Microsoft Employee Allegedly Hacked AltaVista 293
An anonymous reader writes "Seattle PI has a story about Microsoft employee who worked on the MSN Search initiative having allegedly broken into AltaVista computers and stolen prorietary technology. However, the illegal break-in happened before he was hired by Microsoft. The question is, did Microsoft know anything about it? How much code was being written into MSN Search?"
Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:4, Interesting)
Too Obvious
However, three other people with knowledge of Chavet's Microsoft employment confirmed that he has been working on the MSN Search effort
Too unconfirmed
But, if the guy is such an expert inthe search field, isn't it posible that source code was his? How would that impact everything from a legal point?
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah and also that damn Einstein... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yeah and also that damn Einstein... (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, note that all of Newton's work is in the public domain now (and in the early 1900's, when Einstein came up with his theory) anyway.
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:3, Insightful)
Methinks you've been listening to too many urban myths and jumping to conclusions.
I have read a comment from gates in which he admits to dumpster diving for operating system listings to understand how others wrote code, but nothi
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:4, Interesting)
Have you even made a cursury examination of the events you seem so certain about?
What in P4 is stolen from Alpha? (Score:2)
Re:What in P4 is stolen from Alpha? (Score:4, Informative)
What's more telling is this quote from DEC v. Intel: TRUE FACTS [vsm.com.au]
Mr. Palmer quoted a passage from the Corporate Focus feature in the August 26, 1996 Wall Street Journal. In the article, entitled "Intel Shifts Its Focus To Long-Term Original Research," Intel COO Craig Barrett is quoted as saying, "Now that we're at the head of the class and there's nothing left to copy."
Said CEO Andy Grove, "We're a big banana now... we can't rely on others to do our research and development for us."
I am working from my memory here. IIRC, Intel was scared silly over the potential of IBM-Apple alliance (which then included Motorola over Apple's uneasiness to be allied with IBM alone) to create an uber-chip called PowerPC. Intel was stuck with 486 without having a clear direction where to go. DEC approached Intel and they discussed the possibility of Intel adopting DEC's technologies. But Intel decided to work alone and created the Pentium line, surprising everybody including AIM. It turned out that Intel managed to do so by using DEC's technologies.
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:3, Informative)
Umm, Cutler quit DEC in a fit of pique over the amount of autonomy he had to run projects. He took his team with him.
Now, Microsoft aren't above poaching staff. They did it to Borland, everyone knows. But Cutler is a different story.
NT on Alpha actually never worked well due to its lack of support.
NT on Alpha didn't get much support 'cos no-one bought it! Al
Re:Good lord. (Score:3, Funny)
Whilst Cutler may have been one of the people that wrote VMS he did so for DEC. It doesn't matter if he wrote it or not, DEC owned the code, and probably also owned many of the ideas that the code contained in the form of patents. Since Cutler did not own the IP here if he did cut and paste in code from an aborted version of VMS then he, and by extension Microsoft, did steal, unless DEC sold had the rights to that code and the patents to Cutler or Microsoft. I
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:2, Informative)
Well, they also typically make you sign a non-compete. They don't have to prove that you are re-using source code you wrote for them, they can go and get a TRO to keep you from working at a company that they can convince a judge is their competition.
In my admittedly limited experience, this doesn't happen that much, tho. Only twice at the company I've worked for the last 10+ years.
Once two guys quit at the same time and the higher-ups
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:2)
Well, they also typically make you sign a non-compete.
These aren't binding in many states.
they sent the lawyers out after them and threatened to make their lives miserable if they went to work at this other company
That would be an actionable offense in some states; a quick road to early retirement for the party so treated.
C//
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:2)
In this case, he had copied large slabs of code to his PC. So down the road, MS will have to prove that they don;t have any Altavista code.
MS has made a policy of luring away key staff of leading companies in areas they want to move into, and often been accused of blatantly stealing technology. Even when they've lost in court, they usually win -- making a small cash settlement after they've won the market and destroyed all competition.
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:5, Interesting)
More corporate bullying. So since we're a banking firm, folks are forced to leave for mostly insurance, and other financial (like mutual fund houses), and even shipping companies like UPS. But nobody ever leaves our bank for another bank.
Unless the other bank wants you so badly that they compensate for the lost incentives. And they'd probably only do this for someone who's an expert at what they do. This brings us back to the original question..once you're there, how do you (or ou new employer) avoid getting sued because you're writing the same or similiar stuff?
wbs.
