Guilty Plea in AOL Engineer's Address Theft Case
ScentCone writes "Jason Smathers, a former AOL software engineer has pleaded guilty in his theft of 92 million in-house account screen names. He'll be paying $200-400k, and serving a year or two of federal time. Smathers used another employee's account to steal the data, and sold it to a Vegas-based online casino operator. Interestingly, one of the charges was 'interstate transportation of stolen property.'"
Doesn't seem like such a good idea now does it?
Little Johnny woke up early to get ready for school. Johnny was a nice boy, loved by his parents, respected by his friends, and likened by his teachers. Like all other good boys, he hated Microsoft(R) and all it's products including Microsoft Windows (TM) and Microsoft Office (TM). He ran Gentoo on his home computer, and used StarOffice for all his homework.
Johnny walked off to the bus stop after kissing his mom goodbye, whistling a little tune to himself. His bus was late again, the third time this month. Johnny didn't like being late for school. It made him feel guilty. So he decided to walk to school, as it was no more than a 15 minute walk away. The bus would take longer anyway, after picking up all the other stupid little kids. Annoying little twitches...they wouldn't know the difference between Gentoo and Knoppix if it stared them in their pimply little faces.
Little Johnny made good time. Before long, he reached the Wal-mart across which his elementary school was. It was just 8:36. It was still 24 minutes before school, and it would take just 45 more seconds to cross the road and enter the school grounds. He liked being early. It gave him time to catch up on the latest geeky news on Slashdot and get a First Post or two before classes began.
Johnny was halfway across the street when a Chevy Avalanche zoomed up and squashed him on the pavement. Little Johnny was no more.
What is the moral, that we, as self respecting geeks, can learn from Little Johnny's short but noble life?
Always look right and left before crossing the road.
If he was charged with 'interstate transportation of stolen property', does that mean that he printed out all 92 million screen names and took them in his car across state borders?
Do the crime, pay the time.
I'm not sure how he's going to pay $200k+ though.
everybody and their mom has a copy of this list.. I actually pruned my copy and removed everybody who's password wasn't "password". a few million 's
Sorry, couldn't help it...
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
Stop the IT crime! Burn all copies of "Office Space"!
time is a perception of a being's consciousness
time is your 6th sense, the wierd ones are 7+
Textual representations of AOL customenrs email addresses are considered AOL's property? As much as I hate spammers, that is insane.
That guy should have asked for much more than that... like if a casino was short on cash! Omni
Maybe, they'd learn that when spamming, the sysadmin wins.
Fight Spammers!
He pleaded guilty cause he was.
Can we really say anything more than 'well deserved'?
Do we know for how much he sold the stolen list? I supe hope for him its more than 400k... but I doubt it!
Eureka Science News - automatically updated
otMhers what to triumPhs would soon during this file
Stop fucking living in the dark ages, will you?!
The guy who gives the email addresses to the spammers is forced to pay restitution costs to AOL for the amount they spent on dealing with email that the spammer's sent. This is bullshit. If anyone should have to pay, it is the spammers. The guy can go to jail for theft of property (if you consider email lists property... which the government seems to... but this is another issue), but he didn't directly cost AOL any money. This is a crap example of a big company getting money from this little guy because getting the money from the spammers is nigh impossible. He plead guilty, so I think that keeps him from being able to appeal.
*yawn*
If so, STOP FUCKING BELIEVING IN FAIRYTALES!
why
If this wasn't about spam, people on here would be jumping up and down screaming their guts out about how the punishment doesn't fit the crime.
For christ's sake, spam is NOT that big of a deal.
Thank you for the most fascist comment of the day.
Who the hell are you or anybody else to say what's a crime and what's not, not to mention what's a "suitable punishment"? Can't take care of yourself? Buy a gun and shoot the bastard. Hell, even 90 year old granny can do that. Can't buy a gun legally? Shouldn't have given up your rights...
He'll be paying $200-400k, and serving a year or two of federal time.
