Battalion BRADLEY ATCHISON’ rick (right), ajuniornutritio ins off a necklace Tuesca Aggielife Page 3 • Wednesday, October 27, 1999 fttfiare •tioneer. He was great ved and added a making jokes a a said. a great auction this yea Shanghai Despite illegality, computer theft on the rise f and a sophomore engineering major,si ;es Hall Bonfire lei present at the event. John Skelton, a eral studies major, said mg over the Fish Pot is Hall tradition and classmen attempting to pot away from their atti said that there were ly 40 people divide teams in the contest was smashed after being over by the students. 3EAU & BRF BY SUSAN OVERCASH The Battalion ast August, Jeffrey Levy, a 22-year-old stu dent at the University of Oregon, pleaded guilty and was convicted of a crime that lay carry a sentence of up to 10 years in prison da maximum fine of $250,000. Levy’s crime not cheating, hazing, or even committing iolent crime; instead Levy was convicted of gaily posting pirated software, digital movies music on a personal web page for the pub- to download. According to the Software and Information idustry Association (S11A) the principal trade sociation for the the software code and tech- cal information industry, the percentage of dergraduate college students who obtained ftware by “borrowing” it from family and lends increased by 17 percent last year. This cans 47 percent of Aggies and their peers not inly condone software piracy, an illegal action, ut actively participate in it. One student who declined to have his name jublished, said companies would not be mak- Youmaybe I money off software he copied. - “The last time I bought software was three ears ago,” the student said. "Some people say impanies can lose millions of dollars because eople copy software, but 1 wouldn’t have ought it or used it if I couldn’t have copied it. ” Ryan Allain, a senior mechanical engineer- )g major, said that most students do not have le means to buy expensive software packages. “If they wouldn’t charge so much for the bftware — when students have to eat off- rand macaroni and cheese because they had )buy expensive software for a class, it makes that much easier to call up a friend and say, ley, let me borrow this,”’ Allain said. The anonymous student said there are many aysfor students to obtain pirated software, in- Res Net, the network connecting dorm ti Mnputers, as well as through other students ’through the Internet. “Instead of transferring 600 megabytes, the size of most files,” the student said, “there’s rip ping, where all the unnecessary stuff — sounds and all — are taken out of the software. The file is compressed down to about 200 megabytes and zipped, and that’s what you normally see in people’s folders on ResNet.” The anonymous student said, students may also share serial numbers that allow them to use shareware packages and copy righted software. “There used to be a database on ResNet with a list of names and keys or serials that peo ple can use to access software,” he said. “That’s mostly for shareware, though.” Such postings are against University regula tion and state and federal law. Jeff McCabe, associate director of comput ing information services (CIS), said CIS acts as technical support for ResNet and University computing resources. “We provide the wiring and connections and just try to make sure its a good, quality ser vice,” McCabe said. “The networks group, a sub-group of CIS, structures the firewalls and wires the dorms.” However, McCabe said if a complaint of il legal activity is filed, CIS may act as an investi gator in the situation. “We don’t go out and look for viola tions,” McCabe said. “We process com plaints, and if we find anything, we’ll turn it over to [Student Judicial Services of Con flict Resolution Services].” If networking options are not available, stu dents on campus obtain pirated software using CD burners and similar equipment, and some times make a living out of it. Allain said when he lived on campus his freshman year, he knew students whose in come came from selling burned CDs and pirat ed software. “One student would buy a CD burner,” Al lain said, “and everybody else would pay to have them burn the CD’s — that’s how they would make their money.” Using CD burners these days, however, may be a dying trade. The anonymous student said companies are now adding bad “sectors” to the CD to prevent copying. “You can still read the CD,” the student said, “but when you try to burn it, the burner can’t copy the bad sectors and won’t let you copy it.” Instead of burning a CD, students can use an official copy of the software as long as they 1 have a key, which is a code that the software deciphers to allow a specific user access to the program. The anonymous student said, programmers have created “crackz,” or programs that work around keys, bad sectors, serials and other se curity measures. “Crackz can decipher the algorithm in the software that codes the key,” the anonymous student said. “People distribute crackz on tir Internet, and then students can download those to get a key for an official CD.” According to SIIA, because of crackz an other pirating efforts, the American piracy rate' was 25 percent in the United $tates in 1998, which is more than $2.8 billion dollars in pira cy losses, in an industry where business per sonal computer application software account ed for worldwide revenues of $17.8 billion. Much of this loss is due to pirated software being distributed over the Internet. The anony mous student said, the most prevalent place to get pirated software, or “warez,” is Internet Re lay Chat (IRC). “IRC is a network that over 25,000 people connect to,” the anonymous student said. “You can get anything — MP3’s, downloads, all kinds of stuff — from people.” Students, like Levy, who are caught pirating or using pirated software on college campuses are subject to harsh penalties. McCabe said that students in violation of University regulations with respect to software piracy are subject to legal actions. “Companies can come in and take student to court,” McCabe said. “They are subject to the full weight of the law.” §iS iltt T R I s > ■; B-HI UJ f TMii t- / I CHM , A T'Aj il http t//members. i DESIGN -9755 OUR HAH ir foil low-lights 118 Walton 1 n Entrance to Texas 1 •V ■sid 'A m :y "S’ „ ily R.Snooks, Campus Edit# Tie Bennett, Community EdPj .azarus, Sports Editor ig Shilling, Sports Edtor eb McDaniel, Opinion Edit# I 3 Whitacre, Radio Producer ] ;my Brown. Web Master eisity in the Division of Student Publications, a ini®* nil phone: 845-3313: Fax: 845-2647; E-maH ent by 77ie Battalion. For campus, local, and g offices are in 015 Reed McDonald, and of ent to pick up a single copy of The B ill or spring semester and $ 17.50 for the st ng the fall and spring semesters and Monday#* exas A&M University. Periodicals Postage PaidatCB McDonald Building, Texas A&M University, Ct We the 12th Man Tradition VR A FREETail 8ateParty. ^:rrd::tc ehindthe heart r enter ' in >«ober 30° AAm S tosc T ■ U, 'V11 Hall r:;: BRYAN * COLLEGE STATION SHOP ONLINE AT «up«rpages \ hc 12th man rules in Aggieland. And GTE Yellow Paces and 1 n-owmg a tailgate party for all you 12th men - and WOm< i sll P er P a g<*-com~ services are ls l ^ e c °3iost and they'll broadcast for 2 hours Kef i ^° U W ° n 1 WieVe. KTSft 92 I ^ -re great giveaways, B« of all, if f food, soft ^ VCUv Pages. A&M is feauntd or, rhe cover, your new Gil; ' " ,:, Lc ’em maroon pages! - am Shop on. 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