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:5, Informative)
When you write code in a work for hire relationship, you do not own the code you wrote. Your employer owns it, and when you and your employer break up you lose all access to it.
Besides, the charges right now don't center around the source code, they center arround the claim that he illegally accessed a computer system (by using a friend's account) and then caused electronic "damage" to it. This really is more of an ex-employee hacking case than a source code ownership issue right now.
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:3, Insightful)
C//
Re:Seems like this is happening a lot lately... (Score:2)
Bored of these games. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bored of these games. (Score:2)
Re:Bored of these games. (Score:2, Insightful)
Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:5, Informative)
And if you RTFA, those questions are still unanswered.
The man in question here was a former AltaVista employee, and he allegedly downloaded the secret source code for the crawling engine after leaving the company, but before working for Microsoft.
It seems that so far Microsoft has not been implicated in the investigation at all, and nobody's accusing him of having introduced AltaVista's code into MSN's project. It's an interesting possiblity, but so far there's no authorty making that link.
Re:Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:2)
--
3 new Gmail invitations availiable [retailretreat.com]
/. readers wets pants, reaches for new Depends... (Score:5, Informative)
Kinda what I thought, as in "so what" and "perhaps THAT'S why the new MSN test search is SO DAMN SLOW".
And if you read the story (RTFA?), you also learn that this guy was a lead developer of the codebase he hacked into, so it's probible he already knew enough to splice it into The New MSN, if he's like 99.9% of all techies, he already has copies of some of the code burned to CD from when he worked there.
This is really not a Microsoft issue, although Slashdotters will wet their pants over this, blind to the fact this took place YEARS before this guy came to M$, and his "excuse" is kind of understandable: He wanted to see how "his" baby had evolved since he left AV. Maybe, maybe not. But still not the "Micro$oft" smoking gun....
Re:/. readers wets pants, reaches for new Depends. (Score:2)
Learn to spot "humor".
Actually, when the story first came out, when everyone else accused M$ of slanting the search because they could not find "linux", I said this very thing. I had to sooth by burns with BBQ sauce for days after.
Re:Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:4, Funny)
Oh come on, why let the facts get in the way of bashing Microsoft? You're aware you're reading slashdot right?
Re:Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:2)
Wheeeeeeeeeee!
Re:Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Microsoft not involved yet. (Score:2)
Quick. someone tell (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Quick. someone tell (Score:2, Funny)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Warning (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Warning (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft allegedly commits crime (Score:3, Funny)
Way to go (Score:2, Funny)
Been there before (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Been there before (Score:2)
Re:Been there before (Score:5, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Been there before (Score:2)
Actually, Microsoft has been proven in court to have stolen code more than once. My guess is that since it is so difficult to prove such a thing when MS keeps the code hidden (and still hides much of it to this day even though they've had year
Re:Been there before (Score:2)
Precisely. The illegally copied W2K source code was never released to the public, and certainly never looked at by anyone with sufficient authority to make pronouncements about how much GPL'd code was illegally incorporated into it.
Never used altavista... (Score:2)
Re:Never used altavista... (Score:3, Funny)
After RTFA (Score:3, Insightful)
Curiosity was framed damnit! Curiosity is always framed. It's ignorance that did it.
The truth exposed ... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The truth exposed ... (Score:2)
"Stolen" Idea? (Score:2)
It's information, and it wants to be FREEEEE!! This guy didn't steal anything. He liberated this information, and should be celebrated as the freedom fighter he is!
Analogy (Score:2)
No, if this story is correct, he hasn't "freed" it, he's smuggled it out of its AltaVista jail and re-incarcerated it in the Microsoft Super-Max prison.
If he'd (illegally) GPLed it, then it would be "free" and hiding in the "freedom-fighter"/"terrorist"s house, and enemy forces would use this as an excuse to engage in punitive destruction of GPL-supporting villages.
Why steal? (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately for all, he was fired (and later died) after stealing & reselling large amounts of company software. Some details at http://www.compaqsucks.com/wwwboard/messages/545.h tml [compaqsucks.com]. But he'd been with MS for several years at that point.
Re:Why steal? (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, it makes sense (Score:2)
Better to be pre-emptive (Score:3, Interesting)
I know many might say that employers own the intellectual property that you generate while working for them, but I don't agree. If I develop something innovative whiile working there, it's mine. If I come up with a solution for a problem am I supposted to forget the solution and never use it again if I go elsewhere?
Let them sue me. Hard to get water from a stone.
Re:Better to be pre-emptive (Score:2)
That's why you should always design any complex algorithm in pseudocode first. The company owns the actual implementation/documentation/source code. You keep the algorithm in your head. That way every time you reuse that algorithm, it's a clean room implementation.