This guy has 'Capital Punishment' written all over him.... he got off lite!!
'You've got male!'
For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
Smathers is only paying "the amount the government estimates AOL spent as a result of the e-mails," which is that $200,000 to $400,000. Is our government unable to represent those who suffered significantly more harm than AOL, the people?
Sufferers may primarily be AOLamers and maybe all of us here will laugh that off to some extent, but consider "The stolen list of 92 million AOL addresses included multiple addresses used by each of AOL's estimated 30 million customers. It is believed to be still circulating among spammers." AOLamers or not, these are our grandparents and grade school teachers; training-wheeled users who if anything, need more protection than we do.
This penalty does them no good, whatsover. TFA makes it clear that a signficant number of them are still getting ruined by the crime, as_we_type. IANAL; can someone add whether "the people" can expect to be served a piece of Smathers?
If this is it, it sure as hell isn't what I'd call "restitution." Anyone want to wager that we also get nothing out of Sean Dunaway, the guy to whom Smathers sold?
BG
I wouldn't trust my contact information with any private party. The government is, at least, obliged not to make profit with it. I'm glad they sued the competitor.
'transportation of stolen property'
More like 'transportation of copied property'.
No such law.
"A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
GeneralEmergency
You forgot to include the text/html part:
----35977.08538_20228509
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
fibration crankshaft spatial
perfecter conjure
downey happenstance aromatic charley gubernatorial
----35977.08538_20228509
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Actual spam message
----35977.08538_20228509--
Its not theft, right? AOL wasn't deprived of any property!
As far as I can tell, aol still had the account names. When my car got stolen, what I objected to was that I no longer had my car, not that someone else had a car a lot like mine. Aiding spammers may be wrong, but let's keep the categories straight.
West Virginia resident and former AOL employee Jason Smathers is expected to undergo an experimental surgical procedure to surgically attach a locking mechanism to his rectum. Smathers stated that it's in no way related to his anticipated 18-20 month sentence.
Quite frankly, I don't care what goes on in there as long as people fear getting into one. Fucking ream the shit out of the murderers and child rapists with broomsticks and they'll never rape again.
Does it really matter whether this guy published this list of screen names or not? Had he not done it, then someone else would have a few days, weeks, or months later. Instead of an AOL employee giving out the names, it could have been a hacker, and the names would still be all over the Internet.
AOL members get so much spam anyway that their E-Mail accounts are nearly useless. The guy should be punished, agreed, but I doubt that this theft made that much of a difference in the "spam war."
-Steve
"Games are for Children"
http://www.shoemakervillage.org/games
I wonder if users can sue AOL for not taking proper precautions (obviously the assumption here is that they didnt)
"Interstellar transportation of stolen property"
Yikes! At first glance that's what I read.
Thinking about it though, (while not really stolen property) he could do that but it would take at least 4 years for the act to occur.
The mantra of impending doom: "Cooperate and Graduate"
Damn, man. The guy deserves a thank you. Those casino sites rock. Really.
Look at http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,119011,
Fight Spammers!
Yes, get this man off the street before he copies anyone else's database! I know I feel a lot safer with him behind bars. The monster.
As I understand it Facts are not copyrightable. A huge list of email addresses is just a big list of facts. If they can't have a copyright on the list of email addresses they can't assert that they've been stolen.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
bureaucratic and came as a complete It's 3est to try exploifted that. A
Hell, you made me think about goatse. Mod him down.
Oh yes, please! I've got a nun fetish. I'd be willing to try even anal fisting too if a hot, young nun would be doing it.
Does anyone know if oral sex is as much of a sin for a nun as having real sex? There's this hot young nun that I know and I'd really like to eat her out.
Thank you for the most fascist comment of the day.
Who the hell are you or anybody else to say what's a crime and what's not, not to mention what's a "suitable punishment"? Can't take care of yourself? Buy a gun and shoot the bastard. Hell, even 90 year old granny can do that. Can't buy a gun legally? Shouldn't have given up your rights...
