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Australia's Largest Police Force Accused of Widespread Piracy

beaverdownunder writes "UK software giant Micro Focus is demanding at least $10 million in damages from the New South Wales police for widespread use of unlicensed copies of its ViewNow software it is alleged were used by members to access the COPS criminal intelligence database. Although other government organisations also alleged to have mis-used the software have settled with Micro Focus, the NSW police refuse to do so, instead seeking to fight out a battle in Federal court."

38 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. The U.S. demands extradition by crazyjj · · Score: 5, Funny

    We acknowledge that the crime didn't happen in the U.S., and the company involved is British. But we feel we have jurisdiction.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    1. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by c · · Score: 2

      Screw extradition. The TSA is always hiring, and the people involved here are obviously upper management material.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    2. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by crazyjj · · Score: 4, Funny

      The U.S. also demands extradition of those cool police interceptors from Mad Max.

      --
      What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    3. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by AngryDeuce · · Score: 2

      And Kylie Minogue, too.

    4. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, the obvious course of action is to extradite them to the UK for trial, and if found guilty punish them by sending them to Australia!

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    5. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by houghi · · Score: 4, Funny

      I know we are not involved in this, but we can send Celine Dion.

      Kind regards,

      Canada

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    6. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by jd2112 · · Score: 2

      The U.S. also demands extradition of those cool police interceptors from Mad Max.

      The Chevrolet Caprice police car is a rebranded Aussie built Holden Commodore. (untill '09 out was available to the public as the Pontiac G8)

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    7. Re:The U.S. demands extradition by mjwx · · Score: 3, Funny

      The U.S. also demands extradition of those cool police interceptors from Mad Max.

      Unfortunately Ford no longer make the XB Falcon Coupe, or big block V8's in general, but we are willing to send over some bogans that want to drive one.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  2. How dare they! by P-niiice · · Score: 5, Funny

    Those cops put their lives on the line everyday! Who else would protect us from murderers, robbers and people who don't ....pay for....things they use...

    nevermind

    1. Re:How dare they! by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is why my minions will all have stylish uniforms. It gives them legitimacy.

    2. Re:How dare they! by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is why my minions will all have stylish uniforms. It gives them legitimacy.

      You'd be amazed at where you can go with a clipboard and a high-viz jacket.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:How dare they! by trum4n · · Score: 2

      Also, white ford vans can park ANYWHERE. The high-viz makes it so the cops don't even ask who you work for!

    4. Re:How dare they! by Whiteox · · Score: 2

      Exactly! All 16,000 illegal copies, installed and working.
      Then they deleted it and replaced it with another pirated front end from the same company.
      Word on the street is that they sourced it from the Bikies.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    5. Re:How dare they! by mjwx · · Score: 2

      This is why my minions will all have stylish uniforms. It gives them legitimacy.

      You'd be amazed at where you can go with a clipboard and a high-viz jacket.

      You know you can just buy lab coats.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  3. We should have known! by Troyusrex · · Score: 2, Funny

    The eye patches, hooks for hands and tendency to say "Argh" a lot should have been a dead giveaway!

    1. Re:We should have known! by gnick · · Score: 2

      Somehow "Argh! G'day!" just doesn't have much of a ring to it...

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
  4. why are we even using this word. by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it seems whenever a major multinational corporation or government entity is charged with piracy, they arent. theyre simply "out of compliance" or "underlicensed" or some other equally innocuous amorphity they can escape through hiring a compliance officer, cutting a comparatively insignificant check, and saying theyre sorry. when a private citizen is charged with piracy its almost always widespread, intractable, correlated to violent terrorism, and prosecuted at the fervor of a rape case. its exactly the opposite of what it should be.
    if as numerous industries do you are trying to make the case for intellectual property, it seems to do irreparable harm to the thesis to have a double standard for something so dire. if indeed using BusyBox and not adhering to the GPL or downloading the latest Nine Inch Nails album and not paying for it is just the same as stealing a car, then the logical conclusion is this police department should be disbanded. but if in practice we see a double standard then we're led to consider legitimately that piracy probably isnt as demonic as copyright clearing houses would hope you will believe.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:why are we even using this word. by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The corporation has become the biggest scam of human history.

