Symantec launches US$15M piracy suit

Symantec has filed suit against an alleged software piracy ring, seeking more than US$15 million in damages

Symantec has filed suit against an alleged software piracy ring, that has been in operation in North America since late 2003, the software vendor claims.

The lawsuit, filed last month in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles seeks more than US$15 million in damages from a network of U.S. and Canadian businesses that are alleged to have sold counterfeit versions of Symantec's products, including Norton AntiVirus, pcAnywhere and Veritas Backup Exec.

These companies and their affiliates run a global counterfeit organization that focuses on the U.S. and Canada, Symantec said.

The businesses, which operated under eight different names, including Sili, Advanced Sales Productivity Solutions and GT Micro, used spam and online advertising to offer Symantec's software at cut-rate prices, said Cris Paden, a Symantec spokesman.

Customers who paid for the software would then be sent disks with Symantec's logo, wrapped in plain white sleeves. The disks, which came without documentation, would not install or work properly and could also include malicious software that would then be used to steal sensitive information from the purchaser's computer, Paden said.

Symantec began investigating the matter in early 2004, when it started receiving complaints from customers who had bought the bad software, Paden added. "The people who bought these disks thinking they were from Symantec would come to our customer service," he said.

One of the Sili Web sites named in Symantec's complaint, Sle-business.com, offers US$6-per-user volume licensing deals on Symantec's Norton AntiVirus 2006. That product typically sells for about US$20.

Sle-business.com's Web site also offers software from McAfee, Intuit, Corel and Webroot Software, among others. Sili representatives could not be reached immediately for comment.

Symantec has worked with police to seize more than 100,000 copies of counterfeit disks, but Paden did not know if criminal charges would be forthcoming in the case. "We are working with law enforcement," he said. "I can't tell you who because if I did that would tip our hands to the extent of our investigation."

Like many other vendors, Symantec has become more aggressive in its fight against unauthorized copying. In 2002, Symantec was losing about US$500 million per year to software piracy, but it has now reduced those losses to less than US$50 million per year, he said.

Customers who are worried that they may be buying phony software online should make sure they are actually giving their credit-card information over a secure Web site, Paden said. That means that when they are asked to enter a credit-card number, the Web address should begin with https://, and there should be a locked padlock displayed near the address to indicate that the browser is visiting a secure site.

"That's the smoking gun as to whether you're dealing with a legitimate outfit or not," Paden said. "99 percent of the time these guys don't use this."

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