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DrinkorDie two convicted of software piracy

The police crackdown against the DrinkorDie piracy ring has notched up another success
Written by Graeme Wearden, Contributor

Two men who were accused of taking part in a massive global software piracy ring were convicted at the High Court this week.

Alex Bell, 32, of Grays, Essex, and Steven Dowd, 42, of Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside, were both found guilty of conspiracy to defraud. They will be sentenced in May, along with two other men who had pleaded guilty to similar charges.

Dowd and Bell were accused of supplying software for DrinkorDie, a worldwide gang that cracked hundreds of software applications and made them freely available over the Internet. Groups such as the Business Software Alliance have estimated that the group cost the software industry millions of pounds in lost sales.

The High Court heard that DrinkorDie operated a sophisticated system where suppliers obtained software and passed it on to crackers who broke the software's copy protection. Testers would then make sure the modified software worked before it was passed onto packagers who uploaded it to a secure Web server.

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