      Mod me down if you like, but here is why: it's a system where they have managed to make it so that NO ONE can ever be held legally responsible for anything. You have a CEO that make millions in many companies that can't be held to account for anything (or even elected to governor in the case of that medicare fraudster Rick Scott). You have such concentration of wealth and power that ever case doesn't become a matter of law, but who has paid the most for lawyers where, in most cases, the individual is TOTALLY locked out of the process of civil justice. And even if you get a judgment, all the corporation has to do is refuse to pay it and then the legal process starts up all over again. As a nation we still hold the option of revocation of charter since a corporation is a legal entity, but our politicians are paid-off dupes and they would never have the nerve to use it, even in cases like Monsanto where their poison can *literally* be found in every human body on the planet.

      Say hello to the new boss... same as the old boss. We're back where we were when it comes to monarchy, friends. It's just a different type.

    2. Re:why are we even using this word. by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Informative

      downloading the latest Nine Inch Nails album

      Odd choice of example, there. The Slip was released under a Creative Commons Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share Alike license. You may distribute it without contravening the licensing terms as long as you do not profit from the distribution, and you don't attribute the work to anyone other than Trent Reznor.

      I understand the point you're making, but that kind of mistake is the sort of thing idiots will jump on to "prove" you know nothing of the subject.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:why are we even using this word. by kiwimate · · Score: 2

      Letting slide the inflammatory language, they are different.

      Pirates are quite frank about their intentions - they usually want to get something for free because they don't see why they should have to pay for it. A pirate who is illegally downloading music or movies or software will admit they know what they're doing is copyright infringement, but claim it is justifiable because of the pricing structure or because of evilness on the part of the MPAA or because they wouldn't buy it anyway or some other rationale.

      In the case of a corporation with a site license, their intentions are usually (not always) to be in compliance with the licensing structures. Enterprise licenses can get extremely complicated, based on how many seats you have, are you external facing, how many CPUs are being used, are you running on a VM, etc., etc. It is very easy to want to be good and buy the licenses you're supposed to, but get it wrong somewhere. This is allegedly what happened in this story - 6500 licenses purchased, many more in use.

      The intentions are completely different, and because a corporation is usually intending to do the right thing, a vendor will frequently have a quiet word with them and say "look, honest mistake, we understand, these things happen, and we know you want to do the right thing, so here's the true-up bill and let's all keep on being friends". Why? Because they want to keep their large customers happy and they know that the intention is good.

      Unlike a pirate who will proudly acknowledge that their intention is to "stick it to the man" or something equally silly asinine.

    4. Re:why are we even using this word. by Painted · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's almost like the legal system is set up to generate more and more lawsuits, isn't it? It seems like the people who are in charge of creating the laws have some sort of vested interest in keeping the legal system complex, thus requiring more and more specialists in law (I dunno, I'll use the term "Lawyers" to describe these specialists).

      Remind me, what percentage of politicians are lawyers?

      :-/

      --
      http://marsandmore.com - Posters of space, spacecraft, and astronomy.
    5. Re:why are we even using this word. by bzipitidoo · · Score: 2

      Piracy is not as simple and black and white as you make out. How about: Hard drive with legit copy of Windows crashes. Pirate copy of Windows installed on replacement hard drive. Or the other way around: Hard drive with legit copy of Windows is moved to a new computer, where it refuses to work. Replaced by pirated copy. Old computer junked. Another one: Thanks to a bug in the DRM, a legit copy refuses to run. Customer service is unable to resolve the issue. Problem solved by replacing legit copy with pirated version. Or this: Is software licensed to a person or a seat? Can I install software on 2 computers (1 desktop and 1 notebook), both for my use only? Why should I have to pay for 2 copies for that? It didn't cost the vendor anything-- they didn't have to provide another set of installation CDs, manuals, etc. Many games work just fine that way. Do you see anything morally wrong with any of that? None of that was "get something for free", that was all hacking to get some use out of something that was paid for, and to get around restrictions that infringe on the customer's rights.

      Vendors have made it very burdensome to maintain compliance. It's a real nightmare to track licensing for dozens of software packages on hundreds of computers. There's really no good reason why enterprise licensing should be so complicated, and should depend on details that are really none of the vendor's business. If I was in NSW's shoes, I'd dump that COPS software in favor of something open.

      Now the law is caught in their own web. They're the ones who let software licensing become such a mess. Perhaps this will inspire them to change their attitudes a bit.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
  5. Thieves by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Police department wants to fight it out in federal court to try and establish their right to steal software? Hmm...

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    1. Re:Thieves by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Police department wants to fight it out in federal court to try and establish their right to steal software? Hmm...

      It's possible that the contract is not as clear as Micro Focus makes out it to be and the police department thought they had a site license. Since the police department is willing to fight rather than pay up, it's quite possible that the contract is unclear enough that they could win - if it was really a clear 6500 seat license contract, it's not likely that the police department would pay millions in legal costs to delay an inevitable $10M penalty.

