Cybercrime, often conflated with other forms of digital threats, largely involves individuals being defrauded through malware infections, social engineering to obtain OTPs, theft of passwords via data breaches, malicious links, “digital arrest” scams, matrimonial fraud, investment traps, and cryptocurrency schemes. Such crimes have surged in recent years ₹22,000 crore was reported lost in 2024, though the actual figure is likely much higher due to underreporting driven by embarrassment or fear. While police cyber cells and the Ministry of Home Affairs’ Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) are working to counter these threats, recovery is difficult because perpetrators are often organised gangs rather than lone actors. Traditional hotspots like Jamtara have been replaced by multi-state border areas such as Bharatpur and parts of North Bengal near the Bihar–Bengal–Nepal border, with many operations now run from Southeast Asia particularly Cambodia and Thailand often by Chinese-linked syndicates.