Australian police swoop on Warez community

The Australian Federal Police have swooped on homes across the country as part of a global crackdown on cyberspace gangs distributing pirated software.

The early morning raids, on homes in Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide, are part of a global investigation dubbed 'Operation Buccaneer' which saw the US Customs execute 37 search warrants in 27 US cities, according to a US Customs statement.

-Seven search warrants were executed in Australia in the early hours of the morning," an Australian Federal Police (AFP) spokesperson told ZDNet Australia. However, -there have been no arrests or charges coming out of that yet," she added.

The AFP said the investigation was ongoing and that an amount of evidence had been seized and information gathered which would be passed on to the US Customs service, -with a view to prosecution".

The coordinated international raids, which fall on the back of a fifteen-month undercover investigation, spanned the US, United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Germany, as well as Australia, with a total of 60 search warrants executed in all

US Customs said four individuals have been arrested in connection with the case so far.

"Operation Buccaneer is the largest and most extensive investigation of its kind," US Customs Commissioner Robert Bonner said in a statement. "This investigation underscores the severity and scope of a multi-billion-dollar software swindle over the Internet, as well as the vulnerabilities of this technology to outside attack."

According to US Customs, the initial phase of the investigation focused primarily on the Warez group called DrinkOrDie, the most well known of about ten major Internet piracy groups.

As Warez members include corporate executives, computer network administrators and students at major universities, government workers, and employees of large-scale technology and computer firms, computers and hard drives were seized following the execution of search warrants on major universities, businesses, as well as residential US addresses, US Customs said.

The software pirated by the groups under investigation included expensive business software, firewall and other security software, and copyrighted games, music and digital videos.

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Talkback 33 comments

    I think this is great that the ...Anonymous -- 12/12/01

    I think this is great that the police are doing something about it. i have $k's worth of software thatI purchased legally and then I see people sell pirate software at the markets for $10-20 each. i think the police should set up a website or something for poeple to dob in a cheat.

    Piracy cost us consumers more money as the vendors increase their price to counteract the criminals.

    I personally think the police ...Anonymous -- 12/12/01

    I personally think the police should keep themselves concerned with bigger cyber crime issue's like child pornography or Denial of Service attacks. Not raiding people's home's and taking computer equiptment just because some software or movie company's might lose abit of money. They need to get their priorities right.

    This is great for Linux! The m ...Con Zymaris -- 12/12/01

    This is great for Linux!

    The more pressure that is applied to everyone to be legal with their software, the more acutely attractive Linux and open source software look.

    Our analysis of the software licencing requirements 50, 100 and 250 workstation organisations indicates that these organisations can save from AU$160,000 to AU$550,000 on licence fees alone if the use Linux & OSS rather than Windows & Microsoft technologies.

    Our research can be found here:

    http://orange.cyber.com.au/conz/linux_vs_windows_pricing_comparison.pdf

    Yet more crap from the big end ...Anonymous -- 12/12/01

    Yet more crap from the big end of town.

    Our police should NOT be used to enforce copyright law due to inherent weaknesses in software design. This is a clear area for the corporations involved to put up or shut up.

    Why should taxpayers foot the bill for these companies ? They should be left to protect their own interests - they can prosecute for breach of copyright , breach of contract .. but it is expensive so the buck is passed to the government. NO WAY .. let them foot the bills themselves.

    Jail pirates, jail open source ...Anonymous -- 12/12/01

    Jail pirates, jail open source user

    They both deprive the community form revenue.

    M$ is a greedy monopoly & ...Keith Styles -- 13/12/01

    M$ is a greedy monopoly & so are all the software houses who write & distribute M$ Application software. They even charge like wounded bulls for support. Its just a big money machine. To hell with the customer is their motto.
    Let the Police do their job of policing for the community & stop working for Big Business Corporations. Copyright is a business problem not a police problem. Let the Corp's do their own dirty work.

    Yeahhh Go Open systems...Gooo Linux the more the better.

