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MegaUpload Programmer Pleads Guilty, Gets a Year In Prison

An anonymous reader writes When MegaUpload was shut down a few years back, seven of the company's employees were indicted by the U.S. We heard a lot about Kim Dotcom's court proceedings, but not much about the others. A few days ago, we received word that programmer Andrus Nomm has been arrested in Virginia. This came as a surprise to everyone involved. MegaUpload attorney Ira Rothken said it was likely Nomm had made a deal with the Feds. Now, we know for sure: Nomm has pleaded guilty to felony copyright infringement and was sentenced to a year and a day in prison. In a statement, the Department of Justice said they will continue to pursue his co-conspirators.

8 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. A programmer arrested for © infringement? by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Isn't a programmer an employee doing what he is requested to do - and anyway making programmes does not infringe copyright laws. It seems everyone has to pay a price in this megaupload story, in order to send a strong and threatening message.

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    1. Re:A programmer arrested for © infringement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Better go arrest anyone who developed a web browser, BitTorrent client, email client/service then. All of those have been used to violate copyright.

    2. Re:A programmer arrested for © infringement? by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Funny, but given the massive scale of the criminal conspiracy which was perpetuated by the financial industry with re-packaging shitty debt ... I think it's mostly just a demonstration that "the law", and the consequences for breaking it, and entirely dependent on how much you have paid your congressman.

      Wall street ripped off the world for trillions of dollars, and not a single person was charged. And yet they're all "too big to fail" and we couldn't possibly charge them with crimes. And certainly the rank and file were clearly just following company policy.

      Executives oversee illegal activity all the time, but somehow the fact that they're executives means the "corporate veil" protects them.

      I think it's a complete crock that employees of corporations can be charged depending on, literally, how much slush money one set of corporations has given government.

      Essentially the *AAs have bought themselves a different set of laws, and the US government are more or less their enforcement arm.

      It's hard not to see these kinds of prosecutions as more or less political show trials. Because, they essentially are.

      It's not based on the principle of law, it's based on the political desire to make an example of someone. And that someone ran afoul of major campaign donors who have bought off the government.

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    3. Re:A programmer arrested for © infringement? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yea, that's not a defense to anything. If I'm an accountant, and my boss tells me to do the books, I'm still committing a felony if I do it, and actually could be committing a felony if I don't immediately report the request to the relevant authorities. TFA clearly states that the defendant knew that what his employers were asking him to do was illegal, and he did it anyway.

      Round one of "devil's advocate", now it's my turn.

      Suppose you're a sysadmin for the NSA and you discover they are committing a felony. Should you then report it to the relevant authorities?

  2. Co-Conspirators? by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, someone hires you to work on a file sharing network. And this is conspiracy? I mean there was a time when "file sharing" was a legitimate thing to do and didn't automatically imply copyright infringement.

    Even if it did, I doubt Kim Dotcom said "hey, how'd you like to join a conspiracy to enable copyright infringement?" I think it was more likely "I want to hire a database programmer"

    I know it's kind of hip to say "well what do you expect?", but really this seems punitive vindictive and disproportionate.

    I mean if this can happen when you write code in good faith for someone who used it for purposes later deemed illegal ... that kind of puts us all in the frame. I mean, corporate ethics being what they are and all that.

    Damn.

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  3. Re:Don't plead guilty by DrJimbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can be sure as shit that Kim isn't going to part with his money to defend him even if he didn't have his own case to worry about.

    You are correct but not for the selfish reason you imply. Kim Dotcom's assets have been frozen so they were not available to defend this programmer. He is only being allowed money for living expenses and his own legal fees. You may hate Kim Dotcom but he is not stupid. It would have been in his own best interests to pay for this guy's defense (assuming that fact couldn't be use to malign the defendant).

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  4. Wait, I'm confused... by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't copyright infringement a civil offense?

    Democracy my ass.

  5. Re:Don't plead guilty by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    reminds me a lot of a guy who lives in NH. He was a pot dealer who was a member of a local political group that the feds wanted to keep tabs on. So what did they do? They offered a heroin dealer a wrist slap if he would help nail the pot dealer.

    The pot dealer gets nabbed, and told he will be given a sweetheart deal if he spys on the policitcal group...he says no so they railroad the fuck out of him to make an example of what happens when you don't act like the sniveling peon you are.

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