Cybercrime, in simple terms, is a crime that is done on a computer or over the internet, while criminal justice is a system of law enforcement for crime that is committed. There is a large overlap between criminal justice and cybercrime, mostly because of how crime is becoming more involved with technology. One example would be how more likely money is to be stolen through the internet nowadays than for an individual’s purse to be taken. Over the past few years, society has shifted into a technology based world where most people put their entire lives on the internet, so new types of crimes emerged to take advantage of that. Because of this, a large amount of crime is connected to a form of technology in one way or another. For those reasons, that is how cybercrime and criminal justice began to overlap. This also relates to ethics. This relates because crime and ethics are both constructed by the individual and the society that they belong in. Whether certain actions on the internet are ethical depends on how that individual uses the technology, and how that action is perceived is determined by the society they live in. If a certain action made on the internet is considered bad enough to be labeled as a crime is directly correlated with ethics. For example, posting erotic photos online can be considered taboo for certain countries, but is not critical enough for that individual to be considered a criminal for it, while in other countries, it could be the exact opposite. Certain countries may give large fines or even sentences for doing an action like that. This concept can be seen all throughout cyber security and cybercrime, because a certain individual or societies ethics for particular actions involving the internet can differ drastically.