Technology plays a huge role in criminality, because actually a significant amount of crime is connected to technology. If you commit an act of cybercrime, you are breaking the law and will be held accountable for your actions through the criminal justice system. There are multiple ways in which criminal justice and cybercrime overlap, one way is the fact that criminologists look to what is called human factors as a means to explain human behavior. Criminologists discuss human factors in criminal justice and within cybercrime. Another overlap is the fact that those who receive an education through criminal justice programs in college may potentially have enough skill, knowledge, and training to take on some of the “softer” careers within cybersecurity. One of the bigger areas of overlap is how criminal justice is potentially handy in assisting to identify appropriate interventions and responses to cybercriminals. These overlaps may also be tied to some of the other disciplines discussed within this course. One such example is how some criminologists see certain types of cyber crimes as white-collar crimes. White collar crimes are crimes committed by a person with high respectability and social status within their profession. In some cases of white collar crime, digital forensics is utilized as means to help identify and investigate means by which a white collar cyber crime took place. Cybercrime is also known as electronic crime. This type of crime encompasses many different types of illegal actions, but all cybercrime uses a computer, network, or the internet to do illegal activities. This is why it is called cyber crime since the crimes are done using computers and network connections. This overlap between the disciplines we talked about in class closely relate. For example, Information security, ethics, and philosophy can be joined together to form a point of view from each discipline to clearly elaborate on a subject and finding the common ground.