Its not yours, legally or morally (Score:2)
And you signed the agreements to back morality up in court...
Of course you cant forget the basis of your solution and the knowledge you gained, but the actual solution doesn't belong to you.
That is a cost of working for someone else.
It's not yours if your contract doesn't say so (Score:3, Informative)
Unless your contract says otherwise, any code you write for your employer is theirs under copyright law as a "work for hire". So if you want your innovative work to be yours, you should make sure your contract says so.
If I come up with a solution for a problem am I supposted to forget the solution and ne
Typo (Score:5, Funny)
Sincerely,
WH Gates
MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:5, Interesting)
A certain site I help run has shown what many other people are seeing: MSN's search robot is absolutely going crazy lately. It purposely retrieves files of all kinds - it's done about 4.5GB of traffic on my site because it's downloading large videos! What's a search engine going to do with all these videos?
Besides that, it visits the forums as often as many of the regulars do. It's FAR more aggressive than googlebot.
It's rather obvious that MSN's new search engine is going to be both more complete and more up-to-date than anything else that's out there. I love google right now, but I wonder how they're going to stand up to MS.
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2)
A certain site I help run has shown what many other people are seeing: MSN's search robot is absolutely going crazy lately. It purposely retrieves files of all kinds - it's done about 4.5GB of traffic on my site because it's downloading large videos! What's a search engine going to do with all these videos?
If it bothers you so, why don't you use /robots.txt [robotstxt.org] to keep it out? (and if the MSN robot ignores this, there's a story for /. in itself)
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2)
If it bothers you so, why don't you use /robots.txt to keep it out?
Better yet, block the crawler completely.
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:3, Funny)
I didnt notice it taking alot of bandwidth from my site, probably because we dont have alot of videos for it to download.
I did notice the forum activity though. It comes in just as often as the regulars. It wasnt a problem til it got involved in an anti-MS flame-war though. Jeez- talk about malware- some of the things it said were just plain mean.
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:5, Informative)
Repeat after me. A spider is not a search engine. A search engine is not a spider.
You seem to be all up in alarm because Microsoft might come out and beat up google. I wouldn't worry about it myself. To begin with, all those videos are going to be mostly useless unless they do a "video search" similar to google's "image search". What good that would be I don't know. You seem to have forgotten that even though MS may have more content to search than google, they still have to sift through all that stuff. They still have to grep it, grok it, cull it, and then format the results in a high-availability high-performance cluster of database servers in order to compete with google. Even for MS that's a herculean task.
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2)
Also, the reason Google's search tech is so good is because they employ an absolutely insane number of talented PhDs. These people have done loads of research on graph theory, information theory, and other related fields and how they link back to searching, and all that has been incorporated into Google's engine.
MS isn't going to squish them unless they've managed to match them brain-wise, and from what I've heard, that just isn't happening. Add to this the fact that Google started small DB-wise and grew
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2, Insightful)
i think it will slow done once it's reached X number of pages
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:2)
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:3, Informative)
How about something crazy, like, say, searching videos? [altavista.com]
Re:MSN's new search will be HUGE... (Score:3, Informative)
some more info (Score:4, Informative)
katu [katu.com]
Similarity (Score:3, Insightful)
Its completely the employees fault. I am no big Microsoft supporter but nothing they can do about this if the guy chose to do it by himself.
Re:Similarity (Score:3, Interesting)
Will AV pull a Darl McBride? (Score:4, Insightful)
Naturally they will in that case refuse to show the sources of AV, making it impossible for Microsoft to prove the opposite.
Source code "theft" (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't believe that source code theft is really such a problems for such companies - I really really doubt microsoft would use much of altavista's code even if they legally could! (It's so unbelievably much work to figure out someone elses mature code....)
However, employee education leakage is far more important. The raison d'etre for some of those architectural choices, or experiences with certain emergent pattern in large scale systems, and similarly complex issues are very, very valuable.
So really - feel sorry for microsoft... this just gives them bad PR, potentially opens them up for lawsuits (however unfounded), and generally doesn't do them any good..
I wonder where the claim of 5000 dollars damage comes from? The article says he claims he was curious about the progression of the product (which honestly, however illegal, I sympathize with - you put so much of yourself in these systems and then all of a sudden you're not allowed to know anything about them... arg!), so maybe it's all just much ado about nothing [mit.edu].
