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BREAKING NEWS: "Braindump" Site Owner Sentenced


1/31/2003 -- Robert Keppel, the first "braindump" site owner to be criminally convicted for selling IT certification exam questions, was sentenced this morning in federal court to 12 months and 1 day in prison and ordered to pay $500,000 in restitution to Microsoft.

Judge Ronald Leighton in the United States District Court, Western District of Washington also ordered Keppel to three years supervised release after his prison term is served, and added a $100 "special assessment" that goes into the court's victim relief fund, a court spokesperson said.

Keppel pleaded guilty in August to a felony charge of theft of trade secrets in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1832(a)(2), part of the Economic Espionage Act of 1996. The charges stemmed from the sale of Microsoft certification exam questions through Keppel's now-defunct Web sites, Cheet-Sheets.com and CheetSheets.com.

The U.S. Attorney's office had asked for an 18 month prison sentence for Keppel.

Keppel's defense attorney argued for work release or probation.

An independent attorney told CertCities.com that Keppel could serve as little as four months of his sentence, depending on factors such as "good behavior." The defense could also choose to petition the judge to reconsider the sentence.

CertCities.com is attempting to contact Microsoft and Keppel's defense attorney for reaction to this verdict.

The amount of restitution Keppel was ordered to pay is in addition to assets already forfeited by Keppel, including a 1997 Ferarri Spider, a 2001 Lexis RX300 and $56,000 seized from various bank accounts.

A spokesperson for the US Attorney's office told CertCities.com that the reason the sentence was 12 months and one day is that "[the sentence] needs to be over a year [for] a felony."

Robert Pedigo, Executive Director for the Information Technology Certification Security Council (ITCSC), an industry consortium that works to preserve the security of certification exams, said that the verdict is "good news for everyone who takes a certification test honestly and for those who create and deliver those tests. It's bad news for those who would try to profit by undermining the value of certifications."

"The members of the ITCSC [which includes Microsoft, Cisco, CompTIA, and others] believe that the important point is summed up by the conviction," he commented. "It demonstrates that the courts recognize the copyrights of intellectual property owners and that test theft and fraud in testing are now clearly criminal activities."  -B.N.



There are 202 CertCities.com user Comments for “BREAKING NEWS: "Braindump" Site Owner Sentenced”
Page 3 of 21
1/31/03: Anonymous says: I studied MS materials, built a test lab to install and configure servers and the whole bit, recreating the conditions in the MS materials, used practical experience from on the job, and basically busted my @$$ to get my certifications, and then some Joe Blowhard comes along and memorizes the stolen test questions in a few days and gets the same certification? Am I the Schmuck?
1/31/03: Mike says: Who Cares, the MCSE is worthless anyway. They give them away in high school now. Cisco's CCNA is headed down the same road.
1/31/03: Anonymous says: Did you know they give 4 year degrees away too, for the right price.
1/31/03: Sun'n Sea from San Diego says: Hundreds of current industry engineers and professionals have used that and other similar sites as "study guides" when they were struggling financially and could not afford other sample tests available in the market. What does the law say about them? Did Robert Keppel and others make money from the "brain dump"? I am not saying if the site was free then it was OK to have it up, but why is he convicted to pay $500,000?
1/31/03: indeed from the depths of dispair says: Just a racket within a racket. He just wasn't part of the "Club". I got screwed out of $7000.00 by a legitimate M$ Certified Partner, MCT staffed, IT Center. Think the big boys pity me?
1/31/03: Anonymous says: Whats the difference between a 4 year degree and an IT cert? NOTHING absolutely nothing. You read a book take a test. Sometimes you cheat, lie and scam. The more things change the more they remain the same.
1/31/03: Afraid to say from Amerika says: Once again, Microsoft get the best justice that Money Can Buy. Its almost as bad as them pushing Goober for president because he was a "Hands off of business" Republican. Bill Gates should be ashamed of his company, their ethics are big dog, big lawyers, big business. This guy is not guilty of anything as dangerous as running a stop sign, but he gets to be a guest of the taxpayers for a year? Public service would have benefitted society. This detracts. Yes, out legal system follows the Golden Rule: He who has the gold makes the rules!"
1/31/03: Anonymous says: NetBSD, BeOS (ashame they are out of busniess), Linux or Macintosh...I think Microsoft is too greedy, and the world depends too much on apps that are not secure aor reliable.
1/31/03: Anonymous says: Well as more Robert Keppels pop up by the hundreds (i.e. after Napster), Microsoft still needs a name for their new operating system Windows .NET server, I mean Windows Server 2003, I mean Windows NT 6.0 Server XP Service Pack 3se .NET 2003. And really when WILL Microsft stop supporting NT4...hmmmm or will Windows 3.11 make a comeback!!!! I am sure we shall all wait and see with eagerness. I know I will. You know sometimes I get so excited about all that's going on with Microsoft, I fall on the floor and start licking my fingers.
1/31/03: Chris from New York says: Some good thoughts from WHG. I've always found it laughable that prospective MCSE's have to pay $100 a pop for tests that measure your ability to implement and administer Microsoft's product for them. The tests should be free with restrictions on how many attempts can be made in a given period of time. At the very least the first attempt should be free. When I got my MCSE I used the dumps as a supplement to studying, and I don't feel one bit bad about it. I studied my tail off. I'm proud of that accomplishment, but I keep things in perspective. It's not like I just finished my residency in neurosurgery or something like that. I have to agree there seems to be a lot of elitism in the IT field. There are a number of people who think they're one step away from Einstein, or at least act that way. Usually they are far from that level. You can be talented and skilled without being an elitist. Along with the elitists in the field we have the BSer's. We've all met them, and we've all done a little bit of it ourselves. Sometimes a little BS helps because nobody knows everything about everything. The people who simply memorize dumps are by necessity all BS when they get on the job, and they'll soon be found out. You can't survive on BS alone. So do the dumps devalue certs? Yes, but it's more the people who aren't interested in learning anything than the existence of the dumps. I think this was more of a problem during the dot.com craze. People were actually getting hired based on certification alone, with no actual experience. You didn't even have to have a high school diploma. Next thing you know the network is down and the company's losing thousands. With today's tighter employment situation, companies are much more discriminating. Those that aren't deserve what they get. Everyone involved shares a little of the blame for the current status of certifications, which I don't think is all that horrible. Paper MCSE's are quickly identifiable. I have to disagree with the "everybody deserves to work" comment though. That's called communism, and you just have to look at the Soviets in the 80's to see what zero unemployment really means. As far as certs protecting our jobs from going overseas...uh, I don't get it. People overseas can't get certs? Why not? Too dumb or can't afford it? Yeah, that's cool. Well, thank God Microsoft has gotten this guy thrown in prison for a year...phew, don't have to worry about panhandling tommorrow.
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