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February 26, 2010
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Cracking The Code Online IP Theft Is Not A Game

It must have seemed like the perfect scheme—buy the stolen source code of a popular online game, rent some servers to run the game as your own, and then hang a shingle on the web inviting gamers to come play at a steep discount.

A California man who followed that path must have thought he’d never get caught. He was even warned once by the game’s rightful owner, a large South Korean company, to shut down. He didn’t.

“They don’t think that a company is going to come after them at any point,” says Christopher Thompson, a special agent on a cyber squad in the FBI’s office in Austin, Texas. “He said he was going to stop doing it and he didn’t.”

So the company, which has offices in Austin, called the FBI. The suspect was apparently lining his own pockets from “donations” and ads on his site while his pirated version of the game, “Lineage II,” was siphoning $750,000 a month in potential revenues from the company.

According to Agent Thompson, here’s how the scheme evolved:

In 2003, a computer user in China obtained the “Lineage” source code from an unprotected website. The proprietary code was then placed on the underground market, where a Texas man, among others, bought it in 2004. He then passed it along to his business partner in California, who set up a website, to offer the “Lineage” game at a discount. Gamers arrived in droves—as many as 50,000 active users by 2006—which pinched the legitimate game’s bottom line.

“It’s comparable to the music-downloading and file-sharing problem in the late ‘90s—thousands of people engaging in activity that is inherently illegal,” Agent Thompson said. Read more at fbi.gov.


A Indiana lawyer who specializes in the new field of Internet Law can assist you with all of your legal worries pertaining to Internet / Cyber laws. From assistance in patent application to filing claims of infringement, an Internet lawyer will help you with any topic of concern. Contact us know.

 

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
1996 Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments (EFOIA)
The 1966 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) permits any person to request access to federal agency records or information. Federal agencies are required to disclose records upon receipt of a written request, except for records that are protected from disclosure by nice exemptions or three exclusions in the Act. Persons are also able to request documents in an electronic format under the 1996 Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments (EFOIA).

 


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News about Internet cases in Indiana and nationwide:

St. Joseph Woman Sentenced For $312,000 Wire Fraud
Bradley J. Schlozman, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced that a St. Joseph, Mo., woman was sentenced in federal...
Read more >


Pleasant Hill, California Computer Hacker from Deceptive Duo Guilty of Intrusions into Government Computers and Defacing Websites
The United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of California announced that Robert Lyttle, 21, of Pleasant Hill, California, pleaded...
Read more >


Internet Fraud Investigation Operation Cyber Loss
The FBI and Department of Justice are joined by the National White Collar Crime Center (NW3C) today to announce that criminal...
Read more >


More News >

 
 

Terms

 


Friday's Term

Analog

Definition:

The transmission of sound and visual information in the form of waves in the frequency spectrum. For example, in an analog telephone transmission the human voice is transmitted as sound waves that can be detected by the ear.

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Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Internet Law:

  • Intellectual Properties
  • Copyrights
  • Patents
  • Web Site Developments
  • Service Provider Liabilities
  • Trademarks



Indiana Internet-Law Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need legal assistance you should contact our Internet-Law Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Bloomington
  • Brownsburg
  • Carmel
  • Columbus
  • Connersville
  • Crawfordsville
  • Crown Point
  • East Chicago
  • Elkhart
  • Evansville
  • Fishers
  • Fort Wayne
  • Franklin
  • Goshen
  • Granger
  • Greenfield
  • Greenwood
  • Hobart
  • Huntington
  • Indianapolis
  • Jeffersonville
  • Kokomo
  • La Porte
  • Lafayette
  • Logansport
  • Marion
  • Martinsville
  • Merrillville
  • Michigan City
  • Mishawaka
  • Muncie
  • New Albany
  • New Castle
  • Newburgh
  • Noblesville
  • Peru
  • Plainfield
  • Portage
  • Richmond
  • Seymour
  • Shelbyville
  • South Bend
  • Terre Haute
  • Valparaiso
  • Vincennes
  • West Lafayette
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