Chinese man pleads guilty to pirating $100 million in software

11 years ago | Posted in: Laws | 634 Views

By Agence France-Presse

 

A Chinese man pleaded guilty in a US federal court Tuesday to pirating software that investigators said was worth more than $100 million.

The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement said that it had broken up an operation run by Xiang Li, 36, of Chengdu in Sichuan, China, that the bureau called “one of the most significant cases of copyright infringement ever uncovered — and dismantled.”

Li had distributed via his website Crack99.com high-cost programs for defense, engineering of things like computer chips and aerospace materials, telecommunications, aerospace simulation, and computer-aided manufacturing which he had “cracked,” or broken access codes to allow anyone to use them, the ICE said in a statement.

Between 2008 and 2011 he sold software by some 200 different manufacturers to at least 325 buyers, ICE said, with more than one-third of the buyers in the United States, including a NASA engineer and a defense contractor.

Li was arrested in June 2011 after being lured by undercover buyers from ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations division to the Pacific island of Saipan, in the US territory of the Northern Mariana Islands, to deliver pirated software.

“Li mistakenly thought he was safe from the long arm of HSI, hiding halfway around the world in cyberspace anonymity,” ICE director John Morton said in a statement.

“Fast forward to today, where he is now being held accountable in Delaware for illegally stealing, distributing and ultimately exploiting American ingenuity and creativity at a loss of at least $100 million to US companies.”

Li pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement and wire fraud in the US district court in Wilmington, Delaware, and faces up to 25 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

He is scheduled to be sentenced on May 3.

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