Altavista source code (Score:5, Funny)
Doesn't sound credible (Score:2)
what really happened (Score:5, Informative)
To be sure, he's a smart guy, and doesn't need to. He might have screwed up by doing what he did, but being code-smart doesn't make you common sense-smart.
The 'hack' was to demonstrate the insecurity of certain machines at AltaVista. The lost data was recovered in a couple days. He'd pointed out the insecurity of these machines a number of times and nothing was done about it until after he accessed the machine.
The alleged stolen source code was a backup of the tree on a FireWire drive he created when the source repo was being moved.
While I'm not condoning what he did, he shouldn't be crucified for it. The punishment in the US regarding [cr|h]acking does not fit the crime. In this case, the "victim" is a huge corporation (Yahoo) who was damaged far below the necssary $100k necessary for FBI involvement and stands little to benefit from this predatory proscecution of its former employee other than the PR stunt that is connecting him to Microsoft and the new MSN search.
I'm gonna be fucking sick.
Re:what really happened (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm
Re:what really happened (Score:2)
Actually, the trigger is only $5,000. I agree with what you said, though.
Re:what really happened (Score:5, Insightful)
You're right that he's not got much common sense...
Feel free to bitch about your employer's poor security. If you're a permanent employee, and confident of your position, hack in to show it can be done and report your findings to the powers that be. (I'd still recommend telling your boss you're going to try, though.)
But for the love of God, don't leave a company, then hack in to their systems just to show them that it can be done. You've left - your responsibility to their security has ended, and if you do it then, people will merely suspect your motives.
I wouldn't dream of hacking into an ex-employer's systems, no matter how benign or helpful I thought I was being, unless I had their express permission to try.
Maybe it's just me. And anyone else with some common sense.
What do Alta Vista do? (Score:2, Insightful)
This despite the fact that opensource codee can be seen by all, including those who own the copyrights, and project leaders can be notified, "These lines of code in these files are ours. Remove them please."
Alta Vista may have had their code stolen by a Microsoft Project.
How can Alta Vista
And to add to that... (Score:2)
Do unto others... (Score:5, Interesting)
Id have to side with Microsoft on this one, They obviously knew he had Altavista knowldege but i wouldnt hold their feet to the fire because i dont think they knew the extent of what this mans "experience" was.
Microsoft is in a real tough spot with keeping their secrets secret while ensuring that Altavista is treated fairly. People who steal software source code suck.
Quit picking on Microsoft..... (Score:2, Informative)
resume, or wait, maybe he did.....
Its ok though, if he was really top notch it would have been google.
Be Honest (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, if I someday go to work for a direct competitor of a company I used to work for, I'd sure as hell make sure I had deleted most of the code I had from the previous company. I definitely wouldn't keep the entire project tree at the very least.
Re:Be Honest (Score:2)
And how many software developers here have hacked into their previous employer's system to get a copy of that source code?
Archiving source code from previous jobs is one thing, breaking in to grab it after being fired is, well, clearly illegal.
NDA (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't work in software, so let me throw out this question. Don't they make you sign an NDA when you work on something like a big search company's search technology? I know they do this in some other tech businesses, making it really hard for you to work for a competitor on the same sort of product without violating your agreement. The reason I ask is that I'm curious how they could hire him for MSN search in the first place.
As far as the stolen code goes, since it happened before he was hired by MS, you can't really blame them. I was also thinking, if he worked on it himself anyway, couldn't he probably replicate most of the functionality even without the actual code in front of him? Then again, the article says, "Chavet told investigators that he worked on the AltaVista source code while at the company and logged into the AltaVista system after leaving because he 'was curious about the evolution of the source code after his departure.'" so maybe he was just trying to steal the most up to date ideas possible. :-)
Shame on AltaVista Admins & HR Department (Score:4, Interesting)
Shame on the AltaVista legal and personnel departments for not making their employees sign non-compete clauses to prevent employees from working on the exact same type of technology for competitors.
that's easy (Score:4, Funny)
How much code was being written into MSN Search?
Obviously not enough...
he is an undercover linux-terrorist (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/010
His e-mail address is @av.com, that is altavista, so it must be him.
I am now laughing my ass off. (Score:2)
And laughing.
And laughing.
Hmm.. (Score:2)
Oh good.. (Score:3, Interesting)
On his resume? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, I'm sure that was a bullet item on his resume.
Already convicted (Score:5, Interesting)
To cut a long story short, IIRC, MS bought a company X. Company X had a license to USE some code from Company Z. MS effectively began to assume they owned it, so Company Z had to court to stop MS pirating their software.