Interpol reports a sharp rise in cybercrime and scams across Asia
The figure that reframes the problem is a share, not a sum. In more than half the countries Interpol surveyed for its latest Asia and South Pacific cyber-threat assessment, cybercrime now accounts for around 30% of all crime recorded nationally.
That is the line that turns scams and phishing from a category of nuisance into a structural feature of the regional crime economy. When nearly a third of recorded offences happen through a screen, cybercrime is no longer a specialism. It is the main event.
The report, published this week, describes a region where rapid digitalisation, new tools and increasingly organised criminal networks have combined to drive crime online faster than enforcement can follow.
Phishing and related scam techniques have become the most widespread and most financially damaging form, with a third of the countries surveyed reporting more than 10,000 cases each. The pattern is consistent enough across borders...
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