Thank you for the anarchist retard comment of the day.
Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
In November of 2003 I was getting about 175 spams per day. In December of 2003 I installed Spamassassin, set up ip# and domain name block lists, tweaked the rules and wrote my own, and wrote a user email/spam report system. I spent a good deal of time getting this set up and working out the bugs. My email server received over 145,000 connections in 2004, over 143,000 were spam.
I have the ability and resources to do these things but many internet users do not. While I don't have an AOL account, I still think he should have received more hard time. Put him away for a long time, maybe his cell mate will be a disgruntled AOL user who lost it after getting "one too many spams".... make other spammers and their helpers think twice.
The expression of the facts in a particular grouping can be copyrighted.
OpenBSD is FOSS, but you can't make ISOs of the official CDs and sell them because Theo holds copyright of the particular way the CD is laid out. You can make your own CDs/ISOs, with the same data, but not just copy his image.
The OpenBSD project does not make the ISO images used to master the official CDs available for download. The reason is simply that we would like you to buy the CD sets, helping fund ongoing OpenBSD development. The official OpenBSD CD-ROM layout is copyright Theo de Raadt. Theo does not permit people to redistribute images of the official OpenBSD CDs. As an incentive for people to buy the CD set, some extras are included in the package as well (artwork, stickers etc).
Note that only the CD layout is copyrighted, OpenBSD itself is free. Nothing precludes someone else from downloading OpenBSD and making their own CD. If for some reason you want to download a CD image, try searching the mailing list archives for possible sources. Of course, any OpenBSD ISO images available on the Internet either violate Theo de Raadt's copyright or are not official images. The source of an unofficial image may or may not be trustworthy; it is up to you to determine this for yourself.
http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq3.html#ISO
500GB of disk, 5TB of transfer, $5.95/mo
"Welcome!! You've got jail!"
"hey, could you pass me a paper towel? er.. I mean... DEPLOY ABSORBTION PANEL!"
interstate transportation of stolen property
But he didn't steal it! He infringed a trade secret! He didn't take anything away from AOL; he just made a copy! Why do we misuse --
Who cares? This guy deserves the word "thief."
Since he's being charged over stolen property, I'm assuming Slashdotters are okay with the concept of intellectual property in this circumstance.
Going after people who harvest and spam your e-mail address is Good. Going after people who harvest and pirate somebody else's music is Bad. How's that moral relativism smell?
seriously.
The chorus sings, "Your cheeks are so pale!"
Moral relativism is modus operandi for liberalism.
Consider the political demographic of this forum and suddenly hypocrisy seems normal.
Go ahead, mod me troll instead of refuting me. You'll only illustrate my point.
It should be copyright infrigement or breach of privacy, not theft. We might not mind in this case, but we don't want 12 year old girls using Kazaa to be charged with grand theft and put in jail.
I haven't heard anything against the Vegas company that purchased this information. Why is it OK for a company to carry out these acts but if a citizen does the same acts, he/she is fined a few hundred grand and sent to jail for a year or two?
If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
I would agree with you, but look at how the court argued in United States vs Riggs back in 1990 (yes, the famous E911 BellSouth document case) about applying the "interstate transfer of stolen goods" rule to an electronic file. When the issue of tangibility was brought up, the court briefly compared the electronic file with "a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas", arguing that the "interstate transfer" rule could reasonably be applied to the gas in spite of its "intangibility". Now, even an odorless gas does consist of very tangible atoms, and it seems to me like a rather weak argument for applying the law also to what is essentially a transmission of information. If a TV station broadcasts a movie without paying royalties, is that "interstate transfer of stolen goods" too?
In the E911 case, the "value" of the stolen document was heavily inflated, quoted as $79,499 when a paper copy was actually available from Bellcore for $13.
