Introduction to Cybercrime

By Gabriel Ebina Categories: Cybercrime

About Course

Introduction to Cybercrime: Technical, Legal, and Criminological Foundations is a foundational course designed for criminology students, criminal justice learners, professionals, and ordinary internet users who want to understand cybercrime beyond surface-level definitions. This course explains cybercrime in plain language and technical terms, introduces the legal framework of RA 10175, and discusses the most common digital crimes affecting people today, from phishing and online scams to hacking, identity theft, malware, cyber libel, and account takeover. It also examines why cybercrime matters in modern criminology, how victims are targeted, and what practical knowledge every person should have to stay safer in a digital world.

Show More

What Will You Learn?

  • • What cybercrime is in simple, technical, and legal terms
  • • The key provisions of RA 10175 and related Philippine cyber laws
  • • The common forms of cybercrime and how offenders commit them
  • • The technical concepts every non-IT learner should understand

Course Content

MODULE 1 Entering the World of Cybercrime
This opening module introduces learners to the growing importance of cybercrime in the modern world. It explains why crime is no longer confined to physical spaces and why criminologists, students, professionals, and ordinary citizens must understand digital offending. The module frames cybercrime as a modern public safety, legal, and criminological concern.

MODULE 2 Understanding Cybercrime: Simplified, Technical, and Legal Meanings
Module Overview In Module 1, the course introduced cybercrime as a real and growing concern in everyday life, professional work, and organizational security. The next step is to answer a more basic but extremely important question: what exactly is cybercrime? At first glance, the answer may appear simple. Many people think cybercrime is just “crime on the internet” or “crime using computers.” While these ideas are partly correct, they are not enough. Cybercrime is broader than social media scams and more complex than the popular image of a hacker breaking into a system. It can involve phones, computers, online accounts, digital files, websites, email, cloud storage, financial platforms, messaging applications, and many other forms of electronic communication and data. This module is designed to give learners a strong foundation by explaining cybercrime in three connected ways. First, it explains cybercrime in simple everyday language so that any learner can understand it. Second, it explains cybercrime in a technical but approachable way, showing how devices, systems, accounts, data, and networks become involved in criminal activity. Third, it introduces the legal meaning of cybercrime by showing that not every harmful or unethical online act automatically becomes a punishable cybercrime under the law. Because this course is intended for professionals, employees, educators, business owners, public servants, law enforcement personnel, and ordinary internet users, this module does not assume a technical background. When a technical term appears, it will be defined and explained in plain language. By the end of this module, learners should not only be able to define cybercrime. They should also understand the environment in which cybercrime happens, the role of data and accounts in digital offending, and the difference between actual cybercrime, ordinary misuse of technology, and online behavior that may be wrong but not necessarily criminal. After completing this module, learners should be able to: 1. Define cybercrime in simple, technical, and legal terms. 2. Explain how technology can become the tool, target, or environment of a crime. 3. Understand basic digital concepts such as devices, networks, accounts, passwords, data, and online platforms in relation to cybercrime. 4. Distinguish cybercrime from ordinary computer misuse, unethical online behavior, and non-criminal digital misconduct. 5. Recognize that not every harmful online act automatically falls under the same legal category. 6. Build a clearer foundation for understanding the cybercrime offenses discussed in the succeeding modules.

MODULE 3 The Philippine Legal Framework: Understanding Republic Act No. 10175
Module Overview Cybercrime is not defined only by technology. For an act to be treated as a criminal offense, it must be prohibited by law. A suspicious message, harmful post, compromised account, or fraudulent transaction may appear clearly wrong, but legal responsibility depends on the particular act committed, the surrounding circumstances, the evidence available, and the law that applies. In the Philippines, the principal law dealing specifically with cybercrime is Republic Act No. 10175, officially known as the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012. The law identifies acts involving computer systems, electronic data, online communication, and information and communications technology that may result in criminal liability. It also provides rules on investigation, jurisdiction, penalties, and cooperation among government agencies. This module explains RA 10175 in understandable language. Legal and technical terms will be defined before they are applied. The goal is not to turn every learner into a lawyer. Instead, the module is intended to help professionals and ordinary users recognize possible cybercrime situations, understand why certain acts are prohibited, preserve relevant information, and seek proper legal or technical assistance when necessary. The module also considers important legal developments after the law was enacted. In Disini v. Secretary of Justice, the Supreme Court reviewed the constitutionality of several provisions of RA 10175. Most of the principal cybercrime offenses were upheld, while certain provisions, such as the original offense involving unsolicited commercial communications and particular investigative powers, were declared unconstitutional. This material is for education and general awareness. The final legal classification of an actual incident should be based on complete facts and professional legal advice. Module Learning Outcomes After completing this module, learners should be able to: 1. Explain the purpose and general scope of RA 10175. 2. Identify the principal groups of offenses under the law. 3. Explain common cybercrime offenses in clear, non-technical language. 4. Distinguish offenses against systems and data from computer-related and content-related offenses. 5. Understand the concepts of attempt, aiding or abetting, jurisdiction, and increased penalties for crimes committed through information and communications technology. 6. Recognize the relationship between RA 10175 and other Philippine laws. 7. Avoid immediately accusing or legally classifying a person without adequate facts and evidence.

Student Ratings & Reviews

No Review Yet
No Review Yet
Scroll to Top