Understanding eWhoring
Alice Hutchings, Sergio Pastrana

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the 'eWhoring' online fraud, revealing its business model, methods, and economic factors, and suggests intervention points to prevent and disrupt this emerging crime.
Contribution
It provides a detailed crime script analysis of 'eWhoring', an unusual online fraud, based on extensive forum data, highlighting its mechanisms and potential prevention strategies.
Findings
Sexualized images are stolen and shared online.
Demand for exclusive image packs increases with saturation.
Multiple online platforms are exploited for 'eWhoring' activities.
Abstract
In this paper, we describe a new type of online fraud, referred to as 'eWhoring' by offenders. This crime script analysis provides an overview of the 'eWhoring' business model, drawing on more than 6,500 posts crawled from an online underground forum. This is an unusual fraud type, in that offenders readily share information about how it is committed in a way that is almost prescriptive. There are economic factors at play here, as providing information about how to make money from 'eWhoring' can increase the demand for the types of images that enable it to happen. We find that sexualised images are typically stolen and shared online. While some images are shared for free, these can quickly become 'saturated', leading to the demand for (and trade in) more exclusive 'packs'. These images are then sold to unwitting customers who believe they have paid for a virtual sexual encounter. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCybercrime and Law Enforcement Studies · Spam and Phishing Detection · Crime, Illicit Activities, and Governance
