ESA Welcomes Game Pirate Jail Sentences
Kevin Fuchs of West Amherst, NY, and Kifah Maswadi of Oakland, FL, were sentenced to eight and 15 months in prison, respectively, this summer. Fuchs will follow that up with eight months of house arrest and another 16 months of court supervised release. Maswadi also received three years of court supervision, 50 hours of community service, and an order to pay $415,900 in restitution.
"These decisions illustrate, once again, that game piracy will not be tolerated and the extent at which these criminals will be prosecuted. The ESA and its members will continue to support law enforcement's efforts to protect the intellectual property of our industry," said Michael Gallagher, CEO of the ESA. The sentencing follows a recent United Kingdom ruling which established a legal precedent in their courts.
The news comes at a time when piracy has had increasing influence on the gaming industry, prompting game makers to argue whether fighting piracy directly or finding other means is the right way to solve the problem. Others, like id Software, have responded by diversifying the platforms on which they release games.
In January 2007, Fuchs plead guilty to conspiring to reproduce and distribute copyrighted works. He had worked as a "supplier" in the piracy underground by obtaining pre-release copies of games to hand over to groups that would then "crack" the games by circumventing the games' copy protection systems.
Maswadi, on the other hand, plead guilty to criminal copyright infringement in June 2008. From 2006 to 2007, he had sold "Power Players," consoles pre-loaded with pirated games that connect directly to televisions. Mawadi made over $390,000 from sales and was facing three years in prison but received a reduced sentence for his cooperation with authorities.
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I don't know if I should applaud them for protecting their assets or scream for what seems like a bit of overkill for the situation.
Are they sending folks to prison who steal music and get caught?-
The RIAA/MPAA is trying to get laws passed that will turn civil matters into criminal ones. So yes, they do want people who download mp3's to serve jail time, not just owe their entire life's earning potential like they've been doing so far. Seriously, some of the judgements against individuals who downloaded mp3's.. the amount of money; the people are better off killing themselves as they'd never be able to pay that money at any point in their life.
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I believe they're going after bigger people (well not literally)...basically people who make money from pirating by distributing pirated copies and essentially make a living from it...which I think is a much better approach than what the RIAA and MPAA is doing and just suing smaller people instead of going after the source
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