Feds Crack Software Piracy Rings
Two-year probe targeted international groups illegally distributing software, games, and movies online.
Todd R. Weiss, Computerworld
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A two-year federal investigation into international software piracy over the Internet culminated earlier this week in the serving of more than 100 search warrants against suspects allegedly involved in piracy syndicates.
In an announcement, the U.S. Department of Justice says three separate federal investigations over the past two years had targeted international groups that illegally distributed pirated software, games, and movies, as well as individuals and groups who had illegal access to computer systems and distribution networks.
"Today, U.S. law enforcement initiated the most aggressive enforcement action to date against illegal software piracy," says Attorney General John Ashcroft, in the statement. "Many of these individuals and groups believed the digital age and the Internet allowed them to operate without fear of detection or criminal sanction. Today, law enforcement in the U.S. and around the world proved them wrong."
The targets of the three operations included both individuals and organizations known as "Warez" groups that operate in the U.S. and around the world. Warez groups specialize in the illegal distribution over the Internet of copyrighted software programs, computer games, and movies. Additional suspects are expected to be identified and targeted, the government says.
Bob Kruger, vice president of enforcement for the Business Software Alliance, a Washington, D.C.-based antipiracy industry watchdog group, says the federal actions marked a "banner day" in the fight against software theft.
"We do view this as probably the most extensive and aggressive law enforcement action to date against software piracy," Kruger says.
Three Campaigns
The three operations were as follows:
Operation Buccaneer, a one-year investigation by the U.S. Customs Service and the Justice Department's Computer Crime and Intellectual Property section, working in conjunction with the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Buccaneer involved the simultaneous execution of 58 search warrants against high-level Warez leadership and members around the world.
Included in the targets is the piracy group called DrinkOrDie, which is made up of about 40 members worldwide. The groups decode antipiracy measures in software and release the code on the Internet before or at the time of a new product's launch, causing losses for software companies. The U.S. worked with authorities in the U.K., Australia, Norway, and Finland in the investigation.
Operation Bandwidth, a two-year effort to identify and prosecute groups and individuals involved with illegal access to computer systems and the piracy of proprietary software using Warez storage sites on the Internet. The investigation involved the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the Environmental Protection Agency Office of the Inspector General and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The groups, along with the Nevada U.S. Attorney's Office, created an undercover Warez site as part of the investigation, which was used to transfer more than 100,000 pirated files, including more than 12,000 separate software programs, movies, and games. More than 200 suspects participated in the piracy efforts at the undercover site. Thousands of copies of pirated software will be removed from circulation because of the sting, as well as computer hardware seized by authorities.
Operation Digital Piratez, a yearlong effort by the FBI and the New Hampshire U.S. Attorney's Office to infiltrate several Warez distribution organizations, including "cracking groups" specifically created for the purpose of pirating software so that it may be distributed over the Internet in violation of U.S. copyright laws.

For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2007 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.
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