    Report Piracy — Illegal Softwa ...Anonymous -- 13/12/01

    Report Piracy — Illegal Software report forms:
    • For a company using unauthorised software
    http://www.bsaa.com.au/rewards/forms/company.cfm
    • For a software or hardware dealer selling or distributing unauthorised
    software http://www.bsaa.com.au/rewards/forms/dealer.cfm
    • For a home user using unauthorised software
    http://www.bsaa.com.au/rewards/forms/homeuser.cfm
    • For an internet operator selling or distributing unauthorised software
    http://www.bsaa.com.au/rewards/forms/bbs.cfm

    WASTE OF TIME why bother stopp ...Anonymous -- 13/12/01

    WASTE OF TIME

    why bother stopping one group of Warez Enthusiasts... There are soooo many people out there trading they'll only open up the space for some of the smaller groups to get the Distros out there for us all...

    And if you like and use the software then buy it!

    Warez is better than Try Ware as it isn't held back in any respect

    Windows XP and the BSAA do a g ...Anonymous -- 14/12/01

    Windows XP and the BSAA do a great job in promoting open source software un-intentionally.

    That's great.

    Monopolies need competition.

    To the poster of "I think ...Anonymous -- 14/12/01

    To the poster of "I think this is great"... are you a complete moron? Do you honestly think that MS Office will drop to a realistic price if no pirate copies are made? Will a copy Windows fall to $100AUD just because you can't download a copy from a chinese server? Get real!!! The pirate industry is alive and well BECAUSE of the outrageous prices charged by software companies. I buy shareware all the time.. I am happy to pay $30, $40 or $50 for product... but $400, 500 or $1000? I think not. Companies can recoup their investment by selling 1000 copies of a $40 program or by selling 10 $500 copies... you do the maths! The only thing that these types of "crackdowns" do is to make sure that some monopolistic crusher of free enterprise makes an addition billion dollars this year to intimidate governments with whilst destroying any hope of you and me getting a real choice in computing platforms. Wake up and stop being a corporate sheep.

    I am against theft just as much as the next guy, but in the real world I will give a lot more support to the Robin Hoods of the world than to the Adolf Hitlers. Are you a merry man or a brownshirt?... the later if your website idea is any indication.

    Little John hit the nail on th ...Anonymous -- 15/12/01

    Little John hit the nail on the head.

    I find it amusing to read the postings of the BSAA employees.
    Somehow it is so easy to pick them.

    You are silly to think police ...Anonymous -- 15/12/01

    You are silly to think police forces are being wasted on tracing warez kids. Thats why there are divisions like the Computer Crime Unit. You dont get homicide detectives arresting computer related crimes.
    This is the first time they have done something attualy usefull, rather than just bust someone who sells cds for $10. They attacked the warez scene at the root and as a result many groups have closed down fearing that they will be next.
    Nice work

    Use open source software and d ...Billy Da Goate -- 15/12/01

    Use open source software and don't worry about license compliance.

    The irony about it all is this ...Anonymous -- 17/12/01

    The irony about it all is this.

    There is a LARGE hole in the copyright law that allows you to make ONE copy for backup purposes, as long as you don't distribute or resell it.. This is REGARDLESS of if you have the original disk or not.. I mean ever heard of OFF-SITE Storage :).

    If you have a copy of the software, and don't have it installed on your system, it is .. to be honest .. completely legal!! :)

    I level out my playing field. ...Anonymous -- 17/12/01

    I level out my playing field.

    I MAY download warez and mp3s, and I MAY proud of it. I wouldn't distribute them but MAY have them for personal use..

    For Example: If I download say 4 computer games from the internet, then I buy 2 games at $70-100 .. I reckon it's all propotional.

    If the price of software went down ($50 is decent for a game), then I would be more inclined to buy instead of download it!!.

    However I think the best thing the software developers could do .. would be to have rips of their games online that are fully functional, apart from say movies and boxe's and crap and charge say $15 or something to log into a website with a secure username and password, and download the full game yourself.

