Net Journalist Prosecuted For Warez Crimes 41
Andrew Burnes writes "A fellow Internet games journalist will shortly plead guilty in a Connecticut court room for being involved in the warez scene, following his apprehension in April as part of Operation Fastlink. Here is a slice of his email to various press and editorial professionals: 'I am very sorry for what I have done, and after I serve my sentence, I hope I will be able to continue my career in the game industry, and move on with my life. This last year has been incredibly hard for me emotionally, facing the consequences of my bad choices, and I am hopeful for your support, but I'll understand if you want nothing to do with me.'
That depends (Score:5, Funny)
That depends. What kinda warez can you hook me up with?
Had to happen eventually (Score:1)
Ouch (Score:1)
Big deal... (Score:1)
Re:Big deal... (Score:5, Funny)
Gamer: What are you in jail for?
Prisoner: I killed 20 people with a plastic fork. About you?
Gamer: I was passing out warez
Prisoner: What the fuck is that.
Gamer: It's aaa.... Computer Games
Prisoner: Why are you in the same prison with me?
Gamer: My lawyer and judge didn't like my warez collection.
Re:Big deal... (Score:1)
I feel safer already... (Score:5, Interesting)
Another dangerous criminal apprehended!
Re:I feel safer already... (Score:4, Funny)
well.. how badly was he in it? (Score:5, Insightful)
hell, whole demoscene spur up from c64 warez scene, and from that scene spur up many of the star programmers for todays games.
(professional for profit pirating on the other hand.. if he was into that in hardcore: fuck you)
not that this should affect his game reviewer career though.. hell.. most game reviewers SHOULD be into warezed games so that they could write the reviews both early and WITHOUT ass licking of the publisher being necessary to get the review game.
Re:well.. how badly was he in it? (Score:2)
Hell, hell, hell. What's all this talk about hell? I thought this was a gaming discussion, not a hell discussion.*
didn't play doom?
Re:well.. how badly was he in it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:well.. how badly was he in it? (Score:2)
Not only that, but there's little point to it. Review versions are often tweaked and polished before the final retail game comes out, so anyone who downloaded the review version ends up having to download the final version. This is why warez groups tend to stay away from them.
Rob
Re:well.. how badly was he in it? (Score:5, Insightful)
not that this should affect his game reviewer career though.. hell.. most game reviewers SHOULD be into warezed games so that they could write the reviews both early and WITHOUT ass licking of the publisher being necessary to get the review game.
Uh huh. I once worked on a game where we accidentally put a game killing bug into our first beta candidate. We rolled it back, and fixed it properly, and told the people concerned to chuck the disks we'd just sent them, and to have this BC2 disk. Guess which version got warezed onto the net. Guess which version 4 different reviewers reviewed. Guess which reviewers got an 'early' review where they spent several paragraphs bagging the crash bug and saying this game is a load of shit. Guess which reviewers had to spend a bit of quality time with a lawyer where they tried to insist that 'it was like that when I bought it, but I don't have the original disk anymore'.
If you go with the warezed version, you don't know what you're getting. But we might. We do keep track of identifiable features in each version that goes out of the studio. The last game I was on, the 'zero day warez' version wasn't a zero day crack. It was from a month before release. Anyone who reviewed that, wasn't reviewing that same thing that gamers were going to play. As far as I'm concerned, if you're not reviewing the game that I'm buying, then what does your review have to do with anything, and why should I pay money for it?
Which reminds me... (Score:2)
Did he not get the public perp walk like this guy did?
Re:Which reminds me... (Score:4, Informative)
He died in jail. [suntimes.com]
Does it go the other way as well? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Does it go the other way as well? (Score:2)
What a dumbass. (Score:5, Insightful)
Dude. Your career to this point depended on them trusting you enough to give you free, early access to games you could write about. You spent your time undermining that trust and the industry by distributing those games to the world as warez. It pissed the gaming industry off so bad they are prosecuting you and sending you to JAIL.
You have no career in the game industry. You probably have no career in journalism. Considering how many job applications ask if you've ever committed a felony, you may have no career at a fast food restaurant.
Let me put it another way: Game Over.
Re:What a dumbass. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What a dumbass. (Score:4, Informative)
Your assumption that he used his position at Game Over to acquire software and warez it appears to be incorrect. If you read the discussion under the brief blurb at IGN (TFA), you'll see a post (which purports to be) from the Game Over President/Editor in Chief. It says:
Your words, however, are pretty harsh. Perhaps you know more about this than you're letting on.
Re:What a dumbass. (Score:2)
Rob
Re:To be as dry as possible ... (Score:1)
Re:To be as dry as possible ... (Score:2)
When it comes to computer software, you'd be surprised.
Rob
this sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
Good...and bad (Score:3, Interesting)
Overall, I've always thought that games are one of the things that there is very little justification to just strait out pirate. I mean, there is no real requirement that you have game X (as opposed to say, certain Operating Systems or Office applications that such a large portion of the world uses that if you don't have it, in some cases, you are basically screwed), and I've always thought that games as a whole were fairly reasonably priced.
On the other hand, in some cases, piracy probably helps the game companies sell more games than they might otherwise, and in the end I think rewards companies who make good games (there are a number of games that I've purchased because I downloaded a pirate copy of a game that I wasn't really interested in, and then realized that the game was in fact quite good, or ran better under wine than I expected, and I ended up going out and paying for the game).
In the end though, regardless of whether or not this guy was doing the game industry a service or a disservice, it seems to me that if you are in a position like this guy was in, warezing games is a pretty boneheaded move just because it seems like an "insider" is a lot more likely to get caught than John Q. Cracker.
jail time? (Score:2)
Re:jail time? (Score:1)
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/aptech_stor y.asp?category=1700&slug=Computer%20Piracy/ [nwsource.com]
Re:jail time? (Score:1)
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/aptech_sto
Looks like he didn't have much trust to lose (Score:2, Informative)
Game-over started by reviewing warez copies (Score:1)
http://web.archive.org/web/20010420123331/www.tre
10/19/98: First out the gate. Don't know how they got it.. but hey. Here it is..Game Over.net