  6. Jail them! by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Funny

    Copyright infringement? I would sentence them all to life in a remote penal colony...oh, wait.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
    1. Re:Jail them! by Zocalo · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but I believe both the US and UK are full. Can't even give them hard labour in an Asian sweatshop since Apple spoiled it for everyone. I was going to suggest some time doing IT support in a Call Centre, but apparently USAid pulled funding from those just this morning and I don't really want a cruel and unusual punishment rap.

      TANJ, damn it!

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  7. Corporate contract dispute != Piracy by lwoggardner · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Someone screwed up, or misinterpreted the contract. Maybe thats the NSW Police or maybe it was an overeager MF salesperson a decade ago. Vendor says you owe us big time, org says nu-uh we'll just remove the software. Most corps and vendors settle before the lawyers get involved but occasionally things go further.

    The massive beat up about the cops being untouchable and the vendor not being able to get the police to investigate themselves is complete bollocks. Seriously since when do the cops get involved in corporate contract disputes?

    National media coverage of MicroFocus suing their customers is probably not a good way for them to drum up business.

  8. Re:Are the cops getting cut off from the internet? by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Also note that when Micro Focus started investigating the cops illegal software copying, the cops began deleting the software from a number of systems.

    That is willful destruction of evidence of a crime.

    Sure, right, because that could have been in no way a move to cease breaking the law by keeping it.

    Kind of the same way a drug dealer flushes his goods down the toilet when the police arrive to serve a warrant - he's not destroying evidence, he's just trying to cease breaking the law.

  9. Re:corporation licensing is not the same as music by bmo · · Score: 4, Informative

    corporation licensing is not the same as music downloads and being in compliance is not easy

    Bullshit.

    Under the law, they are the same. Copyright law does not distinguish between software, multimedia, or books.

    --
    BMO

  10. Summary for the lazy people: by mezion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Simply comes down to the contract, which we can't see.

    The software in question is called ViewNow. It is a mainframe computer program NSW Police began using in 1998 to access the COPS database, which holds the highly confidential details of just about every citizen in the state.

    Mr Craig ... says police were allowed to use up to 6,500 ViewNow licences and if they wanted any more, they would have to pay for them.

    They made software with no copy protection, and were suprised that noone could be bothered to write down every computer they installed it one - especially at 6500+ copies?

    Micro Focus say when they asked police just how many ... licenses they were using, a police employee allegedly told them: "Oh f--k. We've rolled out 16,000 devices".

    Maybe they made up some new terms after the fact and no-one can remember nor has a paper trail to prove otherwise.

    Mr Craig said."The minute we advised police there was an issue they began de-installing our software. They de-installed it without keeping records."

    If you realize you are in breach of the licencing terms, isn't the requirement to stop using the software and uninstalling it the correct procedure?

    In essence, the NSW Police defence is that it has all been a terrible misunderstanding.

    NSW Police say on their reading of their contract... gave them the right to reproduce as many licenses as they wanted.

    Simply comes down to the contract, which we can't see.

    1. Re:Summary for the lazy people: by Hyperhaplo · · Score: 2

      If you realize you are in breach of the licencing terms, isn't the requirement to stop using the software and uninstalling it the correct procedure?

      Short version: Yes. Goes for just about any situation where you are running software you don't have licence for. If you delete all of the offending copies there really isn't much they can do in court except try to extract past-payments.. and that can be flogging a dead horse and can make courts quite irritable.

      Having been the IT guy on the wrong side of a couple of much lower level versions of one of these audits, it is my experience that the software vendor generally doesn't want you to uninstall the software.. they want a nice juicy fat long term contact. The real wolves out there play all sorts of games to get licence by the seat software bumped up.. it's worth millions.

      Yes, it is all down to the contract.

      However, if they take pre-emptive action and purge all of the software before any court documents are lodged and served.. there is a very good chance that this vendor just blew their case and hastened the demise of their contract.

      Most likely the AU police will either:
      1) Re-neg the contract
      2) Keep the current contact and be absolutely certain to keep the software under the contracted limits
      3) Are absolutely legally certain of their 'unlimited licence' position (if this is the case) and will fight to the death in court of the black and white of the contract .. bearing in mind that in a lot of cases if the contract is fuzzy it can be damn hard to squeeze a client let alone win this type of case. Generally.. everyone loses.
      4) Replace this software either inhouse or with another vendor. Would not shock me at all if CA was at the AU NSW police's front door on Monday briefcase and business plan in hand ready to do a deal

      Note that I am not a lawyer.

