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Crime

Bleeping Computer Countersues Maker of SpyHunter 43

An anonymous reader writes: Bleeping Computer, a longstanding popular discussion forum that helps people rid their computers of malware, has now countersued Enigma Software Group (ESG), which makes an antivirus software known as SpyHunter. Bleeping now claims that ESG has been violating Bleeping's trademarks by registering new domain names that include "bleepingcomputer" and posting some of the company's webpage's source code on other websites without its authorization, among other allegations. ESG had sued Bleeping for libel earlier this year over a series of messages that it claims disparaged SpyHunter and the company as a whole.From the filing:Enigma's lawsuit is plainly nothing more than an attempt to bully and censor Bleeping Computer, and to deter anyone who might criticize it -- one more attempt in Enigma's long pattern of threats, intimidation and litigation. Worse, however, is that all the while, Enigma has been engaged in aggressive, secretive, and cowardly attacks against Bleeping Computer, including ripping off Bleeping Computer's content and pretending it was authored by Enigma, repeatedly misusing Bleeping's registered trademark to trade upon its goodwill, and publishing blatantly false claims about Bleeping. As the following allegations demonstrate, Enigma conducts its business in a manner that is illegal, unethical and simply immoral, thereby demonstrating that Quietman7's mildly critical statements about Enigma's product, that so enraged Enigma and lead to this lawsuit, pale in comparison to the egregious misconduct Enigma perpetrates on a regular basis.
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Bleeping Computer Countersues Maker of SpyHunter

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    And I thought this lawsuit was going to have to do with smokescreens and driving into the back of trucks while speeding down the highway.

    • by Pax681 ( 1002592 )

      And I thought this lawsuit was going to have to do with smokescreens and driving into the back of trucks while speeding down the highway.

      ah.. the memories... i have the theme from Peter Gunn in my head now!

  • Who? What? (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) *

    1. Similar domain names have been a scam vector for so many years, if Bleep Whatever is so popular as to attract the ire of these assholes, maybe they should have been proactive years ago and bought up those domains? It's not a huge cost.

    2. To be honest, I've never heard of either of these to groups, though the Scam Wear folks seem to be on a suicide mission. On the other hand, when Bleep Whatever vanquishes them, they will just show up under a different brand.

    • Did you really just suggest that they buy every possible domain containing their name? Not just .org and .net but also bleepingcomputerfreest00fscammerz and etc.
    • Re:Who? What? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by James in PDX ( 1233094 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @03:53PM (#52686259)
      Surprised you have never heard of bleepingcomputers.com Bleepingcomputers.com is a VERY good site to keep abreast of ransomware and free decryptors for ransomware. Maybe the best site for this information. I don't work for them, but have used their advice many times and recovered tons of encrypted data.
    • Re:Who? What? (Score:5, Informative)

      by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @04:01PM (#52686297) Homepage

      1. Similar domain names have been a scam vector for so many years, if Bleep Whatever is so popular as to attract the ire of these assholes, maybe they should have been proactive years ago and bought up those domains? It's not a huge cost.

      I'm going to presume that you didn't read the actual complaint. This wasn't the competitor buying up bleepingcomputersucks.com or bleepingcomputeralternatives.com, arguably permissible domain names without causing infringement. The two domains that it explicitly mentioned in the complaint were bleepingcomputerregistryfix.com and adware.bleeping.computer.remover.getridofspywareonphone.com. Neither of those domain names would be predictable to proactively register to prevent competitors from using them. Or in the second instance, even could be registered since the 2nd level domain doesn't infringe itself. There would be a nearly infinite number of combinations of domain names and keywords that would need to be registered which definitely would have a huge cost. And both the examples I think do run foul of trademark law as they were designed to deceive legitimate trade.

    • ". Similar domain names have been a scam vector for so many years"

      Antivirus programs themselves are a similar scam vector. When you download one of them, you have to make sure it's not one of those identical-looking clone of MalwareBytes or AdAware that actually spreads malware.

  • by mujadaddy ( 1238164 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @03:38PM (#52686161)
    *hums Peter Gunn theme*

    *sprays oil slick*
  • Wtf? Subhuman lawyertards begrieving normal people?
  • by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Thursday August 11, 2016 @03:51PM (#52686243)
    Pardon my "French". I check Bleeping Computer's site often, since our shop works on PC's. Their Combo Fix was a godsend back in the day, and is still useful on Windows 7 machines that are infected. Spy Hunter, on the other hand, is a piece of shit run by slim balls. I will never Spy Hunter. AdwCleaner, Combo FIx, Junkware Removal Tool and others do a better job and aren't put out by assholes.
  • It sounds like Enigma is run by a small child that likes to throw temper tantrums.
  • "Ripping off" is considered proper and relevant language for a legal filing?
  • game of the 80's. What a bag of dicks.
  • I just want a Windows 10 version of ComboFix.

    Yeah, I realize there are "other tools" but ComboFix was simple, and NEVER burned any PCs I applied it to. It did a very good job of scrubbing those machines clean of the worst, scum-of-the-earth malware imaginable.

    I donates to sUBs back in the day, and I'd contribute more if they'd release a version that worked on the Win 10 and Win 8.1

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