    With compression tools and High speed internet access this should not be a problem.

    I mean I would certainly pay to download say Return to Castle Wolfenstein with no movies or cutscenes .. However at $70 at K-Mart it's not too bad a price I guess.

    to the anonomous person " ...Anonymous -- 17/12/01

    to the anonomous person "jail pirates, jail open source user" you sir/madam are a fool. Fair enough punish the pirates. after all pirate software is illegal. open source is not how ever. As for open source depriving software makers of income how ludicrous is that. The open source provides an alternative to commercial software. The open source community is gaining in strength so much so that many commercial software makers are now offering there products in version that will run on open source systems.
    saying jail open source users is a moronic statement.

    The employees of the BSA had b ...aliens4reality -- 18/12/01

    The employees of the BSA had better start living in fear of their livelihood. If ALL the illegal software is eradicted from the planet, then ALL BSA employees will be unemployed. Gee, on second thought keep up the pressure BSA. HAHAHA!

    Those raids have had an amazin ...Anonymous -- 19/12/01

    Those raids have had an amazing impact on the scene in the first week. The internet traffic has dropped 50% since then. However the elite has not been caught and won't be. It will be even harder to get into those circles now. With the rise of broadband too many people started downloading games and movies (as a subsitute for the non-existing broadband content)... and this was asking for trouble.

    The ones that should be punished are the pirates that sell warez!!! It's highly illegal and damages the scene. The latter has always been about making software freely available to those individuals (not companies!) that want to test it or cannot really afford it.

    The software & film industry is completely dishonest with the public. Some business software producers are actually happy that students use their (pirated) products. Those students are going to buy their products later on - through the company they work for. A common way to establish standards...
    Good products (software & movies) will always be successful - no matter what. Of course I am going to see "Lord of the Rings" in a cinema and buy the DVD later on. Even if I had a SVCD/DiVX copy now. Only average products won't survive... in this case the industry tends to blame the warez scene. Haha - why should we have different standards? Even if those products are "freely" available and people download them, who wants to see or play them!? Many downloads end up "unused or unseen" in the corner... you are just happy that you have got it (first). That's all.

    The major release groups have carried on with their work btw...

    I hope that the feds and the police use their scarce resources on the chasing of drug dealers, murderers and terrorists before they hit on easy targets such as internet nerds!

    what is wrong with warez SOFTW ...Jonathan Curtis -- 19/12/01

    what is wrong with warez SOFTWARE is non tangiable y pay for it?

    why dont the police worry abou ...Anonymous -- 19/12/01

    why dont the police worry about real crime and stop wasting tax payer money on cracking down on software piracy.

    seriously, of all people who own a computer, how many of those do you think actually have a legit version of windows or office?

    large organistions and businesses can afford the large sums of money microsoft charge for software liscences but do you think us home users can honestly afford the money?

    all i can say to software comapnies is re-think about how much you charge for your products and if home users can seriously afford them???

    if it wasn't for warez i would ...Anonymous -- 20/12/01

    if it wasn't for warez i wouldn't have enough skills to keep me employed. i learnt more with them than i learnt in the classroom at uni.

    Go catch some kiddy fiddlers instead guys.
    They do more harm to society than a bunch of teenagers sharing games and music

    look, if any of you have bothe ...Anonymous -- 20/12/01

    look, if any of you have bothered to realise over the past few years the structure of the internet you'll all see that such an action agains warez will do nothing. the internet if an Anarchy!. i dont see any structured body that has been able to sucessuly stem out any form of illegal internet activities because the people responible, constantly change hosts and ip addresses. and the global community has a grudge agains gian international conglomerations like microsoft anyway. the people of the world willingly participate in the "warez" distribution scheme by downloading the warez. look at the reality of it all. any kid who can install a ram chip in a computer already has 50 million warez files in his computer. just ask me! you cant stop internet piracy because these "pirates" pillage the companies that everyone hates. microsoft for example

