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EXCLUSIVE: CompTIA Overseas Braindump Lawsuit Expands to TroyTec.com; Owner Plans to Settle


9/10/2003 -- The Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA) came one step closer to being the first certification program to successfully sue an overseas braindumper this month after identifying who it says are the real owners of the site CheatExams.com, as well as tracking down information on the site’s financial transactions.

As CertCities.com reported last month, when CompTIA originally filed its copyright suit against the owners of CheatExams.com in February, it named a Florida-based individual, George Jennings, who was the registrant according to Whois. It amended the complaint in May to name the more recent registrant Adarsha Computers, which listed a Denmark address.

However, according to another amended complaint filed with the court August 5, CompTIA states that those registrants were false, and the real owners of the site are Mala Premaney and Tushar Bhagat, both with addresses in Pune, India. CompTIA states that it was provided this information by a third-party source, which it did not name. Google searches confirm that a Premaney has been associated with an Adarsha Computers based in India.

It also states that Premaney and Bhagat also operate TroyTec.com/Testkiller.com, which re-opened earlier this year under controversy over the identity of the new owners. (Click here to read the story as well as background on legal cases surrounding these sites. Note: The Whois registration has since changed to a Gary Ritchie in Pune, India).

The ownership connection between CheatExams.com and TroyTec.com appears to be verified by recent events: CheatExams.com has been closed, stating that "We have merged with our Web site ...http://troytec.com." Troytec also recently pulled all CompTIA-related products from its site, citing generic legal concerns.

According to detailed court records recently obtained by CertCities.com, in the civil suit, which alleges trademark infringement, theft of trade secrets, and other violations along with copyright infringement, CompTIA is asking the court for $497,234.10 -- the amount it says the defendants earned in total through CheatExams.com. CompTIA did not give a source for that amount, stating only that it learned it through "investigations." It also states that revenues from the site were being transferred from First Union National Bank to an account in India.

According to the most recent court docket, in a hearing Sept. 3, Judge Stephan R. Underhill, U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut, Bridgeport, granted CompTIA a preliminary injunction in the case in part due to the identity deception as well as the merits of the case. However, he declined to grant CompTIA a summary judgment at that time. CertCities.com is attempting to verify the reason for this as well as the specifics of the injunction

This deception appears to go back to October 2002, when CompTIA first began corresponding with the owners of CheatExams.com about the CompTIA-related content. The court filings include an e-mail exchange in which the defendants purportedly use the name John Connor to correspond with CompTIA outside counsel Matthew Lundy, of Bridgeport-based Pullman & Comley, LLC.

In the exchange, "Connor" shares the following about CheatExams.com's operations and source of material:

"We had started our CompTIA section only 10-12 days before we received your e-mail and fortunately, have not sold a price till (sic) date. So, I don't think there's any question of a loss being occurred to CompTIA. We are not a very high earning web site like like the types of cheet-sheets or testking. We sell only a product or two on any working day...

...Using these guides, a few good technical books, the Internet super highway and our professional experience, we developed all of our own study guides.

Testking.com, real-exams.,com, examsheets.net, ezypoass.net, 2bcertified.net, itpasszone.,com, smarktcertify.com, certifysky.com, exam rare.com, certify.com, ucertify.com, chinaITcertify.com, cert21.com, transcender.com, measureup.com, cheet-sheet.com, getcertifiedforless.com, exactexams.com, are a few common sites from where we used (sic) to get the questions.

Though we are a small company, we took all care while selling our study guides for not to get into any legal complications with any company. Due to the fear that the companies from which we purchase study guides maybe selling real stuff, we modify all of our questions, pictures & exhibits too, so that our study guides are in now way similar to the real tests..."

Throughout the e-mail exchange, which continues into early November, Lundy, repeatedly requests to speak to Connor directly via phone. At the end of the exchange, Lundy writes:

"Your communication raises numerous issues that may only be fully addressed in the context of a meaningful discussion. Unfortunately, you have declined to provide me with your contact information and I am unable to speak to you directly concerning this matter. Moreover, I have enclosed my contact information and invited you to initiate a telephone call, yet you decline because you are not in "town." I am somewhat confused as to why your current location prevents you from accessing a telephone to contact me.

...if you continue to avoid discussing this matter, CompTIA will have no alternative but to exercise all of its available options...

CertCities.com attempted to reach Premaney and Bhagat to confirm their ownership of the site, whether one of them was on the other side of this e-mail exchange, as well as other facts in case and to get their perspective on the suit. To contact them, we used e-mail address available on the Troytec.com site. An unnamed person responded to our e-mail declining the request for comment/verification due to the pending litigation, but did say, "We are going to settle the issue out of court."

CertCities.com contacted CompTIA for comment on this case and to verify several aspects, but did not receive a response by press time.

If the case settles, one aspect of the settlement may be for the site to turn over its list of customers to CompTIA. This was a condition of the settlement of a 2001 civil suit CompTIA filed against CheetSheets.com. (The site was later shut down due to a criminal prosecution of the site's owner, Robert Keppel, initiated by Microsoft.)

In that case, CompTIA sent a mass e-mail to Keppel's customers asking them to either destroy the Cheet-Sheets in their possession or send them to CompTIA (reports vary as to the e-mail's content). No disciplinary action was taken against any of the purchasers, CompTIA said at the time.

Later that year, CompTIA settled another civil suit with former U.S.-based owner of TroyTec.com/TestKiller.com, Garry Neale. CertCities.com was unable to verify if customer names were part of this settlement. Neale is still under criminal investigation by the Bexar Country District Attorney's office in Texas (see links above for more information on this).

