Feds Indict 19 in Software Piracy Case

By MEGAN REICHGOTT, Associated Press WriterWed Feb 1, 1:35 PM ET

Federal authorities on Wednesday announced the indictment of 19 people accused of using the Internet to pirate more than $6.5 million in copyrighted computer software, games and movies.
The 15-count indictment outlines an alleged plot by defendants across the United States to illegally distribute newly released titles, including movies like "The Incredibles" and "The Aviator," and games like "Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2005."
The indictment, returned late Tuesday by a federal grand jury in Chicago, followed undercover investigations in Chicago, Charlotte, N.C., and San Jose, Calif., according to U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald and the FBI.
"Online thieves who steal merchandise that companies work hard to produce and protect might think that cyberspace cloaks them in anonymity and makes them invulnerable to prosecution, but we have the ability to infiltrate their secret networks and hold them accountable for their criminal conduct," Fitzgerald said in a statement.
The defendants, many of whom worked in high-tech jobs, were members of "RISCISO," a "warez" community founded in 1993, according to the indictment. Warez groups are underground associations that use the Internet to illegally distribute copyrighted software.
The allegedly pirated works included movies, games, graphics, desktop publishing programs and spreadsheet applications, authorities said.
Each defendant was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit copyright infringement, which carries a five-year maximum prison sentence. Fifteen also were charged with copyright infringement, which carries a three-year maximum.
Arraignments had not been scheduled by Wednesday, and none of the defendants was in custody, but authorities said they had begun extraditing two of the defendants who lived in Australia and Barbados.




 

xSlyPandax

New member
Why is the maximum jail sentence for PLANNING to commit copyright infringement more than the jail sentence for actually commiting it?

And maybe if software wasnt so ridiculously expensive for what it is (45 quid a pop for a PC game???) then we wouldnt have this problem. Companies just milk the consumer as much as they can, the new xbox 360 games are about 50 quid each plus the price of "Extra content" on xbox live!
 
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