US government seizes news Web site
In a move that has alarmed free speech advocates, the U.S. Justice Department this week seized a news Web site containing information on pirated software and hardware, turning it into a government-run site containing warnings about software piracy and links to antipiracy investigations.
The seizure of iSONews.com was part of a plea agreement with the government by David Rocci, also known as "krazy8," who pleaded guilty in December to conspiring to import, market and sell modified computer chips for Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox, according to a statement released by the Justice Department.
The Justice Department did not return calls asking for comment on the Rocci case.
Rocci helped run the site, which provided information about, but not access to, pirated computer software and hardware devices, called "mods," that can circumvent copyright protections in game consoles such as Xbox and Sony Corp.' s Playstation 2.
Isonews.com also offered online discussion groups for individuals interested in the "mod" scene.
On Thursday, visitors to the www.iSONews.com domain were instead greeted by a low-tech Web page displaying the logos of both the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the U.S. Customs Service.
The Web page said, in part, "The isonews is now the property of the United States government. The domain and web site were surrendered to U.S. law enforcement pursuant to a federal prosecution and felony plea agreement for conspiracy to violate criminal copyright laws."
Links to a DOJ press release regarding the seizure and to a government site with information on federal antipiracy investigations were also provided.
Despite the government's seizure of the iSONews.com domain, the iSONews.com site was still accessible Thursday afternoon at the site's IP (Internet protocol) address, http://66.201.243.169. Most of the site's features, including online discussion groups, continued to function.
It is not clear whether the government is administering that site, or whether it has also seized the content on the iSONews.com Web servers.
"This raises some very interesting privacy issues," said David Sobel, general counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC).
"If the government has the logs to this site, is an unsuspecting person who thinks they're going to this site because it has useful information having their IP address captured by the government as part of a criminal investigation," Sobel said.
Content on the iSONews.com site indicates that Rocci and the site's other managers tried to steer clear of becoming a site associated with creating or obtaining copies of pirated software or "iso-images."
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