Microsoft Sues 117 Phishers 170
An anonymous reader writes "Earlier this week Microsoft filed 117 John Doe cases today to learn the identity of scam artists who have been targeting its Hotmail and MSN customers in phishing scams, according to a Washington Post story. This is the same tactic the music and motion picture industries have used to mixed success against file-swappers, except in this case the ISPs themselves are some of the biggest targets of phishing scams. The story says the tactic has already worked once for Microsoft; in a case last year where ISP subpoenas led to a kid in Iowa who was caught phishing MSN users from his grandpa's dial-up account. The 21-year-old was ordered to pay Microsoft $3 million, but I doubt his job at Blockbuster is going to make a dent in that debt."
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:2, Insightful)
Clue, April Fools is supposed to entertain, mislead and laugh.
Not bore to death and steal attention from real news.
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:2)
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:2)
There are plenty of fools out there without giving them a day to recruit.
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:5, Insightful)
Now that more and more of the "unwashed masses" are using online services like Paypal and eBay, phishing scams are all over the place. It's getting a little ridiculous. These phishers need to be sent to Federal "pmita" Prison sooner rather than later.
Phishers of that type (those stealing money and credit card numbers) lack integrity and they lack honor, and they need to be put away.
What's the problem? (Score:2)
This is an old scam. Fixing the systemic problems that enables it on the net (too easy information sharing, government mandated IDs that can easily be misused, etc.) is hard, and requires government action. It is only becoming easy because of tech; and saying that punishing people harder because the tech slider moved
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
I don't know... rape, for instance? Dismemberment of small children? I agree with you, generally, as shoplifting or smoking a joint certainly don't merit prison rape, but I would say that for some of the things currently on the books (as listed above) prison rape is an equitable punishment.
Unless, of course, we are all just products of our genes and our enviro
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
My personal view is that there should be a bright line between, well, cruel and unusual punishments and punishments officially sanctioned b
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
In my own mind, I have not clearly established why prisons exist. Is it to prevent the offenders from offending again? Is it to punish? Is it to rehabilitate? Is it a combination of those three?
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft suing 117 Phish fans is not a joke?
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:3, Funny)
Nope, dumb phuck.
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that's what they call "spin".
You sure? (Score:2)
Re:This isn't an april fools joke guys. (Score:1)
Fool's Post (Score:1)
Re:Fool's Post (Score:2)
Re:Fool's Post (Score:2)
Re:Fool's Post (Score:2)
Re:Fool's Post (Score:1)
Re:Fool's Post (Score:2)
That wouldn't be surprising - that'd be plain mean
Re:Fool's Post (Score:2)
I got a better idea. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:1)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:1)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:1)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:1)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I got a better idea. (Score:1)
BTW (Score:1)
There is a big difference... (Score:5, Insightful)
phishing (Score:2, Funny)
Re:phishing (Score:1)
0401 (Score:2)
Re:0401 (Score:1)
Re:0401 (Score:2)
People stop posting. (Score:1, Funny)
Make Money Fast! (Score:4, Interesting)
Nope (Score:1)
this is the silliest april fools joke story yet (Score:1, Flamebait)
Phishing != File trading (Score:5, Informative)
I can't believe that the slashdot editors greenlighted such a poorly worded post on the front page. At the very least, they should have edited the post before putting it on the front page. WTF, they should know the different between file trading and phishing.
Oh, they should string up the phishers by their thumbs. Good for MS (I don't believe I just wrote that, it really is April Fools Day)
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:5, Insightful)
i always hate this line of reasoning. the fact is, whether or not filesharing helps the actual copyright holder is irrelevant. you don't have the right to re-distribution, plain and simple. let the copyright holder decide for him/herself if they want to allow sharing. otherwise, it's just poor attempt at justifying copyright infringement.
i have the right to determine who enters my house. even if there are outsiders that can help me out, ultimately i make the decision whether or not they enter my house.
No it's quite relivant (Score:5, Insightful)
The way the MPAA/RIAA/etc talk about file sharing, they act like it's on the severity level of grand theft or so. They act as though massive amounts of actual harm are being caused. Thus they argue for stiff penalities, currently lawsuits in the hundreds of millions of dollars, and they want a law making it criminal carrying prison time.
In actuality, file sharing is like speeding. There is no direct harm. There is no loss of money, since they never had the money in the first place. There is a potential loss of money, since you now have something you potentially might have paid for, but then a bad review, friend's suggestion, or alternate product can cause the same thing. Also, even the potential loss is small.
Now phishing is a moderatly severe crime. It causes serious economic damage to the victim (phishers generally take them for all they can) as well as damage to their credit, which is difficult to repair, and the necessity to essentially recreate one's identity. The harm is very real, not at all potential.
