cybercasing
pp. Using online location-based data and services to determine when a home is unoccupied with a view to robbing it.
Other Forms
Examples
2010
Data stored in digital photographs can help criminals locate individuals and plot real-world crimes, a practice two researchers called "cybercasing" in a recently published paper. The site Pleaserobme.com was one of the first to expose the problem by displaying tweets tagged with location information, although it has since stopped the practice.
—Niraj Chokshi, “How Tech-Savvy Thieves Could 'Cybercase' Your House,” The Atlantic, July 22, 2010
2010
But may we offer, perhaps, a simple fix to address some of these concerns: don't post your vacation photos until after you return home and don't Twitter about it while there. Simple steps like these could go a long way into protecting your home and valuables from being "cybercased" by any tech-savvy thieves.
—Sarah Perez, “Researchers Warn of Geotagging Dangers - Are You Concerned?,” ReadWriteWeb, July 22, 2010
2010 (earliest)
This article aims to raise awareness of a rapidly emerging privacy threat that we term cybercasing: using geo-tagged information available online to mount real-world attacks.
—Gerald Friedland & Robin Sommer, “Cybercasing the Joint: On the Privacy Implications of Geo-Tagging” (PDF), International Computer Science Institute, May 02, 2010
Notes
The verb to case, "to study the layout of a location before robbing it," has been in the language for about a hundred years, with the earliest written citation occurring in 1915.
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