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FTC Threatens Spyware Distributors With Prison

Federal regulator Mark Pryor, in a Senate Commerce Committee hearing, has stated that spyware distributors should face harsher penalties than fees. His solution: imprisonment. "Federal Trade Commissioner William Kovacic said most wrongdoers in the spyware arena 'can only be described as vicious organized criminals. Many of most serious wrongdoers we observed in this area, I believe, are only going to be deterred if their freedom is withdrawn,' so it's important for the FTC to collaborate on its cases with criminal law enforcement authorities, Kovacic said."

7 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. Making the punishment fit the crime by chebucto · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is a really good idea. Spyware makers are the worst in terms of computer crime.

    I remember, not too long ago, when pricks around the world wrote dialers for people with dial-up connections. Dialers, once installed, would route someone's call to their ISP through some insanely far-away place (usually pimples in the pacific) with insanely high long-distance costs. The people who wrote the software would then split the profits made from the long-distance call with the corrupt operator of the far-away places' phone company. The effect was to leave people out-of-pocket by a huge amount (hundreds or thousands of dollars). If the target got the long-distance charge removed by the local phone company, the local phone company would have to eat the charges.

    The point of the above is to underline the character of crimes committed: it's pure theft. Modern spyware either seals people's browsing habits or personal information, so it's a little less direct, but it's still a theft.

    I think spyware writers are more foul than virus writers: while virus writers do what they do for the technical thrill and bother a lot of people in the process, spyware writers do it just to get money.

    Their motives are base, their methods are underhanded, and they should go to jail.

    --
    The English word fart is one of the oldest words in the English vocabulary.
    1. Re:Making the punishment fit the crime by daterabytez · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think spyware writers are more foul than virus writers: while virus writers do what they do for the technical thrill and bother a lot of people in the process, spyware writers do it just to get money.
      Actually, there was a time when this was probably true, but no longer. A great many viruses and exploits today, well over half, are purely for financial gains. The recent ANI exploit is just one example.

      -Carl
  2. What! by dragonquest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So right, I hate spyware, adware, and the likes. But sending people to jail may be a little on the heavy side. Reason being, who'll decide quantitatively about the severity of the malicious code? And will there be a difference of punishment between individuals and corporations who make spyware? If a corp makes it, they'll be dragged to court resulting in a lengthy legal battle ultimately only resulting in financial loss of the corp, not necessarily prison. There cannot be a very fair system of deciding this since its a very grey area with no clear black and white lines. What some people think of as invasion of privacy could be regarded as a useful convenience by another. The best protection you could have is your common sense.

    --
    "Never try to tell everything you know. It may take too short a time."
  3. Re:Windows?? by mwvdlee · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why the pirated CD?
    Since when does the RIAA need evidence to screw people?

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  4. Re:Ubuntu has spyware in it.. by J0nne · · Score: 5, Informative

    How is that spyware? It sends anonymous statistics on what packages you have installed throught apt, and you have to choose to enable it.

    It does exactly what it claims it does, and you really have to go out of your way to enable it (add/remove software>preferences>statistics>enable popularity contest )

    Right under the checkbox there's a clear explanation of what it does:

    To improve the user experience of Ubuntu please take part in the popularity contest. If you do so the list of installes software and how often it was used will be collected and sent anonymously to the uubuntu project on a weekly basis.
     
    The results are used to improve support for popular applications in the search results

    Compare that to Windows update, which 'inspects your system' every time you update, and you have no way to know what exactly it's inspecting, and what it's sending back to MS.

    You're probably trolling, and I'm probably wasting my time, but someone modded you up, so I guess at least one person believed you.

  5. Has to be said by Guppy06 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    /cough Sony /cough

  6. Re:Mod parent up .. this isn't a troll! by gsslay · · Score: 5, Insightful
    By definition, a troll is a post that is principally designed to provoke argument without any real concern for the topic of the discussion.



    The article is clearly about people who write and distribute malicious programs for the criminal purpose of stealing information, and thereafter actual property and/or money. We can all complain about some aspects of Microsoft's software (yes, really), but its 'spying' is nothing like the same. Legislation may yet change their behaviour here, but suggesting they are in danger of prison is hyperbole.



    So introducing the subject is going to divert discussion off-topic, and either just another attempt at starting a fan-boy argument, or yet another boring round of Microsoft bashing.