Virtual world
Virtual worlds are becoming the newest tool for laundering money

Virtual worlds becoming money laundries

Criminals are using online currency to cover tracks

Shaun Nichols in San Francisco

Virtual worlds have become the newest tool for criminals to launder their ill-gotten gains.

According to a recent report by McAfee, cyber criminals are increasingly turning to the currencies in virtual worlds as a way to legitimise money earned from fraud, malware and other illegal activities.

Advertisement

Because cashflow is connected to user names, malware writers can convert funds from illegal activity into online currency for use in virtual worlds and then withdraw them again.

In the process, the criminal puts a step between themselves and the illegal act, thus creating legitimate or "laundered" money.

McAfee senior architect Dr Igor Muttik suggested that sites could help stem the flow by implementing a delay time between when a transaction in requested and when it is executed. Such a delay, says Muttik, could give law enforcement a chance to connect the flow of the criminal money.

Unfortunately, there are other ways for criminals to launder money in virtual worlds.

Muttik noted that because the sending of messages is free in online worlds, money can be reinvested into spam campaigns and laundered as revenue from those ventures.

To close the door on spam laundering, Muttik suggests that virtual world operators institute a small charge for messages. If each message cost a small amount of virtual currency, criminals would be less drawn to spam campaigns.

"As long as the price is not creating a negative, the bad guys can use dirty virtual money because sales of goods and services orchestrated by a spam campaign will clear their funds," explained Muttik.

"Unfortunately, a solution for raising the cost of virtual mail can only work as long as normal law-abiding players happily accept such a raise."

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Do you agree?

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

eu flag

V3.co.uk weekly debrief, 6 Nov 09

This week, Europe decides what to do with illegal file sharers

Intel unveils its micro server platform

Small-enclosure systems take aim at hosting market

IT white papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

What is the biggest problem your firm faces as a result of the data explosion?

View poll results

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Spotlight

Piracy, privacy and processing power set to be hot topics for V3.co.uk Summit

Have you got a burning desire to quiz experts from...

iPhone

World's first iPhone virus surfaces

Images of 80s icon Rick Astley spell trouble

Airvana HubBub

Airvana debuts 3G femtocell for offices

HubBub improves indoor network coverage for businesses

shopping key

E-commerce on brink of SaaS revolution

Figleaves founder argues platform-as-a-service vendor will emerge to shake up...

Primary Navigation