As stated numerous times previously, criminals seem to have taken the internet as a safe place to commit their crimes with a sense of anonymity and more power. With the fact that criminals have more power online it leaves the notion that normal users have become more vulnerable which is important in understanding how criminal offenders and victims interact. The main question asked is how does the improvement of cyber technology coincide with the changing impact on how criminal offenders interact with victims. Firstly, I believe that with the vastness and interconnectedness of the internet, those running criminal enterprises or even small schemes have much more power over normal users. For example, without the internet a criminal may be limited in their ability to scam or exploit when they are locked only to the people around them but with the internet, if done correctly, criminals wishing to gain money through illegal means are able to collect more finances from people all around the world without them even knowing. In terms of criminal enterprises drug racketeering could be seen as a criminal and victim relationship and as such understanding when criminals use the internet to reach a wider group of customers, for example dark web drug markets like the Silk Road site, they may be widening the amount of victims of crime related injury. Criminal offenders committing acts of stalking or harassment may also use the anonymous nature of the internet to stealthily interact with their victims, who themselves have no way of finding out who they are being harassed by and how to confront them about it, and as such it is much harder for law enforcement to track down the original harasser and charge them. In extreme cases cyber bullying and stalking could lead to suicides, which in another way has made murder a seemingly easier affair due to cyber technology.