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Crime The Courts United States

'Guilty' Verdict for Russian Who Stole 117M Dropbox and LinkedIn Login Codes in 2012 (msn.com) 31

In 2012 "Russian hacker" Yevgeniy Nikulin breached the internal networks of LinkedIn, Dropbox, and Formspring, and then sold their user databases on the black market, reports ZDNet. (He stole 117 million login codes, according to Bloomberg.) Nikulin was arrested in 2016 (while on vacation in the Czech Republic), and after an extradition battle spent years in U.S. prisons while awaiting his trial, which Bloomberg calls "an ongoing constitutional violation that deeply distressed U.S. District Judge William Alsup."

Yesterday a jury finally found Nikulin guilty: It was the first trial in Northern California since the coronavirus pandemic shut Bay Area courtrooms in mid-March... The trial started in early March but was interrupted by the coronavirus pandemic and a shelter-in-place order for the Bay Area on March 16, when almost all in-person court hearings were postponed nationwide... Forced by circumstances to twice delay the trial, Alsup stood firm on a July 7 start. The judge, Nikulin and lawyers wore masks. Witnesses testified from behind a glass panel...

Nikulin is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 29. The Justice Department said he faces as long as 10 years in prison for each count of selling stolen usernames and passwords, installing malware on protected computers and as many as five years for each count of conspiracy and computer hacking. He also faces a mandatory two year sentence for identity theft, according to prosecutors.

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'Guilty' Verdict for Russian Who Stole 117M Dropbox and LinkedIn Login Codes in 2012

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    They're just going to stack it as life. You violated the corporatocrat leaders' sanctuary.

  • More blah blah blah as to why a criminal should not be in prison.

    I'm just going to start printing "Diplomatic Immunity" t-shirts so no one ever has to worry about the repercussions from criminal acts.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Damn right, he should be sentenced to a year in prison for each login hacked, kept alive and tortured the whole time. No mercy. Criminals aren't human.

  • I am quite sure that nothing was "stolen". Copied, perhaps. But not "stolen".

    I really wish these idiots would learn the English language.

    • by vinn01 ( 178295 )

      "Copied, perhaps. But not "stolen" "

      It was "stolen" enough to be sold. He sold copies of the stolen databases on the black market.

      There is no need to insult journalists for not being as tech-savvy as you.

      • "He sold copies of the stolen databases on the black market."

        No, He sold copies of the copied database on the black market.

        Nothing was "stolen", merely copied.

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