The study is set up as an international comparative study. Instead, it is mainly about understanding human behaviour, about norms and about the relation between the two. The results can also help those to whom the police are accountable as well as provide the academic world with new and up-to-date arguments in the ongoing discussion about technology-based policing, fundamental human rights and how the law can be enforced in this newly created digital environment.Īlthough this study deals with police detective work in a technological environment, its main focus is not on technology as such. The results can help the police to fight crime in modern society appropriately. "Legal fairness" refers to the police doing their work in accordance with the rule of law and fundamental human rights. "Forensic correctness" refers to collecting information in accordance with technological and jurisprudential requirements imposed on law enforcement. The core idea is to compare everyday police reality with the de-mands that are imposed on detective work by principles of both forensic correct¬ness and legal fairness. Hence, the study takes us to the very heart of the privacy debate since here the obvious wish of TOR-users to remain unknown clashes with the power of the state to police the public sphere and fight crime.Įssentially, the present study aims at answering the question of how our society can properly deal with the tension between privacy and other fundamental rights of citizens (TOR-users), and the exercise of state power (officers on the TOR-network), when this power is exercised for the purpose of preventing and investigating crime. ![]() Consequently, the TOR-network has attracted the attention of the police. However, part of the TOR-network has become a mature supply chain for illicit material and services, such as counterfeit money, stolen cards, access to hackers and hitmen and "how-to-guides" for criminals and terrorists. ![]() TOR was developed with the good intention to protect the privacy of internet users. TOR is the acronym of The Onion Router, which stands for a technique that helps an internet user to remain unknown. ![]() The present study focuses on police detectives fighting crime on a specific part of the internet: the TOR-network.
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