Spammer gets jail

falseadoom

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PITTSBURGH — An Indiana man who helped send millions of illegal spam messages to U.S. and international cellphones and computers has been sentenced to 27 months in federal prison by a federal judge in Pennsylvania.

Phillip Fleitz, 31, of Indianapolis, was handcuffed and ordered Monday to immediately begin serving the sentence.

Fleitz's two co-defendants previously received probation for their roles, and defense attorney Stephen Capone argued Fleitz should receive a similar sentence.

But the judge agreed with U.S. Attorney Jimmy Kitchen who said "Fleitz was the architect. It was his idea. He was the first to do it" and enlisted the others.

"This was a sophisticated and serious scheme," U. S. District Judge Maurice Cohill Jr. said in imposing the sentence.

Fleitz was one of a dozen U.S. residents charged with marketing illegal computer skills on Darkode.com, a cybercriminal marketplace disabled by the FBI in July. Seventy people in the U.S. and 19 other countries were targeted in that takedown.

From September 2011 to February 2013, Fleitz and two others earned between $2,000 to $3,000 weekly by conspiring to violate a 2003 law designed to protect cellphone and computer users from unwanted marketing and pornography emails and text messages.

Fleitz has acknowledged operating the computer servers in China that the trio used to infiltrate personal computers of hundreds of thousands to millions of people in the United States and abroad.

Naveed Ahmed, 27, of Tampa, was sentenced to two years' probation last year. He wrote a program that helped match cellphone numbers with their carriers. That enabled the scammers to bombard the phones with unsolicited messages. Dewayne Watts, of Hernando, Florida, who is confined to his home for six months as part of his two-year probation, wrote the text messages meant to entice phone users to respond.

The computer and text-message spam both included Internet links. Those who received the text messages were told they had won Best Buy gift cards that could be accessed by clicking the links.

In reality, those who responded were routed to Web pages controlled by Internet Cost Per Action networks, which are marketing companies that gather email addresses and other personal information. Such companies are legal, but using spam to drive traffic to the companies' websites is not.

"I just want to say I'm sorry," Fleitz said, adding that the rules and regulations governing marketing are among the things that "make this country great" and should be followed. "I was stupid for not doing so."

Fleitz's father, who didn't give his name, was angry about the sentence saying his son immediately cooperated with the FBI and provided a statement through an attorney. Although Kitchen didn't directly dispute that, he told the judge Fleitz was far from cooperative and tipped off his partners in crime as soon as the FBI contacted him.

Fleitz also has failed three drug tests since December while free on bond. Capone argued that was one more reason to let Fleitz remain free and get treatment.

Cohill said he imposed the prison sentence to "protect" Fleitz from himself.


FBI seems to be pretty aggressive in cybercrime lately, hopefully this will slow down spam in my inbox. LOL
 

Frank

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I see Spam as an annoyance more than a serious crime, unless some type of theft is occurring then that would be cybercrime.. it's really no different to door to door salesman "Even more annoying"
 

Roulette Zeitung

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If spamming in general would be a serious crime, nine out of ten casino owners, a third of all affiliate manger and a fifth or all webmasters have to go into jail.

In the early days of this industry the casinos acquired new players with good search engine positions and good reputation. Today there too many eaters around the cake, and it's an old wisdom that hunger will drive some into madness, the addition to normal appearance.

Leopold
 

WCD Admin

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I have a huge amount of time wasted by spammers every single day. Its more than an annoyance and when you multiply that times millions of people being spammed and thousands of mega-spammers doing it for multiple companies - you have a massive amount of wasted resources, including peoples time and bandwidth. I've been in business long enough that some of my email addresses are basically trash because they are so old that 90% of the mail coming in is spam.

As if that is not enough.. its not a guy who has to walk up to your door and knock on it to waste your time every single time he wants to make a sale. It's a guy who has engineered an army of robots that never stop knocking... on everyone's door... they are annoying the shit of the entire world. Not to mention they have the emails of unwitting clients, some of which may have been your clients - this makes converting and making a living harder for legitimate people playing by the rules, and we also make less money. So yes a crime is done, and theft has occurred.

just my 2 cents

They've stirred up the hive for years and years, now the hive is collectively going to sting them ... serves. them. right. (there are other options out there to make a living for technically minded people) -- I also agree 27 months is plenty, 12 months might be plenty. but I do think punishment is necessary and warranted. just don't spam.
 

AussieDave

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I see Spam as an annoyance

I have a huge amount of time wasted by spammers every single day. Its more than an annoyance

Totally agree.
I can't tell you the number of times, I have to changed email addresses at programs or web wallets because they've ended up on some spammers data base. Some email addy's I use for public domain reg (so I expect it). However others, are only used for aff programs and others only for casino accounts. How the later end up on these spammer lists, well... you don't need to be Einstein to figure that out. While it may not be a crime per se, selling data without permission, gives ALL ethical affiliates a bad name. Don't believe me... go post a question over on Google forums, state your a casino affiliate and see the nasty reception you get.

As far as door knockers, mormons, 7 day adventists etc... since we added the sign (beware of Dog) to front gate, even the pizza guy refuses to enter, instead sends a txt for us to collet it at the gate :D
 
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