The overlap between criminal justice and cyber-crime is that some actions committed on a computer or the internet are crimes. These crimes can either be legal or illegal and such crimes include cyberbullying which is not illegal, and identity theft, which is illegal. Depending on the state that you live in, the legality of the crimes may vary. Another way that criminal justice and cybercrime overlap is that some crimes have jobs associated with them to alleviate it. For example, digital forensics has become a job and field of study that’s opened lots of opportunities to help decrease cybercrime. Criminal justice and cybercrime also overlap due to the types of cases and which government agencies are involved. By this I mean that depending on how bad the cybercrime is, a government agency may get involved thus overlapping the two. These overlaps relate to other disciplines in this class because it shows how inclusive the cyber major is. There is an endless number of jobs you can choose from and it shows that you do not need a specific major or background in order to get into the other. This also relates to other disciplines by showing how a lot of these crimes or instances have a recurring factor. Computer viruses are also a cybercrime and can overlap with criminal justice depending on where the virus comes from and where the virus ends up going to. An example of this would be someone purposefully releasing a virus onto a government agencies computer. This criminal act would gain the attention of government agencies such as the FBI. The two work fields are comprised of majors that have a high probability of ending up working together. The overlap of criminal justice and cyber-crime create insight into how the jobs in this particular field are all interconnected.