The noose appears to be tightening around one of Europe's largest software counterfeiting rings as a German court sentenced a second member of the network to prison on Monday, and handed a sentence to his father . . .. The noose appears to be tightening around one of Europe's largest software counterfeiting rings as a German court sentenced a second member of the network to prison on Monday, and handed a sentence to his father for helping run front operations. After an 18-week trial, a criminal court in Stuttgart, Germany, sentenced the convicted software pirate to three years in prison without parole for copyright infringement and selling counterfeit Microsoft Corp. software. The court also convicted the defendant's father for his participation in the counterfeiting scheme, issuing him a 16-month jail term and 100 hours of community service. The defendant, Dieter Rimmele, appears to be in his 30s while his father, Hubert Rimmele is 58 years old, according to sources close to the case. Dieter Rimmele had previously been arrested in 1999 for software manipulation and was sentenced to a year in jail. The three-year sentence he received on Monday comes on top of the 10 months he has already served in jail since being arrested late last year. The link for this article located at Scarlet Pruitt, IDG News Service is no longer available. . A French tribunal convicts a digital thief and his parent for orchestrating a large-scale forgery scheme across the continent.. Software Piracy, Copyright Enforcement, Criminal Justice, Counterfeit Software. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Computer security consultant and confessed cyber intruder Max Butler will serve out his 18-month prison term at the privately-run Taft Correctional Institution in central California, sources say. Butler, known as 'Max Vision' to friends and associates, pleaded guilty last September to . . . . Computer security consultant and confessed cyber intruder Max Butler will serve out his 18-month prison term at the privately-run Taft Correctional Institution in central California, sources say. Butler, known as 'Max Vision' to friends and associates, pleaded guilty last September to launching an automated intrusion program that cracked hundreds of military and defense contractor computers over a few days in 1998. Butler was sentenced in federal court in San Jose, California in May, and he surrendered to the custody of US Marshals last week. In a telephone interview from a county jail where he was awaiting transit, the newly-incarcerated hacker admitted he crossed the line, but said he thought prison wasn't an appropriate remedy. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . Jake Harmon, a cybersecurity expert, starts serving his 2-year sentence for illegal network breaches.. Max Butler,Cyber Intrusion,Computer Security,Criminal Sentence. . Anthony Pell
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