Aussie jailed for software piracy

An Australian resident who headed the notorious DrinkOrDie software piracy gang has been jailed in the US.

The British born man, Hew Griffiths, had been living in Bateau Bay before his extradition to face trial in the US earlier this year.

Griffiths has now been sentenced to 51 months on one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement. However, with the time he has already spent incarcerated in an Australian detention centre fighting extradition, only 15 months of his sentence remain, reports say.

"Whether committed with a gun or a keyboard -- theft is theft," US Attorney Rosenberg said in a statement.

When extradited in February 2007, Griffiths was initially facing a 10-year prison term and a US$500,000 fine should he have been handed down the maximum sentence by US authorities.

According to the US Department of Justice, Griffiths headed the DrinkOrDie software pirate group, founded in 1993 under his alias Bandido. The DOJ labelled DrinkOrDie "one of the oldest and most renowned Internet software piracy groups".

The pirates distributed free versions of US$50 million worth of pirated software, movies, games and music during its lifetime targeting software houses including Microsoft, Adobe, Autodesk, Symantec and Novell.

In 2001, the group was targeted by law enforcement agencies across the world, with raids conducted in the UK, Finland, Norway, Sweden and Australia. The US operation resulted in 30 felony convictions there, as well as the conviction of 11 foreign nationals.

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Talkback 5 comments

    AUSSIE jAILED FOR SOFTWARE PIRACY Anonymous -- 26/06/07

    This case is causing considerable angst in Australia- not because the person was or wasn't guilty but due to the extradition to face USA law. This has never been done for a crime not committed in the US and is strongly opposed by the majority of lawyers in Australia. he should have been charged and sentenced in Australia not in the USA. Most lawyers do not accept extra territorial application of US laws in Australia.

    True That.. Anonymous -- 27/06/07

    I believe that this bloke should have been tried in Australia rather than in the US. I think that the Australian government should step in in cases like this and at lease let the US know that they are capable of managing the sentencing etc for this sort of crime, considering the crime was committed on Australian soil. I mean you don't see the Australia government extraditing peoples who are targeting Australian residents from the US with malware, spam and all other illegal internet activities.

    If you do the crime you do the time Do the time for the crime -- 21/07/07 (in reply to #320081701)

    How many people would go to work if you where not getting paid?
    So when you get music for free. would you work for free to?
    If someone came to your home and took your car would you be happy?
    If you went to work and your boss did not pay you would you work?
    Think about what you are doing.
    And think as if you where the singer or songwriter or software writer.
    would you work for free. How would you Live?

    If you do the crime you do the time?? Anonymous -- 25/07/07 (in reply to #320083171)

    Get a life! There are so many avenues through which songer/songwriter or software writers etc make extraordinary amounts of money. Through CD sales, online music sales, commercial appearances and sponsorship. The amount of money they lose through this piracy is insignificant, and it is not a case of being paid or not (working for nothing), rather how much of a large profit they make eg $1m or $2m! There are a lot of very high profile musicians such as U2 who are not against piracy of their music. Simply put, if someone makes great music, it is worth it for people to buy the music or dvd etc, so they will make million of dollars. If it is not worth it people won't pirate crap music! So in my mind Piracy costs are a drop in the ocean compared to the money these people make, they definitely don't work for free!!

    Rick Anonymous -- 25/07/07

    I personally agree that there's no excuse for software piracy.

    However, everyone seems to have forgotten about this infamous event:

    http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=technology&res=9407E3DB103AF932A25755C0A962958260&n=Top%2FNews%2FBusiness%2FCompanies%2FMicrosoft%20Corporation

    I don't recall a "certain individual" going to jail for that one.
    One rule for the big end of town, one rule for the little guys.

    Enough said.

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