Romania Swoops In on 70 Cybertheft Suspects

Romanian police arrested 70 suspects Tuesday who they claim were involved in eBay scams and other cybercrimes since 2006.

Believed to be members of three separate gangs, the scammers used phishing attacks to get the login credentials of eBay account holders, then used the accounts to auction nonexistent goods. Police have identified approximately 800 victims who sent money for non-existent Rolex watches, cars, yachts, private airplanes and other luxury goods. Buyers from around the world lost an estimated $1 million after they sent money for winning auctions, but never received goods. According to one Romanian news source, an American buyer paid about $90,000 for a luxury aircraft in one auction.

The crooks allegedly operated in Austria, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States. Police have so far recovered only a small, undetermined amount of money in the raids. Romanian authorities posted a video of one of the police raids on YouTube (above).

Suspects in several countries reportedly exchanged homes, cars and phone cards among themselves.

The investigation, dubbed Operation Valley of the Kings, involved hundreds of law enforcement agents in multiple cities and more than 100 search warrants. It was a joint operation between the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Secret Service and the Romanian Directorate for Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT).

Thirty-one suspects were arrested in Bucharest and the rest were seized in other cities. According to one Romanian news article, a 22-year-old student at the University of Transylvania in Brasov was among those arrested after police raided his dormitory. Related arrests also occurred in the Czech Republic.

(Hat tip: Gary Warner)


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Appeals Court Sides With eBay in Tiffany Trademark Suit

tiffanyA federal appeals court ruled against luxury jeweler Tiffany and Co. on Thursday in finding eBay is not liable for trademark infringement just because some sellers hawk counterfeit goods.

Tiffany’s lawsuit accused the online auction house of contributory trademark infringement because it allegedly turned a blind eye to a steady stream of sellers offering fake Tiffany items.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, agreeing with a 2008 lower court ruling, said trademark law does not impose liability for contributory trademark infringement on eBay because, among other things, the company removes auctions of bogus goods upon request.

Tiffany said it was considering petitioning the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision. The company argued that it’s being forced to police eBay auctions non-stop to flag counterfeiters.

A similar legal battle is playing itself out in the lower courts in a $1 billion copyright lawsuit brought against Google by Viacom.

Viacom alleges Google-owned YouTube is an “unlawful business model” because it is a haven for copyrighted videos. In defense, Google says it promptly removes copyrighted works upon request from the rights holder.

Image courtesy Joellevand

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