There are actually two pieces of intangible property involved here. One is the original work as such, the database that may have cost a lot of time and money to compile. The other is an electronic copy of said original, perhaps available for a modest fee. I believe that in both the E911 case and this AOL case, only the copies have been transferred. The difference is that copies of the E911 document was available for sale, while the AOL customer database appearantly wasn't. How do you determine the "value" of something that isn't legally available for sale? Are we talking black market prices with respect to the copy (what someone is prepared to pay for it) here, or estimated damages to the database owner caused by the misappropriation of the information in it?
When a copy of a printed book is stolen, the value is considered to be the retail price for the copy (and that copy is quite tangible). No license fee for a reprint or damages for copyright infringement is ever involved. If an original manuscript is stolen, that is quite a different thing. But if you make an unauthorized copy (on paper) of an unpublished manuscript?
The law (either the statutory text or its interpretation) is amended to deal with new realities, that's true, but it doesn't happen automatically. Some laws are widened in scope, others are not, in either case because of a reason. If not, totally different laws might end up applying to the very same circumstances, leading to mutually contradictory rulings. How come electronic publishing has been subject to the "interstate transfer of stolen goods" rule long before it's covered by freedom of the press statutes? The AOL database case isn't about publishing, but many other cases of electronic information transfer (such as the E911 case) are.
After having establisheded different legal frameworks surrounding different things like postal mail, telephone services, newspaper publishing, broadcast radio and television, banking, trade, private property, workplace environment, healthcare, public administration, law enforcement, education, scientific research, innovation, and national security, it shouldn't come as a major surprise that having all those laws apply to said activities when taking place within the same piece of machinery on your desktop may become a little messy if not done with proper consideration.
so easy to abuse, no wonder it's number one!
Just another case of where the Fed makes
up a bunch of so called "laws" and just
start's piling stuff on. It isn't about
what's right or wrong or just or unjust.
Its about the Fed doing whatever they want
to anybody they want whenever they want.
You think you have constitutional protec-
tions? Ha! Don't make me laugh.
Whew! I'll sleep better at night knowing
this guy is doing hard time. I mean, after
all, he was *such* a menace. My God, stealing
screen names and selling them! Hmmm, how much
time did that guy do that was caught on tape
smashing Reginald Denny's head with a concrete
brick. Oh, yeah, no time. Yep, America, a just
country if there ever was one.
he was locked up in an unusually rough situation for his non-violent crimes. if he was on trial today i bet he would be hit with some patriot act violations and locked up as a terrorist.
i know a million other people face the same thing, but his is a case most people here should know about.
Lamer!
The horrible thing is that this joker will probably have net access between rapings. Alot of prisons (especially minimum and low security), allow the inmates some form of internet access. A hypothetical situation here, but he could get online, pull this list off of some offsite file dump, and sell it again and again. While I'm not saying this guy would be dumb enough to do this, I do wish to state that if the punishment is to fit the crime, he should have gotten the same treatment that most hackers do: From sentencing until $X years later, you cannot touch or interact with a computer. As a potentional victim, I would find this more acceptible, on top of a much higher fine, in lieu of jailtime.
Let's fake an answer for the curious; let's fake it all for the fame.
I've been a felon for wire fraud since i was thirteen, nuttin happened to me other than 29 months in wales detention in wisconsin and 29 months in a group home ( www.norriscenter.org ) and 3 years probation. I'm 17 in 2 days. I paid(well, my parents) paid $201,000 in court fees and restitution. we are broke now. :(
Actually, the two DO go togeather. Prison is SUPPOSED to be a deterrent. Prison is NOT supposed to be a place of free shelter with feature comforts. It's supposed to be harsh as hell.
In fact, rather then having prisoners rott away and spending my tax dollars, I would rather the system mirror that of what happens in Singapore. That is to say if you rob a store, you should have your ass beaten till skin breaks. I mean, total pain and torture...but not enough to physically mame you for life. Just enough to drill it in your thick skull that it is NOT ok to do crime.
We are all children in life. The only difference is some of us learn our leasons in life so as not to repeat them as we get older.
Life is not for the lazy.
Since they bought AOL addresses to spam with, they probably don't only spam AOL addresses.