From: “L. Todd Masco” <cactus@hks.net>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 5d80f62ddae4f15ef7ac3792f5c0d46927239a416ca9557b15f6aff71926fa7d
Message ID: <199412301925.OAA08386@bb.hks.net>
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UTC Datetime: 1994-12-30 19:20:20 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 30 Dec 94 11:20:20 PST
From: "L. Todd Masco" <cactus@hks.net>
Date: Fri, 30 Dec 94 11:20:20 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: LaMacchia case dismissed
Message-ID: <199412301925.OAA08386@bb.hks.net>
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SUBJECT: JUDGE DISMISSES INDICTMENT AGAINST MIT COMPUTER WHIZ
SOURCE: Reuters via Fulfillment by INDIVIDUAL, Inc.
DATE: December 29, 1994
INDEX: [3]
ORDER NO: 953095#
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BOSTON (Reuter) - The Reuters European Business Report via INDIVIDUAL,
Inc. : A federal judge Thursday dismissed an indictment against a
Massachusetts Institute of Technology student who had been accused of the
biggest case of computer software piracy ever.
The student, David LaMacchia, 20, was indicted March 7 on a charge of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
He was accused of using the university's computers to distribute pirated
software over the Internet, the web of global computer networks.
The U.S. Attorney in Boston, Donald Stern, had called it the largest
single case of software piracy to date.
Although U.S. District Court Judge Richard Stearns was critical of
LaMacchia's actions, he ruled he could not be prosecuted under a wire fraud
statute because it could result in a flood of actions against home computer
users copying even single software programmes for their own use.
However, the judge described LaMacchia as ``heedlessly irresponsible, and
at worst as nihilistic, self-indulgent and lacking in any fundamental sense
of values.''
According to the indictment, LaMacchia, an electrical engineering and
computer science student, used two MIT computers to create bulletin boards
from which Internet users could post or copy commercial copywrited software
worth close to $1 million.
He was accused of using the computer aliases ``John Gaunt'' and
``Grimjack'' to operate the bulletin board from November 1993 to January
1994.
LaMacchia was not accused of profiting from the scheme, nor was he accused
of personally posting or copying any software on the bulletin board.
The Software Publishers Association, a trade group representing software
makers, estimates software piracy cost manufacturers about $1.6 billion last
year.
[12-29-94 at 17:21 EST, Copyright 1994, Reuters America Inc., File:
r1229172.000]
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Entire contents (C) 1994 by INDIVIDUAL, Inc., 84 Sherman Street, Cambridge,
MA 02140 - Phone: 800-414-1000 or 617-354-2230, FAX: 800-417-1000 or 617-
354-6210.
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1994-12-30 (Fri, 30 Dec 94 11:20:20 PST) - LaMacchia case dismissed - “L. Todd Masco” <cactus@hks.net>