    Who is ripping who off , I hav ...Anonymous -- 23/12/01

    Who is ripping who off , I have spent over $2000 in the last 12 months on games and some of those games didnt even last me 5 mins i now only buy games after i have warez versions and think that they are worth playing .So if you a software devoloper I dont consider myself a threat but I am so sick a crap software in pretty little boxes that works nowhere as good as what it's made out .(and the biggest Ripoffs are all ps2 games) i wish i never brought a ps2)

    "As Warez members include ...Anonymous -- 22/01/02

    "As Warez members include corporate executives, computer network administrators and students at major universities, government workers, and employees of large-scale technology and computer firms"

    warez members are normal eveeryday ppl

    I have been in the computer pr ...Anonymous -- 06/01/03

    I have been in the computer profession for 10 years now. I have seen the rise of the software companies to very high large scale, even the hype created by Linux and the limited amount of computer applications available for that.

    It was all due to the dishonest policy of the software producers and the licence holders to sell those wares. No programme is written perfectly and even if written perfectly, does not run perfectly due to want of perfect hardware and compatibilities. So the software producers(writers) circulate a Beta(testing) or a shorntened copy of the original with only some of the functions working. They are not content with giving a copy but a very lengthy but full of hidden contract making the reciever virtually a scapegoat not to use even that imperfect version more than a few days.
    What happens is that the user automatically becomes a pirate without sometimes realising it as well as wasting his time and money to evaluate it. The producers thus save a lot of expenditure and time and man hours and infrastucture to throughly test the software before marketing it. Also it becomes a free marketing strategy for the producers as the gullible beta users do the marketing. Ultimately the software producer is doing only a minute and small role of writing a software whereas the chunk and real part is done by serious knoledgeable people who in the hope gaining more insight fall into the trap for performing many of the functions which the producer himself should do.
    LASTLY AFTER ALL THIS THE SOFTWARE PRODUCER PUTS A LICENCE TO THE SOFTWARE AND CHARGES THE HUGE PRICE FOR WHAT IS DONE, THE MAJOR CHUNK OF THE TESTING AND MARKETING BEING DONE BY THE BETA USER, WHO IS NOT EVEN OFFERED A DISCOUNT PRICE.

    DUE TO THE EXORBITANT PRICE CHARGED BY THE SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS, THE USERS MOSTLY CANNOT AFFORD AND SO THERE COMES THE PEOPLE WITH VESTED INTERESTS WHO USE ALL THEIR BRAINS TO CRACH THE SERIAL NUMBERS AND CODES AND THEN OFFER AT 10% OF THE PRICE TO WILLING CUSTOMERS. (AND GOVT. MACHINERY IS USED AND TAXPAYERS MONEY WASTED TO CATCH THE WRONG DOERS WHO WERE IN FACT A BYPRODUCT OF THE DISHONEST POLICY OF THE SOFTWARE FIRMS.)

    IF ONLY THE SOFTWARE FIRMS DISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE IN LARGE SCALE AND AT AFFORDABLE PRICES TO THEIR TARGET CONSUMERS..............

    IS the software caught really ...Anonymous -- 06/01/03

    IS the software caught really a copy a pirated original? I think 80% of the so called pirated software is really a beta evaluation copy released by the software developers, which is distributed freely which may just good enough for many users. Only 10% of this is given as freeware and the rest is limted time use making the user feel the product and then make him buy it. The piraters mostly copy these limited versions.

    IS THIS NOT SOMETHING SIMILAR TO WHAT THE DRUG PUSHERS DO?

    The Corporations seem to hold ...Jarrod Polmeer -- 04/04/03

    The Corporations seem to hold all the power when it comes to to making decisions on how we are governed and prosecuted.
    As Australians is there any offial body who says anything at all when Companies who import software to australia break our constitiutional rights ?
    By These corporations having this copy-protection on their software it renders any copy of that software unusable (without a "warez crack"), breaking our right to have a backup copy of that software for archival use in case of damage to the first.
    To access our right to have a copy we have to break a law which is the very same law which says we can have a copy, which is quite ironical.

