CertCities.com -- The Ultimate Site for Certified IT Professionals
CertCities.com's 3rd Annual Readers' Choice Awards
  Microsoft®
  Cisco®
  Security
  Oracle®
  A+/Network+"
  Linux/Unix
  More Certs
  Newsletters
  Salary Surveys
  Forums
  News
  Exam Reviews
  Tips
  Columns
  Features
  PopQuiz
  RSS Feeds
  Industry Releases
  Contributors
  About Us
  Search
 

Advanced Search
  Free Newsletter
  Sign-up for the #1 Weekly IT
Certification News
and Advice.
Subscribe to CertCities.com Free Weekly E-mail Newsletter
CertCities.com

See What's New on
Redmondmag.com!

Cover Story: Content Cops

Managing in Isolation

Keep an Eye on Those Servers

6 Steps to a Simpler Network

Your Turn: The Good and the Bad of MBSA


CertCities.com
Let us know what you
think! E-mail us at:



-- advertisement --
Traveling to a
Tradeshow or Event?

 
 
...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Wednesday: May 4, 2005

-- advertisement --
Free white papers, case studies, research and more for the IT Manager:

Blade Systems Move into the Mainstream

Sarbanes-Oxley Compliance

StorageWorks for E-mail Retention

Policy-based Data Management

IT Service Management


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 5 of 6
9/27/03: Anonymous says: ...very well said, I can't agree more...
9/29/03: The way I see it says: The way I see it, we would't have to try and cheat if CompTIA provided training guides for their tests themselves. At least we wouldn't be left trying to guess what study material to use.
9/29/03: Becky Nagel from Editor, CertCities.com says: Hi DJ -- I hope you're not seeing any bias there, because there's really not any; I'm not taking any sides here, just reporting the facts that I have. I would have liked to have gotten more from the point of view of Adarsha computers, but they didn't want to comment because its a legal issue, which is very common and understandable in these types of situations. I am hoping that they will feel more free to comment once the situation is resolved. -- Becky
10/15/03: Ami from Europe says: I am new to certification. Is Testking an illegitimate site? They claim that all the content on the site is 'exclusive property of TESTKING inc' and do provide explanations and references to the questions. I certainly don't want to buy illegal materials. What about other sites like Boson or Transcender? Can I legally use them? Is there a list of known illegitimate/legitimate sites? Can somebody point me to the right direction? Thanks.
11/3/03: CertsR4$$ says: I don't see how certs help to any great degree. I just got my first IT job as a network admin. and I am starting out at $46K. And that's a good chunk of change for starting out. I saw a salary comparison on msn.com the other day. Doctors make around 100K, pilots make $60K. So can someone tell me why I need a certification now?
11/3/03: CertsR4$$ says: Oh! And by the way folks. It's much more economically efficient for a person to get some good resume skills going. You might also want to practice better hygiene as well so the you can get da job! Get yourself a suit for the interview too.
11/16/03: sooner or later people from God Knows says: After reading this three page post I have some input for anyone willing to read it, interested or not.This post is based on a basic reaction I have experienced from reading posters comments from Indian to Texas. It doesnt really matter about any lawsuit because as long as the internet exists there will be ways to compromise testing and exams (Untill the UN or a global body gets into policing the internet, but even then I doubt it) . It was very interesting what the Indian guy posted about VUE in India and the corruption etc. Im sure that there are also corrupt testing centres all over the world, including USA so that problem is not endemic to India. I have worked in IT for over five years and know that IT certs arent worth toilet paper and if anyone really wants a career in IT then get into a University and earn a degree ( if you cant get into University to study BSc for IT then consider another career!). The IT cert "industry" has made ALOT of money for the major vendors, especially during the late ninities IT boom. OF course now we know that you cant reinvent the economic cycle just because you have networked a few computers together! Finally, my own opinon on Americans and their technology is quite ironic, as I am highly reliant on it for my own career and future prospects I cannot deny that its my lifeblood and I need it and I admire America's work ethic and technology, but as for Americans themselves, I find them arrogant, rude and full of shit......and sooner or later.....AmeriKa will reap what its sown in the world, and it will be a bitter harvest. We should all hope that this harvest doesnt happen because when AmeriKa goes down the whole "western" world goes down with it...considering that AmeriKa IS the global economy (15% of Global GDP is from Amerika) I hope the above post is not considered AntiAmerikan but thats the general feeling and reaction I experienced when reading the majority of the posts from Amerikans , with the exception of Defence IT who seems to know what he/she is on about. I must also add that the above are my own opinons and I have the explicit right to voice these opinons, so if any Amerikans dont like that then go read your constitution!!!
11/16/03: marcus from LA says: I took the infrastucture test today. The questions were incomplete, badly written, purposely confusing. In all worthless. The only reason I passed was my 6 years in infrastructure design. Believe me when I say there is NO WAY anyone could get 100% on those tests. When they make the tests fair, then I'll side with those that want to get rid of the cheatsheets. When businesses start taking repsonsibility for the quality they hire instead of allowing Bill and CompTia to dictate terms, then I'll think about yelling about cheaters. Until then, I say let it be.
11/18/03: Anonymous from Phoenix says: What about the fat and happy vendors like Cisco and Microsoft that are selling their study guides and exams for exorbitant prices, lining their already over-stuffed pockets? Certifications are just a means to an end. They provide no added value to the customer. Regardless of how one studies, or should I say, “Crams” for a test, the result is the same. He or she comes out of the test and 3 weeks of cramming and brain dumping with no more knowledge then when they started. Have them take the test the following week and most would fail miserably. Nothing short of experience in the field and working with the product will add any noticeably value or marketability. Shame on those organizations that place so much weight and emphasis on “certifications”. They are ultimately the ones who falsely inflate the value of certifications, enabling the “fat vendors” to continue raping people that are out to earn an honest buck and continue increasing their knowledge through real-world experiences. I have been in this industry for 22 years and do not care to discuss how much I have wasted on exam-crams, study guides and useless certification exams, just so I can hang a piece of paper on my cubicle wall that reads “CCNP”, “MCSE” or “CNE”. I owe my knowledge to experience, not these last-minute-cram-for-a-week recertification exams that just serves as a thorn in my side for several weeks every year. Give me a break! It’s just a big cash cow. Why does it matter who’s milking it? It’s all just about one thing…making money on the backs of people like me.
12/11/03: Anonymous says: This Is Pretty Funny For Sure, compTIA problem is not the braindumps at all here. They are losing money, selling to compTIA aproved dealers is there real problems with it. How could compTIA have copy rights to A&Qs, to a genral computer hardware/SO exam. If that could be done, compTIA would have to pay MS for copy rights on the exams would they not. compTIA has the money and power, and can sue them doesn't make it right does it. Do you think for one min, that compTIA cares if some fools fail the exams. Because they used braindumps, and that is what it really is about ant it. But they do care, when aproved sellers lose money and start yelling. So all of you wanting, all the sites shut down, well what you really are saying is. I want the cost for studying for the exams to go way up, and fill the pockets of all the fat cat incs. That way, many less people will have the money and my cert will be worth more to me then.
First Page   Previous Page     Next Page   Last Page
Your comment about: “EXCLUSIVE: CompTIA Overseas Braindump Lawsuit Expands to TroyTec.com; Owner Plans to Settle”
Name: (optional)
Location: (optional)
E-mail Address: (optional)
Comment:
   

