He, however, was unable to pay the RM5,000 requested and the video was then uploaded online. Amirudin Abdul Wahab, the chief executive officer of Cyber Security Malaysia, cyber blackmail is usually aimed at teenage boys and middle-aged men, and most perpetrators are usually foreigners. Advertising Scams No, Google is most certainly not going to pay you every month for just sitting at home and staring at the computer.

According to North Yorkshire Police, she secretly recorded these acts and later used the clips to blackmail the men.
Wong first claimed her grandmother was ill and asked each man for £3,000 (about $4,500). Wong then revealed the compromising recordings she'd taken, and threatened to post the videos to You Tube if the men didn't pay. Police say gangs may be involved, and that there may be more victims; they urge anyone else affected by this or similar scams to come forward.
Law enforcement authorities investigating the emails soon realized that the threatening communications were part of a larger series of crimes.
Mijangos, they discovered, had tricked scores of women and teenage girls into downloading malware onto their computers.
Let me first explain how this Facebook Blackmail SCAM works.
I feel they operate like a gang and the origin is currently Philippines.However, also included on the list of punishable offenses under this new act is cybersex and some harsh new punishments for libel.The Electronic Frontier Foundation cites the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines as saying the new act actually broadens the scope the country's libel law, which it describes as "so antiquated and draconian that the United Nations Human Rights Council itself declared it excessive and called on the Philippine government to review the law with the end of decriminalizing libel." Wired UK reports that the cybersex portion of the act is an effort to put a stop to sex trafficking and forced prostitution.The Philippines is today making headlines around the world after President Benigno Aquino III signed a law that bans cybersex as part of a cybercrime prevention tactic.The act, signed last Wednesday, September 12, prohibits the "willful engagement, maintenance, control, or operation, direction or indirectly, of any lascivious exhibition of sexual organs or sexual activity, with the aid of a computer system, for favor or consideration." The Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012 aims to cut down on cybercrime by making certain acts such as cyber-squatting, computer-related forgery and identity theft, and child pornography, illegal.The perpetrator wanted a pornographic video of the victim.