    Together with there being no R rated category for games to be released in Australia contributes to this kind of Warez dealing.

    If the government cannot uphold and support the citizens to be able to have rights granted to us, it should be in no position to prosecute those who cannot get justice from the system they are in.

    Who when the inter-computer communications was created gave the right to judge what is done in our own virtual reality, our own virtual newtwork, our homes?

    While computer crime should be prosecuted and privacy of infomation must be respected there comes limits when someone buys a program, that this program becomes theirs and any code embeddem within that infomation is theirs for the modification and no EULA should be able to hold an induvidual to this ta an agreement which infringes on personal liberties.

    While the "warez dealers" are the people who are being prosecuted as they have committed computer crime, the integrity of the Police Commission and the Australian constituition has to be questioned...
    Why do they always go after the little fish ?

    Wake up: get a life pigs Steve Bailey -- 20/08/03

    Wake up: get a life pigs

    All non-current versions of so ...Anonymous -- 23/04/04

    All non-current versions of software should be available FOC by definition.

    And I also do not understand the fuss over ompressed 'commercial cassette-tape' equivalent MP3's whilst the RIAA refuses to widely distribute "clean" unadulterated multi-channel real 'hi-fi' spec securely locked music.

    However, I also reserve the right to make multiple copies for use in different devices for my own use unhindered, unimpeded, ans without additional cost (the latter being incorporated into the media....as has been done for decades!!!)

    The warez community is respons ...Anonymous -- 18/02/05

    The warez community is responsible for more than just distibuting illegal software, oh here we go lets kick warez in the but. my concern is that of the little guy missing out again these actions scares the poorer community into not getting that software they dreamed about and the rich prance around with there ultra fast computers licenced with sp2, when the cost of hardware alone kills people like me. once the software has been written the purpose of charging consumers premium rates for BUGY or soon to be OUTDATED software (winxp lmao sevice pack hell) is the crime. like lets think about it its not like selling hot telivions or or stolen merchandise there is no real phisical property it a dam program that can be copied over a 3 million times in the blink of the eye eg.kazaa if software developers decreased the prices of there products all would be able to do this puppy and the cost of distribution is the winners servers ect.But corporations dont see how unpopular they are getting and ppl are gona fight hack slash enm into non exsisteces, corporations gain favour buy win the consumer with competetive price now they control every thing for the who we vot for in the government to the federal police

    SOFTWARE CAN BE COPIED OVER A ...Anonymous -- 18/02/05

    SOFTWARE CAN BE COPIED OVER A MILLION TIME AT THE BLINK OF AN EYE WHY IS IT SO EXPENSIVE ¿

    To little john read my post ab ...Anonymous -- 18/02/05

    To little john read my post above i love you in a decent sense of the word thanks you hit our nail on the head can i join the robin hood and we will crush the dirty power hungry coporation and make them live in hell with me and all the people of the norm. he he that fells better

    They are targeting Pirates Groups Not the Warez Sharers Anonymous -- 04/08/08

    There is a difference between Warez Downloaders and people who profit from Warez and are in the Groups who initially distribute Warez.... The police are targeting the 'Sellers and Groups' .... If they were to target 'Sharers' you, me and every 2nd person would be busted. Warez Sharers are Politicians to Cleaners - this is not what this investigation is about.
    It is not even about the Warez Sites (ie. Australian www.Phorum.ws or FW) as these are not 'illegal' they are a community of Sharers.

    I personally think there is nothing wrong with testing a piece of software before digging in your pocket to pay the OBSCENE amount they ask, these guys make it possible, aswell as keep prices low.
    Profiting off software I am against, but come on.... if the companies did not charge an arm n a leg for the stuff there would not even be a 'Warez Scene'.

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