 Cybercrime doesn't seem real. It doesn't seem to hurt anybody, but it does. Email fraud, ransomware, cyberbullying, child exploitation, buying and selling of illegal goods across the internet, they're all cybercrimes and they all have victims. Anyone that's connected to the internet or uses a computer is vulnerable to cybercriminals. Businesses have customers. Customers have profiles and accounts. Their bank account details, their credit card details, their name, their address, their positions. All that information can then be sold on the dark web. Students who undertake the Bachelor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, the Bachelor of Information Technology are prepared to work in the cybersecurity industry with a unique set of skills. The industry needs to get a hold of people and experts that are not only experts in the IT and the security, but understand the criminal mind and what they were and how they were attacked. They're the people that need to bridge the gap between the room full of alpha geeks in the corner with the hardcore skills and law enforcement. The double degree here at Griffith University is exactly that. Students within this degree study both information technology and criminology. The combination of those two skill sets is so powerful. This degree is preparing our graduates for cybercrime jobs of the future. The modern cybercriminal can be anybody. You could actually be doing it from a cafe with a latte next to you. It takes very little for a hacker to breach a secure network. Offenders are using psychological techniques to identify and then exploit victims. The cybercrime of phishing is a good example of how cybercrime has become more sophisticated. What we now have is something called spear phishing. They actually will do research on you prior to sending you an email. They will already know something about you. In a spear phishing attack, they may not even come to you directly. They may actually go between your friends, your family, your colleagues and actually build up a profile about you from lots of different angles. There's hundreds of thousands of people who are willing to try and find some type of vulnerability in the system. Cybercrime today definitely has run very much like a business. A high-rise building with a full level dedicated to cybercrime. It definitely has got a very professional side to it. Students within the degree get to work within the largest community of criminologists in Australia and work with experts in the information technology and network security field. This degree will prepare graduates to understand, to fight and to prevent cybercrime.