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DirecTV secrets allegedly pilfered:
The
FBI arrested a college student in Los Angeles on Thursday
for allegedly sending stolen information about satellite
TV access cards to a Web site.
Igor Serebryany, 19, a student at the University of Chicago, is accused of
stealing confidential documents describing the smart card and encryption technology
used in DirecTV's newest system.
When
questioned by agents, the FBI said, Serebryany confessed
to stealing documents from an outside document-copying service
used by DirecTV's lawyers. If convicted on charges of theft
of trade secrets, Serebryany faces up to 10 years in prison.
The
case escalates what has been an ongoing legal and technological
tussle between DirecTV, which continues to invent better
ways of scrambling its signals, and the pirate community,
which keeps finding ways to break them.
Most
DirecTV subscribers use cards--provided by the company to
legitimate customers--known as "Period 2" or "Period
3." Those systems, which decrypt encoded satellite signals
based on the customer's subscription package, have been compromised
by hackers.
In
August 2002, DirecTV began distributing its fourth-generation
smart card system, known as "Period 4." It represents
the outcome of two years and $25 million worth of research
and development.
According
to an FBI affidavit, Serebryany worked part-time for a company
called Uniscribe Professional Services that had a scanning
center inside the Jones Day law firm. While there, Serebryany
allegedly copied scanned files about Period 4 and sent them
to the publisher of DSS-Hackers.com--asking that they be
posted to the Net and without asking for any payment in return.
Serebryany
could not be reached for comment Thursday.
According
to an affidavit from FBI agent Tracy Marquis Kierce, the
operator of the DSS hacking site said he was contacted by
someone who identified himself or herself as "Igor" who
supplied confidential Period 4 files.
Jones
Day, one of the nation's larger law firms, is representing
DirecTV in an unrelated civil case against NDS Americas,
which developed the smart card technology.
Federal
law prohibits anyone from copying or distributing confidential
information "intending or knowing that the offense will
injure any owner of that trade secret." Declan McCullagh
CNet News.com
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