Technology impacts the interactions between the offenders and the victims in many ways. For one, offenders are able to commit crimes from anywhere around the world to a victim who lives anywhere else around the world without being physically seen. The offenders can take as much money or information from their prey as they want and their victims might not even know that it is happening. These impacts leave victims feeling very violated as they have lost so much without seeing it coming. There is a really raw, dirty, and terrible feeling when a victim has their identity stolen, money taken, and/or information collected. This involuntary action makes the victim wonder relentlessly as to how this could have happened if they physically know who it was that conducted this cybercrime, and so on. Technology that allows offenders to commit crimes toward others leaves victims filled with stress and anxiety and a sense of loss of control in their own belongings. In the case of cyberstalking, the offender is able to leverage technology to stalk their victim. Technology unfortunately makes it easier for people to stalk others as many social media profiles show locations, timestamps, and other information that a cyberstalker can use against their victim. Victims on the other hand feel a sense of a loss of privacy since their whole living world of connectivity gives so much information away about them. Luckily, victims can mitigate this from happening as technology can be used against offenders. Victims can put tight security and privacy controls on their social media posts in order to only allow certain people and/or certain friends to see only what they want them to see. Also, victims can learn that they should turn off location services on pictures and social media posts in order to keep their selves from being tracked down.