Karen A. Frenkel



Computers in Court

Technology Review, April 1982

Excerpt

With some 12,000 computers humming away in various government branches in 1976, Abraham Ribicoff, then a U.S. Senator from Connecticut, sensed a tempting target for data defrauders and instituted an investigation into federal computer security.

What he found alarmed him. An Internal Revenue Service employee had used a computer scam to embezzle $650,000 before being caught. And government auditors routinely testing security at the Social Security Administration, one of the world’s largest computer facilities, were able to make off with computer tapes containing the names, addresses, and histories of more than a million beneficiaries.

The criminal justice system was ill-equipped to detect, investigate, or prosecute computer fraud, Senator Ribicoff declared. Some 40 federal statutes could be used to combat swindlers, but most of these predated the computer revolution. “Federal prosecutors are handicapped,” he said, “because there is no law making computer crime a crime.”

The First Act
In 1977, Senator Ribicoff introduced the Federal Computer Systems Protection Act. Designed to “give federal prosecutors a better weapon,” the bill attempted to define computer crime and outline penalties for offenses…



Selected Works

Articles - Blogs
Articles - Magazines
Scientific American MIND How Do Neurons Communicate?
The answer is surprisingly elusive and the subject of intense debate.
Scientific American Silicon Smackdown
A New Algorithim Could Soon Vanquish Go Pros
Scientific American MIND News: Tinkering With Our Clock
A gene that controls human sleep habits can transform the rodents into "early birds"
Scientific American MIND News: Your Brain on Toxins
A review of the literature shows that developing brains are vulnerable to a host of poisons.
Medical Spare Parts
NYSE Magazine
Catching the Customer
How online merchants gain buyers' trust
Battling CyberFraud
Jewerly Etailers and Customer Trust
Computers in Court
Technology Review
Women and Computing
Communications of the ACM
Articles - Newspapers
The Village Voice Unwelcome Science
New York's Newest Science Magnet School and its Pioneering Principal, Jose Maldonado-Rivera
The Village Voice Your Brain on 9/11
Three neurological studies reveal that traumatic memories of those near the site and bereaved children affect functioning of parts of their brains.
CyberTimes Toy Story: Origin of a Species
The making of the first fully computer-generated cartoon feature film.
Articles - Online
Womens eNews Mentor Programs Help Girls Engineer Their Futures
Women continue to lag behind men in engineering, but mentorship programs help attract girls.
Book
Book Reviews
Scientific American Book Review/Essay: Why Aren't More Women Physicists?
Two books look for answers in the lives of a few who succeeded.
Scientific American MIND Play = Learning
Cognitive scientists describe decades of research on play by which children learn. The authors claim that No Child Left Behind over-emphasizes test scores, and ignores data on how kids learn best.
Books - Children's
Looking at Light
Fourth graders explore what makes rainbows, why there are colors, why lights add up to white and paints add up to black.
Listening to Sound
Fourth graders learn about sound waves, echoes, and music.
Light and Sound Technology
How we capture light and sound so that we can see and hear them any time we want.
Documentaries for Public Television
net.LEARNING
The Pros and Cons of Learning Online
Minerva's Machine: Women and Computing
How women overcome barriers in school and the industry
Oral History
Oral history Interviews with Geneva Overholser
Three two audio sessions and one videotaped session with the former editor of the DeMoines Register.


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