      Note that I have never been part of an active court case to defend against this type of problem. Although, at one point it got quite close and heated.

      Every business should have a software licence registry...

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  11. ALWAYS follow the money! by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    If you EVER question why something is happening that seems unfair or inequitable .... If you EVER see failed logic in a situation where the obvious solution or answer isn't the one chosen -- just follow the money!

    Almost every time, it winds up explaining things.

    When you're a major multinational corporation or a govt. agency using software and you're not paying for all of it? The best strategy for the software publisher is to give you every opportunity to get compliant. It's established that those users have deep enough pockets so they can pay you back!

    Individuals who get "thrown under the bus" over a few music copyright violations, or small businesses who get nailed to the wall in the courts over a few software programs they didn't pay for aren't nearly as lucrative for the rights-holders. In these cases, the rights-holder stands to gain more by using them as examples .... Let the law come down on them and give them some prison time or some unreasonably huge fine, and they'll act as a deterrent. Otherwise, all they'd get is a paltry few more sales for the music CDs they listened to, or several licenses the business in question should have paid for.

  12. Re:Are the cops getting cut off from the internet? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

    Gee officer, I slowed down from 150 MPH to stop breaking the law, its cool right?

    After you pay the fine, you're still not allowed to drive at 150 mph. That's the point here.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  13. Re:lawyers are no better by King_TJ · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is very true, on the whole.... There are exceptions out there, of course. (I do some computer service work for a law firm I've worked with for years, and while they're always a little slow to pay their bills, they always do pay - and with a certain consistency in the delay. Not only that, but they even send me gifts every Christmas season.)

    Law firms are high-risk clients though, in the sense that if *anything* goes wrong (even something they perceive as wrong but is simply a misunderstanding on their part) -- you can bet they'll want to resolve it via the channel they're most comfortable with. Most small businesses want to AVOID the courtroom at all costs, since they don't really have A) good enough documentation/record keeping to successfully fight a court battle, B) enough spare time to devote to one, or C) enough money to cover the legal expenses.

    Plus, one thing I've learned over the years is that most lawyers in a given area seem to know each other. (EG. I had hired an attorney one time, who I wasn't very pleased with. I did some computer work for someone else who I found out was also a lawyer, though not in the same specialty of law. During our conversation, I mentioned a few of my concerns, in passing. Next thing I know? My attorney is calling me on my cellphone on a Sunday morning, demanding to know why I'm dissatisfied with his work and trying to defend his actions! Turns out the two of them occasionally saw each other at the restaurants they frequent for lunch during the week and my concerns were "gossiped" from one to the other!)

    IMO, there's a really good chance that if you hire a lawyer against another lawyer you're having issues with -- the two of them will "have a talk:" off the record, and agree to some sort of resolution in advance that benefits BOTH of them more than you!

  14. Micro Focus tried to screw us for $60000 once by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Regular Slashdotter but posting AC. Back in the late 90's we used Windows Micro Focus COBOL a lot but we needed the Y2K version for our server that we complied the code on. Had a nice chat with the sales guy who asked what we did with it, and then a letter arrived saying we were in violation of our license and we needed a RTL for every PC we had it installed, which would have cost $60000 or they'd see us in court. Thank goodness we had a copy of our original license which allowed us unlimited clients as part of the original server install. Our legal team then wrote back telling them to piss off (in legal speak obviously). After that we migrated off their platform ASAP, wouldn't trust them as far as I could throw them.

  15. Re:All Crooks by nedlohs · · Score: 2

    Murder wasn't a transportable offence - it was a capital offence. I'm sure a few slipped though but not boatloads of them.

    Piracy was also capital not tranportable.

    Crooks aplenty of course.

  16. The old Government agency defence. by pbjones · · Score: 2

    Although I think that people should pay for what they use, It may be a case where the EULA didn't include Government Agencies, but the Government should pay, especially since the current convervative would be right behind and anti-piracy action.

    --
    There was an unknown error in the submission.
  17. Re:All Crooks by tdelaney · · Score: 2

    That really depended on the "murder". For example, one of my ancestors (the one whose surname I have) was tranported here for two "murders". In actuality, it appears he was involved in a riot in Ireland in which two people were killed, and he was convicted on that basis. Unfortunately, the records stop there due to the loss of records in Ireland around the time (riots, church burnings, etc).

    In any case he made good - became foreman for the chain gang that built the road to Mrs Macquarie's Chair; got his Ticket o' Leave; married; bought a pub; got drunk a lot; bought several cows (one at a time) ...