we cover:

  • Why pandemics and war are great news for fraudsters
  • The amplification effect of social media
  • How disinformation campaigns drive polarisation in society
  • Why nation-state hackers are well-resourced and focused
  • Why cybercrime and fraud are the invisible crime
  • How police forces are scrambling to catch up
  • Pig-butchering and blaming the victims of fraud
  • Seeing frauds as human-to-human relationships
  • Bolstering our defences as organisations and individuals
  • The need for transparency about cyberattacks
  • Why sanctions are most effective at the individual level

Cover photo by Laili Sadr

In each thirty-minute episode, the New Money Review podcast brings you the best minds from the world of money.

From economics to payments, financial markets, technology, law, digital assets, crime and fraud, you’ll find an episode that interests you. Listen in.

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New Money Review covers innovations in money and their implications for our financial, social and political systems.

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