1995-02-06 - Camden New Jersey

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From: an158409@anon.penet.fi (beacher)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 57200e9edde742ce5374b31439c34f0ac0f6dd0090d97099448f3b7de4c9735b
Message ID: <9502061348.AA14911@anon.penet.fi>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-02-06 15:45:16 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 6 Feb 95 07:45:16 PST

Raw message

From: an158409@anon.penet.fi (beacher)
Date: Mon, 6 Feb 95 07:45:16 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Camden New Jersey
Message-ID: <9502061348.AA14911@anon.penet.fi>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



I thought nothing but armed robberies happened in Camden New Jersey.

Teenage Pirate To Pay $25,000, Loses BBS Equipment
CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A., 1995 FEB 3 (NB) -- A teenage computer operator
charged with illegally distributing hundreds of copyrighted commercial
software programs has reached a settlement with Novell Inc., (NASDAQ: NOVL)
and Microsoft Corp., (NASDAQ: MSFT).

The settlement requires the operator of the now-defunct Deadbeat Bulletin
Board to pay $25,000 to Novell and Microsoft and forfeit the equipment he
used to run the board to the two software makers.

The agreement apparently closes the book on an investigation of the New
Jersey computer BBS (bulletin board service), which authorities said
contained several hundred commercial software products. The equipment was
seized in an August raid of the board.

This was just one of the cases investigated under an aggressive joint
campaign by Novell and Microsoft to locate and prosecute pirate system
operators. The project was mounted last summer and has already resulted in
the closing of two bulletin boards. The two companies said they expect more
seizures in the near future.

Pirate bulletin boards let users download commercial products, paying for
them in money or in barter by uploading programs the BBS doesn't have.
According to Novell the Deadbeat Bulletin Board also contained several beta
files, software which is still in the testing stage. Beta programs are often
incomplete or contain problems, and are distributed to a limited number of
users so those problems can be worked out before the final product comes to
market.

Novell and Microsoft investigators said they first got wind of the illegal
software in late July, and eventually discovered more than 60 Novell and
Microsoft products on the board. A court ordered seizure of the equipment and
the raid was carried out in August. The court records have been sealed until
now.

The agreement also prohibits Microsoft and Novell from any further action
against the 17-year old boy and from releasing his name.

(Jim Mallory/19950203/Press contact: Jessica Jersey, Novell, 408-577-8739;
Public contact: 800-785-3448 or 800-747-2837 to report suspected software
piracy)


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