Thus it's quite relivant to point out the difference. One is a much more severe crime. I fully support agressive tactics and stiff punishments to shut down and convict phishers, just as I do for armed robbers, car thieves and so on. I do not support agressive tactics and stiff punishments to shot down file sharers, any more than I do speeders, those that litter, underage drinkers and so on.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
Copyright exists only to help the general public by encouraging production of new works. Giving "the right to redistribution" to the artist exclusively is a mere legal convenience. We shouldn't let our ethics be distorted by copyright holders' use of inaccurate terms like "theft" and "pi
Wrong again... (Score:4, Insightful)
Copyright exists only to help the general public by encouraging production of new works. Giving "the right to redistribution" to the artist exclusively is a mere legal convenience. We shouldn't let our ethics be distorted by copyright holders' use of inaccurate terms like "theft" and "piracy".
Copy right. Get it?
You, and others, forget that your "right" to make copies (fair use) is given to you with the same stroke of the pen that gave you the responsibility to respect the owner of that copyright.
I'm not an **AA agent trolling here, I'm trying to make a valid point. The law gave you certain rights, but it also gave the producer of the work certain rights. Words like "theft" and "piracy" are over used, and I disagree with the legal tactics of the **AA (as I do the BSA's tactics and others who overstep their bounds, Orrin Hatch listening?).
However, as a music, movie, software or literary producer you've got the right to decide how and where your work gets used (within limits). You sign a deal with Sony or Time Warner, not for recording time and promotion, but so they can mass distribute your music and make those decisions for you. Otherwise you'd have to do that yourself - and you already had the music thing down.
The reason you go for GPL or FDL licenses is because you want to ensure people respect your wishes that modifications are made openly and so forth...
It really burns me to see the same people making issues of GPL/copyleft violations while attacking other people's right to copyright. Copyleft is still copyright, no matter which way you look at it.
Make copies for your friends, but don't hide behind that next time, thinking mass distribution is your right. It's this type of thinking, the application of the idea that "information wants to be free" to entertainment, that makes more restrictive laws necessary and possible. Stop! Because people crying about "freedom" the most are the ones costing us the most. I'm sure RMS thinks Microsoft is wrong for charging what they do for software - but I doubt he advocates breaking the law to demonstrate that idea.
Re:Wrong again... (Score:2)
Wrong. Nobody "gave" us the right to copy. It existed before any copyright laws were written. Those laws took most of that right away- and although they didn't remove 100% of it, they added nothing.
You, and others, forget that your "right" to make copies (fair use) is given to you with the same stroke of the pen tha
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:1)
"Taking away a right" is a far different thing from ignoring it. If I trespass onto your lawn, I don't suddenly own your house, so I haven't "taken away" your property.
Likewise, trespassing on your copyright is different from somehow claiming that copyright for my own.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
But it is not irrelevant if you are discussing whether or not the current laws are just.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
And this line of reasoning doesn't properly explain the difference between intellectual property and physical property.
If someone, say the government, takes my money, I see it gone.
If someone, say you, takes something I've composed (I make music as a hobby), I haven't lost anything.
The problem with the debate of intellectual property righ
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
Other than the right to determine distribution, that is. Therefore, your statement is false.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
By that brilliant line of reasoning, every single crime, misdeanor, and civil infringment is theft. Murder, rape, kidnapping, libel, slander- they all deprive the victim of some abstract intangible concept, therefore you think they are ALL theft.
That is tremendously useful for evaluating right and wrong. Hooray, there's only one kind of crime!
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:1)
Now, the legal system grants the PRIVILEGE of determining distribution, in a failed experiment to encourage creativity, but it is not a RIGHT (regardless of what the name says).
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
Basically, what I am saying is that in the ideal situation the copyright holder would be able to control what is shared and what is not. In practice however, this seldom works. My ISP tr
You're not really giving an argument (Score:2)
The parent was good enough to state
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:1)
Squatters rights.
The Land Registration Act 2002 (which follows recommendations in Law Commission Report 254 Land Registration for the Twenty-First Century) provides a new scheme for adverse possession of registered land. Adverse possession of itself, for however long, will not bar the owner's title to a registered estate in land (s96).
Right to apply - 10 years adverse possession
However a squatter will be entitled to apply to the Land Registry to be re
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2)
But what if people could enter your house without you knowing it, without depriving you of the use of anything in your house. That's what file sharing is. They copyright owners are not being deprived of the use of their work an any way. Using your example, it would be as if an invisible, incorporial being were to enter your house, without us
Read the post again? (Score:1)
Uhh, this is true. They're handling the case in pretty much the same way. That says nothing about the similarities/differences of phishing and file-swapping.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:1)
The sad part is you actually have repeated this bullshit enough you probably now believe it.
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not entirely true. If you are the copyright holder, then you're free to share it with whoever you want to. If you have permission from the copyright holder, then the same applies. If you bought (eg) a CD and do not have permission, then you are not free to share the work (and you don't own it either, you own a copy of it).
Finally though, and probably my biggest issue with what you said, is that I simply do not believe t
Re:Phishing != File trading (Score:2, Interesting)
You don't 'own' the work, you only own the copy of it.
Phishers you the information that you willing supply them, file traders distribute a copy of a file that was willingly supplied to them.
