Tech trend 2022: Metaverse

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Watch Closely

Metaverse, AR/VR & Synthetic Media

Informs Strategy

Act Now

1ST YEAR ON THE LIST

Virtual Crime

A lack of comprehensive legal frameworks for XR and the metaverse may exacerbate the frequency and severity of cybercrime in emerging virtual environments.

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KEY INSIGHT

EXAMPLES

DISRUPTIVE IMPACT

EMERGING PLAYERS

Cybercrime, estimated to have led to the loss of trillions of dollars in 2021 alone, is expected to spread and evolve as web- and app-based digital interfaces transition to immersive virtual experiences in the metaverse, exposing new vulnerabilities.

Since the dawn of the internet, online actions have had the potential to damage users’ reputations, livelihoods, bank accounts, and well-being in the real world. As those online actions become more personalized and immersive, the scope and complexity of cybercrime, as well as its repercussions, are expected to increase. Virtual currencies, especially those stored and exchanged on anonymized blockchains, are well suited for money laundering and illicit purchases. Deepfakes and hyperrealistic avatars can be used to falsely gain the trust of an individual and exploit them, particularly in metaverse workspaces. Bullying and harassment, already a scourge of social networks that has caused devastating real-world consequences for the victims, are likely to have an even deeper impact when insults and threats are delivered by avatars with real voices and animated 3D forms. Plus, as more users link their metaverse profiles to personal information like biometrics, data breaches could prove far more costly.

Historically, tech companies have failed to take responsibility for crimes committed on their platforms. Thus, it is incumbent on lawmakers and cybercrime units to familiarize themselves with emerging virtual platforms if they hope to establish legal frameworks and law enforcement practices to make the metaverse safer for the average user.

• Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center • Interpol • Law enforcement cybercrime units

© 2022 Future Today Institute


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Disclaimer

1min
page 52

Creative Commons License

1min
pages 53-54

Trends in Action

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page 46

Key Questions

0
page 45

Application

1min
page 44

Synthetic Media

1min
pages 34-35

Scenario: The Reborns

1min
page 38

AR for the Enterprise

1min
pages 27-28

Hands-On to Heads-Up

1min
page 29

Smart Glasses

1min
page 24

Diminished Reality

1min
page 26

Smart Contact Lenses

1min
page 25

Forensic AR/VR

1min
page 22

Virtual Crime

1min
pages 20-21

Virtual Possessions and Ownership

1min
page 19

Avatars and Avatar Portability

1min
page 15

Digital Spaces

1min
page 10

Fragmentation of the Virtual Persona

1min
page 17

Hyperrealistic Digital Personas

1min
page 16

Digital Real Estate and the New “Neighborhood”

1min
page 11

Key Insights

1min
page 7

The New Realities Landscape

2min
page 9
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