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Strategies & Market Trends : Groundhog Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AugustWest who wrote (1996)4/21/2002 10:57:58 AM
From: AugustWest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6346
 
(COMTEX) A: Piracy cost Microsoft $100 million
A: Piracy cost Microsoft $100 million

SAN JOSE, Calif., Apr 19, 2002 (United Press International via COMTEX) -- The
FBI announced Friday it had broken up a cluster of software pirates operating in
the San Francisco Bay Area who allegedly cost Microsoft more than $100 million
in lost sales.

Police and FBI agents capped a 2-year undercover investigation by fanning out in
San Jose, Fremont and other communities located not far from Silicon Valley
where they rounded up 27 suspects, most of whom allegedly duplicated various
Microsoft programs in Taiwan and sold them in the United States.

"The conduct charged here is alleged to have caused losses of hundreds of
millions of dollars to people who created and sold their own intellectual
property," United States Attorney David Shapiro said at a Friday afternoon news
conference. "The victims were the legitimate consumers of these products."

The defendants were primarily Taiwanese and Pakistani nationals described by the
U.S. Attorney's office as a "large, loosely affiliated group of dealers in
counterfeit software."

One of the 11 indictments in the cases that were unsealed said thousands of
copies of Windows NT, Microsoft Office and other programs were delivered from
Taiwan to post office boxes and then sold to customers, usually on a cash-only
basis.

Some of the software, which retails for several hundred dollars per copy, was
sold at a fraction of the cost with the transactions allegedly taking place in
shopping center parking lots or at the particular defendant's home.

"The illegal trafficking in counterfeit software resulted in financial crimes
including money laundering, and we intend to follow the money trail," said IRS
Special Agent Dwight Sparlin.

Some of the money wound up being deposited in a Swiss bank account, but funds
also were wired to Pakistan; there was no evidence that any of the money was
going to terrorists or political extremists.

Mirza and Sameena Ali ran a company called Samtech Research, which allegedly
fraudulently enrolled in Microsoft's Authorized Education Reseller program in
order to obtain genuine Microsoft software at steep discounts for resale to
schools. The goods, however, were sold to non-academics, including Shelia Wu, a
defendant in one of the other indictments.

Microsoft cancelled the Alis out of the program in 1997, but the Fremont couple
allegedly began buying up small, software dealerships that had ceased
operations, but still had valid AER certification.

"The Ali's purchased real property in the name of their college-aged son and
have wired over $300,000 to Pakistan," the U.S. Attorney's office said in a
release Friday. "Microsoft estimates that it lost in excess of $100 million as a
result of the various schemes."

The couple also allegedly sent money to Mizra Ali's brother and wife, Zahid and
Riffat Ali, who are believed to have fled to Pakistan in 1996 when they were
indicted for money-laundering and pirating Microsoft software.

The San Jose Mercury News said Friday that the Ali family gained a degree of
notoriety in 1991 when they proposed to build a 16,000-square-foot mansion in
Fremont that would have featured a 4,400-square-foot master bedroom. The Fremont
City Council blocked the plan because they considered it to be far too large for
the neighborhood.

(Reported by Hil Anderson in Los Angeles)



Copyright 2002 by United Press International.

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SUBJECT CODE: 02001000 04003000 13010000

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