'Well, I just put up this site that looked like a bank, sent some people a few emails asking them to play around with my site and they gave me all their details. Who would have thought that.'
If anything Phishers just point out how poor security on the Inter
Re:Translation (Score:2)
"Intellectual property" laws violate private property rights. There's no reason to feel guilty about being annoyed with laws that are designed to give control over your private property to someone who you've never signed a contract with.
3million? (Score:2, Funny)
I think I ow blockbusters about that with all these late returns.. god damn it.
Re: (Score:2)
Bang the Bum Slowly (Score:5, Funny)
The tumbril rolls to its slow beat
Condemned and damned besot with rum
the doomed kneels down his doom to meet
His neck will feel the sharpened blade
his sand of life drifts thru the sieve
Fish not in royal ponds or glade
If long you have a wish to live
doom to phishers
I acutally thank Microsoft (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I acutally thank Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
I understand that Hotmail has to deal with a lot of this kind of spam.
The suits act as a deterent and sends a message that Microsoft is trying to hunt these people down and stop their operations.
Here's a link [msn.com] to the MSNBC story.
So who gets the cash ? (Score:1, Interesting)
Microsoft if it was to do the decent thing would just hand over the evidence to the Police
by suing they get to make a load of cash at the same time all at the expense of people the phishers ripped off in teh first place, where some see shit others see gold
nice huh
Re:So who gets the cash ? (Score:2)
Hehe (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hehe (Score:1)
That is how they started out afterall. Scum.
I don't get it (Score:1)
Are we sure it isn't another April Fools story? Microsoft doing something good?
If Open Source Ruled the World... (Score:1)
Re:If Open Source Ruled the World... (Score:2)
Last I checked, Redhat had some big pockets, as did Novell.
Pathetic Wording! (Score:5, Insightful)
Does slashdot editors consider music sharing in the same light as phishing/spamming and the magic love pill? The teenager seems to be mentioned on the same lines of the other youngsters who were targetted by the RIAA.
In related news, which company makes the most focused effort to bringing the spam-pigs to justice? Check Here [zdnet.com]
I can see only one reason for all this. Its Microsoft!
Re:Pathetic Wording! (Score:1)
117? Sweet! (Score:2)
(Namely, something along the lines of: OMG WTF!?!? 117??? Freakin sweet!! Bungie r0x0rs & MS kicks teh butt MC style!).
Ahem, don't ask.
Re:117? Sweet! (Score:2)
Re:117? Sweet! (Score:2)
Spelling Problem (Score:2)
RP
Why is a 21-year old man described as a "kid"? (Score:5, Insightful)
new revenue model... (Score:3, Insightful)
2) Ignore your customers complaints about fixing it...
3)
4) Profit
Redundant my Arse... (Score:2)
Re:Redundant my Arse... (Score:2)
Or realized that the quality of the email client has exactly zero relevance to the success of a phishing scheme.
So they're suing the guy for 3 million? (Score:3, Funny)
Somehow... (Score:2)
...I don't think Microsoft will accept payment of the judgement by credit card or PayPal.
Why to start cleaining up your own yard? (Score:2)
They send spam messages around claiming you have won a price in some lottery, sometimes even "the Microsoft Word Lottery" or similar.
Of course, it is a Negerian 419 scam. When you would go about claiming your price, you would have to pay some notary fee, or another advanc
Can you say SLANTED? (Score:2)
Yes, lets all blame MS for the actions of the phishers. It's no fault of the actual bastards who are doing the crime.
Only on
analogy time!
Someone break into your house?
Someone steal your car?
Re:Can you say PROFIT ? (Score:2)
Dumbass anonymous coward!
MS is afffected by the improper use of their products. It makes fools like you hate MS even more than there is reason to. Are you really so stupid to not see that as a reason for MS to take action? This is the Civil reason for MS to sue
Ford sue car thieves? - Why not?
Good (Score:2)
This is not at all like the AA lawsuits. In the file sharing lawsuits, there was no actual damage, only potential damages (I'd be supprised if
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:hmm.. (Score:2)
Re:Old (Score:1)
Re:Ummm, did they or didn't they? (Score:2, Funny)
With the massive fraud by the operators of this site today, how do we know one way or the other?
Wait till the dup tomorrow if it is real.
Re: Ummm, did they or didn't they? (Score:2, Funny)
What on earth are you talking about, my dear friend?
I mean, I used to think that Slashdot was going down the drain with them countless trolls, duped stories, and crazy moderation.
How wrong I was! (and I hereby sincerely apologize to the editors for not appreciating the true value of their work). Many sites all over the web are posting crazy hoaxes, where you need to Google, or wait a day an re-check, just to find out if it was true or not.
Re:April the first (Score:1)
Re:first post (Score:1)
Re:Cleaning up one tiny bit of their mess (Score:2, Insightful)
It's an EMAIL problem plain and simple. It's social engineering at it's lowest tech level. Email, phone, chat, all perfectly "secure" are still all perfectly capable of being used to "phish".
Do you even know what the hell the article is about?