DrinkOrDie

DrinkOrDie

DrinkOrDie ASCII .nfo header. Their slogan reads "warez bearz from Russia and beyond".
Origin Moscow
Country Russia
Years active 1993–2001
Category warez
Founder(s) deviator
CyberAngel

DrinkOrDie (DoD) was an underground software piracy group and warez trading network during the 1990s. On December 11, 2001, a major law enforcement raid - known as Operation Buccaneer - forced it to close under criminal charges of infringement. DoD, as a rule, received no financial profit for their activities. The DoD network - which primarily consisted of university undergraduates - was also supported by software company employees, who would leak copies of software and other digital media. DoD was also actively involved in illicit file-trading with other networks.

Contents

History

Start up and trading

DrinkOrDie was founded in 1993 in Moscow by a Russian with the handle "deviator" and a friend who went by the code name "CyberAngel." By 1995, the group was global.

One of its earliest major accomplishments was the Internet release of Windows 95 two weeks before Microsoft released the official version. It is also known for its DoD DVD Speed Ripper released in 1999 shortly before DeCSS. The activity of the DoD group diminished after 1996, and they were not considered major players in the warez scene by 2000.

Member raids

In 2001 the group was busted in a U.S. Customs operation called Operation Buccaneer. The global raids were initiated after information was given to United States Customs by James Cudney, known as Bcrea8tiv. Cudney quickly rose up the ranks of DOD council where he spent many years working undercover for US Customs, logging conversations in chat rooms and channels visited on IRC. He also carried out undercover operations in the UK, France, and the US prior to the arrests collecting detailed information on members.

Large amounts of intelligence were collected by U.S. Customs agents on many warez groups worldwide e.g., screenames, ftp locations, nationalities. At the time, DrinkOrDie allegedly had two leaders, one in the United States and another in Australia.

The Australian co-leader Hew Raymond Griffiths, known by his handle "Bandido", from Bateau Bay on the Central Coast of New South Wales, was charged in 2003 with copyright infringement and conspiracy to commit copyright infringement under US legislation. He was involved in opposing extradition to the USA in Australian courts for a period of almost 3 years.

Griffiths was ultimately unsuccessful and in early February 2007, he was transferred to the US detention system. He pleaded guilty on 20 April 2007 to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement and one count of criminal copyright infringement.[1] On 22 June 2007 Griffiths was sentenced to 51 months in prison for conspiracy to commit copyright infringement. But the US District Court Judge, Claude M Hilton, took into account the almost three years Griffiths had spent in Australian jails while fighting extradition, meaning he will only have to serve 15 months in a US Jail.[2]

The self-confessed American co-leader John Sankus Jr. of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, known by his screen name "eriFlleH" (HellFire spelled backwards), was convicted and sentenced to 46 months, later reduced to 18 months by cooperating with the government in capturing other members of the group. Sankus was also a member of the group HARM at the time of his arrest.

US

Also charged and convicted were:

UK

As a result of Operation Buccaneer, the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit in the UK also arrested six members residing in Britain.

Two of those arrested ran a 6 month trial at the Old Bailey and were charged and convicted for Conspiracy to Defraud, Alex Bell (aka "mr2940") of Grays, Essex and Steven Dowd (aka "Tim") of Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside,

Andrew Eardley of Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, (aka "Maverick") pleaded guilty in May 2005 to conspiracy to violate the criminal copyright laws and was sentenced to an 18 month suspended sentence after previously being remanded in custody and under a stringent 24 hour house arrest order whilst under suspicion of contempt of court. Eardley was also a member of Parents On ‘Puterz (POP) which was founded as a joint venture by Eardley, Cudney & Erickson and allegedly other various other groups of which Cudney had various senior positions.

Mark Vent of Essex (aka "British") entered a guilty plea in July 2004 and received an 18-month sentence. Denis Oshdashko, a Ukrainian national (aka "Vizitor"), who had been instrumental in the reverse-engineering part of the conspiracy, was deported after his arrest.

Bell, Dowd & Vent served their time at HMP Belmarsh.

Elsewhere

Apart from the Australian and British defendants, others implicated in DoD were Swedish, German, Norwegian, Italian and Finnish nationals. All except the Australian were dealt with under the copyright or fraud laws of their own country. Griffiths was the only member of the international network to be extradited to the USA. This has set an important benchmark in copyright enforcement for the US Department of Justice.

References

External links