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TECHNOLOGY TODAY
DMCA conviction for seller of bogus Microsoft product keys

BY: BRIAN MATTHEWS



Federal authorities accused Adonis Gladney of selling counterfeit Microsoft product keys and on Thursday
he was convicted of violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Gladney, 24, is believed to be the first
person convicted for DMCA violations dealing with the circumvention of security protections on software, ac-
cording to Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Missakian. Typically, product keys are used to activate software and
are printed on Certificate of Authenticity labels that accompany legitimate products. Missakian, who prose-
cuted the case in Los Angeles along with Assistant U.S. Attorney Wendy Wu, said the conviction is a sign that
administrators at the U.S. Justice Department plan to take these kinds of DMCA violations "more seriously."
"The defendant couldn't have executed his scheme without counterfeit access keys," Missakian said. "(The
keys) allowed purchasers to load software on multiple computers."
Among those who unwittingly purchased phony keys from Gladney is the United States Marine Corp. Glad-
ney's attorney, Frank Sanes Jr., declined to comment. Convicted of one count of violating the DMCA and three
counts of mail fraud, Gladney could face several years in prison, Missakian said, adding that Gladney's prison
term will likely be based on the amount of monetary damage he caused.
"At this point we're still counting," Missakian said.
Gladney, who resides in Los Angeles, would advertise software licenses in large volume on his Web sites,
abovegroundsolutions.com or agsolutionsspc.com. Customers paid their money and received licenses, which
prosecutors say Gladney claimed legally covered between 25 and 750 users. Gladney would then ship them a
CD loaded with software that authorities say was not designated as a retail product for sale to the general pub-
lic, such as software that typically comes bundled in PCs. "The licenses were essentially thin air," Missakian
said.
The FBI, which spearheaded the investigation on behalf of the Electronic Crimes Task Force, a group that in-
cludes several law enforcement agencies, said that Gladney would obtain key codes and then tweak them so he
could use them over and over.
"By repeatedly using and distributing the same key codes on multiple products," an FBI agent wrote in court
documents, "Gladney is circumventing one of Microsoft's primary security features for legitimate product acti-
vation in violation of (trafficking in unauthorized access devices)."
According to the FBI, Gladney managed to turn his illegal enterprise into a cash cow while he was barely 20.
Gladney told agents he had earned more than $3 million. Following his arrest, officials seized $74,038.

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