Although the name Jennings has officially been dropped from the complaint, this case is still listed on the court docket as Computing Tech. v. Jennings, 3:03cv323.

CertCities.com will bring you more on this story as it develops.  -Becky Nagel



There are 53 CertCities.com user Comments for “EXCLUSIVE: CompTIA Overseas Braindump Lawsuit Expands to TroyTec.com; Owner Plans to Settle”
Page 3 of 6
9/16/03: Dr. Crosby Mantey from Ghana west Africa says: Thats it CompTIA, track and bring down all such anomalyse to book. As a professional body and a unified voice for the IT Industry a high level of professionalsm must be exercised. The best Dr. Crosby LIMIS, N+ ,AP
9/16/03: Sachin from delhi, india says: It is very easy in india to impersonate in any online certification. Most testing sites of Vue and Prometric in india actively support impersonation for a small fee So none of these online cerifications gets any credibility in india because everyone knows like most software used in india is pirated , most certifications gained in india are impersonated . It costs very less to get MCSE or Oracle DBA certified through impersonation in india. If anyone is to blame , its VUE and Prometric and not these web sites which merely publish what is known to everyone already with active cooperation from the testing locations.
9/16/03: sachin from delhi , india says: Outsourcing is good. Why do you outsource everything in usa from china ? computer parts from taiwan ? food from france ? Same should be applied to software and business process outsourcing. If you dumbheads can not update your skills in time , why blame others for your mistakes ? There is always place at the top and just by crying foulplay you can not get the job. You should have skills , i repeat skills , and be hard working. There are so many fields in IT which need people but cant find any. But you dumb heads cant see the oppurtunies at the upper end but just see lower end menial jobs migrating to developing countries like russia , india and brazil , romania etc and start crying . Visit India and see how much social security we get and how hard we work to realise your own laziness.
9/16/03: Anonymous says: Kill 'em all! WHITE POWER!
9/17/03: Defense IT says: Sachin from Delhi -- I will not bash you just because you're from India or any other country. We all deserve to work, support our families, and try to live under a decent society. What I don't like is seing Americans who are attempting to work hard losing everything they work for simply because some management official wants his or her $6 million bonus and decides to outsource work that ends up costing the company big dollars after that CEO is gone. Here's how it happens and will happen to a lot of these companies that are outsourcing right now. All the cheap labor they see in these developing countries will be cheap for now. After the company has a firm base in that countries economy that company, who are mostly ruled by dictators, will start to charge that company to do business in that country. A lot of these company head honchos have never lived outside of the US and have no idea what is in store for them. Plus, how long will they continue to sell goods in America (their biggest market mind you) if Americans can no longer afford to buy the goods because they are worried about their careers? Another thing to keep in mind is the fact that call-waiting centers and help desk support is being outsourced a lot. A lower-end job, but crucial to a businesses reputation. Once that companies reputation is destroyed because English speaking people can't understand what the help desk support is saying, that company will lose a huge competitive advantage. If you don't believe me that poor help desk support can kill a company, ask Gateway computers. So Sachin, or anyone else who believes outsourcing is such a great idea, look at reality. The last time I checked, the majority of people in India and the rest of the developing countries aren't the ones buying high-end servers and IT products--and the majority never will. It's just a matter of time before big companies realize that this outsourcing support isn't all it's cracked up to be.
9/17/03: Defense IT says: I want to correct one sentence from above: 'After the company has a firm base in that countries economy that company, who are mostly ruled by dictators, will start to charge that company to do business in that country' SHOULD READ: After the company has a firm base in that country's economy, that country, which is ruled by dictators, will start to charge the company a large fee to do business in that country
9/17/03: Defense IT says: I really need to proof read prior to hitting the Post Comments button:) Any references to businesses should be business's. Any reference to companies should be company's. Yes, I am well educated but I was on my tangent and my fingers were in their own little world on the keyboard. Take care everyone and let's all stay employed somehow:)
9/17/03: Well said says: Hey Defense IT, I see you take your profession seriously. Well spoken above...with or without the grammatical quirks. We need more people like you in this industry.
9/17/03: john from canada says: Ok, so i've just completed a 1 year part time course at a ligitimate community college and obtained A+ Net+ and MCSA certifications without ever hearing of a brain dump. I am still looking for a entry level IT position and its discouraging reading all this negativity regarding the industry certifications. As i have yet to find employement. Even if i had used the brain dumps i still spent a year in school in a networking program. Do potential employers not ask how you recieved training to write these exams? Will i not be tested before being hired on? Should emphasis not be placed on training? Paying for schooling does not make sense to the IT professional but for us entry level people it should. I don't think there are many people who can read and understand concepts like AD and GPO's without explainations and guidance from a real instructor.
9/17/03: Defense IT says: John, you're at the level that needs to look for the help desk positions. The certifications you have attained should at least get you there. Just hang in there. The problems that the majority IT people have are when they are just getting started; like yourself. The vast numbers of the IT industry that are down in the dumps are those in the 90's who simply worked on the assembly line building one or two components for computers or built one or two web-pages and considered themselves IT gurus. Many, not all, but many became very complacent doing the same tasks day after day, not getting certified, and not going to school. Yes, there are some really skilled IT gurus who have been let go. However, the person who has a degree, the specialized certifications, and a proven track record of system admin-network opps-database-or programming work will not have a very hard time finding work. It's just not possible for people like this to stay on the unemployment line for long because their skills are needed (yes, here in the US). The biggest obstacle for people I described is their unwillingness to move to where the jobs are. Keep your head in the game John. Don't focus on the high level system admin jobs yet. Try to break into a help desk position, even if it's at night. That's the only way you will get in unless you know someone of great importance. Good luck, and I mean that.
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