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...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Tuesday: May 9, 2006


Cheet-Sheets.com Owner Pleads Guilty; May Face Jail Time


8/27/2002 -- Oregon resident Robert R. Keppel, owner of the now-defunct braindump Web sites Cheet-Sheets.com and CheetSheets.com, pleaded guilty in federal court Friday to a charge of theft of trade secrets, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1832(a)(2).

The charge resulted from allegations made by Microsoft that Keppel was selling questions and answers to Microsoft certification exams.

When he's sentenced on November 1, Keppel faces up to 10 years in prison and $250,000 in fines. He also forfeited a Lexus RX300, a 1997 Ferrari Spider and $56,000 in cash as part of a plea agreement. CertCities.com attempted to reach both Keppel and his attorney for comment, but did not receive a response before this story was posted online.

Assistant United States Attorney Annette Hayes, who prosecuted the case, said this is first application of the theft of trade secrets statute to procure a conviction within the realm of IT certification testing. In June, police in Bexar County, Texas seized the assets of TestKiller LTD and its owners citing the same felony charge, but criminal charges have not been filed in that case.

Previously, most "braindump" cases were pursued in civil court, citing copyright and trademark violations. "The [theft of trade secrets] statute is not that old... which is probably why there hasn't been many [criminal cases of this type]. But there's nothing unique about this case," said Hayes. "We picked this statute because it was the one that applied."

According to Microsoft, the case began when the company received allegations from customers that the content of Keen's CheetSheets contained live exam items. Microsoft made a criminal complaint to the Federal Bureau of Investigations during the summer of 2001, which turned the investigation over to its Computer Crimes Division.

In Sept. 2001, the FBI's Computer Crimes Division issued search warrants and seized the cash and cars listed above, as well as papers and other evidence. According to the government, this evidence showed that Keppel began selling the questions some time in 1999. He began buying exam questions from a source in Pakistan in January 2001, which he then incorporated into his test materials. (The government declined CertCities.com's request for the name of the Pakistan source.) Records from a NOVA credit card merchant account, opened by Keppel in July 2000, show that the business earned at least $753,633.03 while that account was active, the government said.

Hayes said that criminal charges were never filed in this case. When her office was given the case in late 2001, they initiated contact with Keppel, and eventually negotiated the guilty plea through Keppel's attorney. The government then filed a Statement of Information with the court on August 8, paving the way for Keppel to enter his plea on Friday.

Hayes told CertCities.com that her office will make sentencing recommendations in late October. According to Hayes, Keppel is currently out on "pre-trial" release.

"I think it's important to note that the government is pursuing these types of cases and we will continue to do so," said Hayes.

Word of the plea spread over the weekend after the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published a short news story online.

"I was ecstatic when I heard the news," said Craig Callaway, president of Self Test Software. "Yes, it's good for [test question] vendors like us, but this is really about the industry as a whole. There's got to be a concerted effort to protect the integrity of certification."

"[This plea] will raise awareness of this problem," said Robert Pedigo, executive director of the Information Technology Certification Security Council, an industry organization that works to preserve the integrity of IT certification exams. "It is probably fair to take this as a shot across the bow of anyone who is attempting to cheat."

Pedigo said that certification vendors are working on improving exam security through a variety of means, including tighter nondisclosure agreements, greater scrutiny of testing centers and legal action, but they are also looking to the certified community for help. "This is an active concern that every single person who holds a certificate should bear in mind. By becoming certified, one is a member of a professional group. And it's important that one defend the integrity of that group."

The owner of one braindump site who wished to remain anonymous told CertCities.com that the plea was not that big a concern. Unlike CheetSheets.com, which commercially packaged live exam items, the source explained that most braindump sites are free collections of thousands of questions submitted by end users. "There's a big difference between looking at 150 screenshots [of actual] questions and poring through a thousand questions -- you can't memorize a thousand questions," the source said. "I think the certification programs realize this."

Even so, the source added that this case may influence his/her site: "I'm thinking of moving away from actual questions and more toward study guides."  - B.N.

 



