The advancements in cyber technology have created new and unique ways for companies and their employees to interact with each other and those outside the company, for either business other reasons. Those other reasons can be for inappropriate or devious purposes. Using company and business assets to for their own gain or goal. These goals can range from simple unauthorized access, misuse of information, or inappropriate communication. More sever is identity deception, digital piracy, spreading malware, or cyberbullying. With the growing need for cyber technology, comes an increase in connectivity, ubiquity, portability, and spanning of boundaries most notably in the IT field. The increase in these areas lead to wider and wider gaps in internal cyber security allowing for employees to take advantage and commit cyber deviance. Another factor is the lack of understanding of these deviant actions within many companies, especially small businesses. This lack of a large understanding has caused counter measures and laws to fall behind and regulation to be stalled. Cyber technology brings with it many conveniences, that assist and streamlines the work within a company where IT is concerned. However, like many advances in technology it is usually implemented before all the issues that it can bring have been ironed out. Unforeseen issues and weakness may have yet to be discovered, if they are not discovered by those who can help regulate and protect these weakness, employees with deviant tendencies can discover them instead and work to suppress them in order to allow them to use them for their own goals. The hardest part of countering cyber deviance, is determining what is considered deviant, besides the obvious. With such a lagging in standards and regulations to this field, it is hard for actual legal ramifications. Unless one violates an implicit and explicit organizational standard or regulation it can be hard for punishment. This creates an environment where the organization in question must be thorough and accurate with it’s regulations to cover all bases.