Drug Cartels Find New Hunting Grounds in Online Video Games

Drug Cartels Find New Hunting Grounds in Online Video Games

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Narcotics police ‍the world over are sprucing up their video game‍ skills, as cartels go‌ increasingly online⁢ to sell drugs and recruit dealers.

“Cartels have been incredibly tech savvy over ‍recent years, reaching vast audiences,” Benjamin Shultz, foreign⁤ malign ​influence analyst at Deloitte, told a Council of Europe meeting.

“The Sinaloa Cartel ⁣has‍ a Twitter account with almost 200,000 ‍followers and they tend to ⁣post nearly daily, engaging and posting images and other contents that glorify what they do,” he said. The account ‌has since been shut down.

To ‍bring greater ⁣attention ⁣to⁤ the role of online gaming‌ in the drug ​trade, the Council of Europe’s Pompidou Group, which works on international ⁣drug issues, held a ⁢forum in Mexico City on December ‌19 and 20.

Online games such as “Grand Theft Auto” or‌ “World of Warcraft” provide ⁣perfect cover ⁤for ⁤cartels to discreetly sell drugs or find⁤ personnel.

“The darknet has been decreasing in popularity for cartels, law enforcement‌ has gotten ⁣pretty good at getting into the⁤ darknet, whereas‌ video ⁣games garner really untapped ⁣resources and are very unmonitored,” Shultz⁢ said.

In online games, users can connect with almost anyone,‌ teenagers can talk to strangers, and there are not many controls, he explained.

The games’ internal messaging⁤ systems are extremely difficult to intercept, particularly when traffickers communicate with emoticons or emojis.

An entire conversation can be​ carried out with symbols,⁣ avoiding any suspect words that ⁢could trigger ‌attention.

Within drug circles in the United States, the electric plug emoji means “dealer,” a small palm tree means “marijuana,” and a key stands for ⁢”cocaine.”

Mexican police were the first to notice‍ the practice, ​with an early case involving three adolescents aged ⁤11 to 14 who were recruited ‌while ⁤playing⁤ “Garena Free Fire” ⁢and‌ offered $200 a week to be lookouts in Mexico ​City.

The ⁤three ⁣were arrested ⁢just before boarding a⁣ bus that their⁣ recruiter had bought them tickets for.

“This type of transaction and dealing is still‍ much more common on Instagram or Snapchat, and most of the⁤ cases with video games have been localised​ near the US-Mexico border,” Shultz said.

“In Europe video‌ games are very unregulated,‍ they’re not monitored so this could be very well percolating under the surface,” he added.

Thomas Kattau, deputy executive secretary of the Council of Europe’s Pompidou Group, said “it is a global issue, ⁢and the idea is you need to⁣ have a forum ​where we can make law enforcement and governments aware of the phenomenon.”

“Mexico is the country that has taken the lead on this issue and brought it to the attention of law enforcement,” he said.

“And ‌now we have seen similar things occurring in the‌ UK and other ⁣countries, ‍and ⁣therefore we see it is not an anecdotal, isolated phenomenon, but something which ⁣is quickly replicating.”

Shultz and‌ Kattau suggest​ better education ‍both for parents and‌ their children about the risks of online‍ games,⁢ as well as greater efforts by game developers to ⁣reinforce ⁣protections, above all by using artificial intelligence to‌ improve surveillance software.

In online games, users can connect with almost anyone
AFP

2023-12-22 07:00:04
Article from www.ibtimes.com
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