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Bone3ater148 karma

Honestly, the hornyness was kinda ridiculous for me too (and I imagine every boy in puberty). I remember being in class and everything in my mind focused about how hot my female classmates were and how I badly I wanted to have sex with them. I'm glad it doesn't "take over" my thoughts anymore. Or at least not so much.

Bone3ater3 karma

Hi there!

Some years ago I was unfortunately introduced to people who were quite active in cybercrime (company identity theft so they could put orders in their name, carding, blackmail, forgery of documents, creating fake job advertisements in order to gather people's information, and other "fun" stuff).

After finding out in what magnitude they operated I reported everything to the police. Two of the suspects were dutch nationals, one escaped to Belgium in order to avoid law enforcement.

This whole ordeal was a traumatic experience for me, seeing as one of the person's involved was "nice", allthough on the other side completely brazen and gleeful (like many other cybercriminals) about their crimes and behaviour, making comments like "Well, even if I get caught by the popo's, european prisons are pretty nice lmao" and "I'll just claim I have aspergers".

My question is as follows: does the Dutch National Police follow up on leads like this? How much "hard" evidence do you need in order to prosecute and are online profiles and comments that these people made (like on hackforums where quite a lot of dutch nationals were active at the time at least) in which they talk about their crimes enough? Also, how come the aforementioned site is still online? It's a huge infrastructure supporting cyber-crime and a haven for a lot of impressionable youth (without wanting to downplay the severity of the crimes some people on there commited).