There are 144 CertCities.com user Comments for “Cheet-Sheets.com Owner Pleads Guilty; May Face Jail Time”
Page 1 of 15
8/27/02: Phil from philadelphia says: Great news! Question though.. Certify.com, jrksoftware.com and even transcender are no different really. I've used all 3 for test prep and time after time the same exact, word for word question came up in the actual test. Of course I understand the concept behind the question and answer but isn't certify.com and the others subject to the same copyright law ? Ive seen troytec guides before and honestly made little use of them due to their lack of explanation. I do find it ironic how microsoft is stopping these guys one by one but how they themselves haven't been exactly the best role model for business practice. The only problem is that people will always use these, and there are TONS of sites out there that sell them. I think it might be a little unrealistic or impossible for MS to stop it all but its all up to the individual.
8/27/02: MCSE2000 from Utah says: To the owner of the anonymous braindump site - there is NO difference between what this guy did more profitably than you and your own complicity in the deliberate violation of the exam standards and professional integrity. Now on to Microsoft - you're directly responsible for allowing this to go on as long as it has. You've largely acheived your goal of getting large certification numbers and now want to try and make them "look" legitimate by belatedly going after the most gross offenders. I'll believe you mean it when you decert and throw out the cheaters that used the braindumps on their asses. Hell, admit you screwed up and make us all retest on your dime. As it is, my MCSE 2000 and all other MS certs (I have most of them) are worthless in the market. "I'm an MCSE, but I really know the stuff" is a mandatory discussion because of your lack of effort on this front going back several years. You had a chance to fix it with W2K but choose to go for the cheap numbers. Typical Microsoft - you talk a good game, but fail to deliver. Prosecuting these losers at this date IS failing to deliver. That horse left the barn two years ago.
8/27/02: Nutt Shlapper from D.C. says: Cool! Now I can sleep at night knowing that the three or four companies Microsoft put out of business will ensure that everyone from this point forward will test legitimately. Right, and I do tend to think that Transcender is JUST as guilty, but their Nose is probably stuck up you know who's ass; Otherwise they'd of been the first. Bottom Line, I am an MCSE in NT4.0, have 3 out of 7 done in Win2k, have NEVER failed a microsoft prometric, and have NEVER cheated. Even if you did cheat, your odor will be very pungent out in the real business world, and you probably wouldn't last. Whoop Dee Doo Microsoft
8/27/02: MCSD from Silicon Forest says: Sorry guys, you can justify all you want. The law was broken, and this site owner knew it all along. He deserves punishment for the crime, plain and simple. There's a HUGE difference between his site and the commercial testing packages: it's called a legal, agreed-upon contract. The free braindump sites are AS illegal, because copyright laws are being broken. You took the exams. You saw the disclaimer and had to click ACCEPT in order to proceed. That means that for-pay or free braindump sites are against the law, period. Certified software for sale is a completely different story. Microsoft doesn't have to even approve THOSE, but they do. I don't work for Microsoft at all, but what's right is right. If you have such a bad attitude towards Microsoft, then why on earth did you get certified? Want of money might be the first answer, the very thing you blast Microsoft for. Microsoft or ANY other company NEEDS to put businesses out to pasture when they're breaking the law, right next to Enron and the rest of 'em, so get some sleep.
8/27/02: Anonymous says: Not that I support cheating, but MICROSOFT deserves all this. They are the biggest cheaters of all when they try to cheat us of our dollars with their tricky stupid test questions. That is why people try to go to these sites and see a sneak preview of these tests. I study hard for these certifications. Hey Mccoy, out there in the real field there are not tricky questions, maybe tricky problems but that is different. You either know your stuff or you don't. But of course there is always, the Microsoft way or the Real field way. Cut the BS Microsoft. Just give me real,plain hard work scenarios that proves I know my stuff. Not tricky, gotcha, april fools questions to try to fail me and get more bucks. Certifications, Ha!, what a joke it has become
8/27/02: Anonymous from Sydney says: Am I ignorant or honest? I didn’t even know about this mob, sure there is heaps of junk info out there as to what is on the tests, but what the tests are about is the concept behind the question not the regurgitation of information. If you want to regurgitate information go back to pre scool.
8/27/02: MCT In FL says: Im an MCT, MCSE, MCDBA, MCSA, and an MCP for XP. Ive never used a cheat paper. Everyday I teach people how to become MCSE's and sometimes people just dont get certain topics. So if they need to use a cheet sheet to help them get certain ideas or topics then what is the harm in that; however there are people who do use the cheat sheets to just get the cert and not learn from it, and that is wrong. The MCSE 2k is to difficult of a cert to obtain; just to let anyone who can memorize answers get it. GO MICROSOFT!!
8/27/02: Guy Allgood from San Diego says: Now if we could find and decertify their customers, my MCSE would look all that much more impressive and mean more than the paper it is written on. This is the reason so many of us who earned these certs are mad. So many of the paper certs have devalued our cert. Now more and more employers insist upon the degrees. Why? The schools are at least corrupt only in view.
8/27/02: MCSE,MCDBA, CCIE,EIEIO says: Kazaa has them all for free. Why bother paying?
8/27/02: phil from philadelphia says: I am also Microsoft certified, MCP, MCSA and 1 away from MCSE in 2000. I've heard from industry experienced people that I know that these tests test your knowledge of the microsoft way. People with 20 years experience have had trouble with some 2000 mcse tests like 70-216 because the real world answer is not the microsoft answer. Microsoft has made millions from people taking tests that you can never really prepare for 100%. They should consider redoing their exams to reflect real world situations and not their BS situations and maybe then people wouldnt be forced to use braindumps. Also, the only reason transcender, certify.com and jrksoftware arent getting nailed for having "similar" practice questions is because microsoft does in fact make money from each test registered from any vendor, they dont make money from braindumps. Ms does make a percentage of the money from self test software vendors in return for obtaining the actual tests and rewording them as self test vendors do.
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