top

Sponsored Links:
Free Authorized Cisco eLearning: from Global Knowledge
FREE PRACTICE EXAMS: Test Gurus
Exchange migration survival guide and poster: It's new and it's FREE!
Subscribe to Redmond magazine: It’s free and available in print or PDF!
Fresh Cisco White Papers: Get them now on TCPmag.com
IT certification news delivered weekly: Subscribe Today!




Home | Microsoft® | Cisco® | Oracle® | A+/Network+" | Linux/Unix | MOS | Security | List of Certs
Advertise | Contact Us | Contributors | Features | Forums | News | Pop Quiz | Tips | Industry Releases | RSS Feeds RSS Feeds from CertCities.com
Search | Site Map | ENTmag.com | MCPmag.com | TCPmag.com | TechMentor Conferences | 101communications | Privacy Policy
This Web site is not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco Systems, Inc., Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp., The Computing Technology Industry Association, Linus Torvolds, or any other certification or technology vendor. Cisco® and Cisco Systems® are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. Microsoft, Windows and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. Oracle® is a registered trademark of Oracle Corp. A+®, i-Net+T, Network+T, and Server+T are trademarks and registered trademarks of The Computing Technology Industry Association. (CompTIA). LinuxT is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other trademarks belong to their respective owners.
Reprints allowed with written permission from the publisher. For more information, e-mail
Application Development Trends | Campus Technology | CertCities.com | The Data Warehousing Institute | E-Gov | ENT News
Enterprise Systems | Federal Computer Week | IT Compliance Institute | JavaSPEKTRUM | MCP TechMentor Conferences
MCPmag.com | OBJEKTspektrum | Recharger | Redmond magazine | SIGS-DATACOM | TCPmag.com
Coming July 2005 Redmond Channel Partner magazine.
Copyright 1996-2005 101communications. See our Privacy Policy.
101communications