You are a surgeon from the US who decides to lend his/her services to help the people of Australia, who were victims of a huge tidal wave.
You are flown to Sydney, Australia to help out the victims of the biggest tidal wave in history. The city was all but destroyed, and hospitals around the country are packed with crying, bleeding victims. Your help is greatly appreciated since you are one of the best doctors in the US, where you specialize in chest injuries. When you arrive, you are immediately put to work setting bones, sewing up torn limbs, and treating victims for shock. Among the victims you find one man who has suffered severe injuries to his lungs from submersion; his lungs are partially collapsed, and he is in severe pain. You remember a similar case back in the US where a man who went through a similar trauma fully recovered after undergoing a new procedure pioneered by an old med-school friend of yours. Knowing how important the process could be to other doctors, your friend posted the process on his web site in the US.
After finding a computer you log on. You are overwhelmed with joy, because this information is going to save your patients life. You set up the equipment in the surgery room and prepare for surgery. In the middle of this long and delicate process, a cyber-pirate takes over and holds the information from the web site hostage. He tells you that if you do not electronically wire him 3 million dollars in 30 minutes that your patient will die. You tell him that you do not have the money nor can you get it. He tells you to find a way.
You wait helplessly, hoping that a miracle happens. Just then the information comes back on the screen and you continue with the operation. Afterwards a cyber-saver comes on-line and tells you that he is the one that took care of the cyber-pirate. You ask him why he helped you. He says that it is his job. He explains that there are about 10 cyber savers, all independently funded. Their job is to seek out abusers and mis-users of the internet and dispose of them in any way they choose. You thank him, but wonder if disposing of them is the correct way to handle the situation. You wish that there was some kind of official justice or security department to handle situations like these. The cyber-world has turned into an anything goes place that is very dangerous for anyone who chooses to use it.