The Register®

Biting the hand that feeds IT

AOL man pleads guilty to selling 92m email addies

Fuel for spam

An ex-AOL employee has pleaded guilty to stealing 92m customer names and email addresses from the ISP's database. The 24-year old, Jason Smathers, sold the email addresses for $28,000.

Smathers sold the names to Sean Dunaway who used the names to promote his offshore gambling site before selling them on to other spammers. Charges against Dunaway are pending.

Smathers tried to make a guilty plea in December but the judge rejected it because he was not certain a crime had been committed.

Smathers pleaded guilty to conspiracy and interstate transport of stolen property.

He will be sentenced 20 May and faces up to two years in prison. He will also have to pay AOL between $200,000 and $400,000 - the amount it spent fixing the problem. The Judge is unlikely to be sympathetic, he cancelled his own AOL subscription back in December because of the amount of spam in his inbox. More details at CNN. ®

Related stories

AOL loses two million punters
AOL ditches newsgroups
Time Warner squares AOL fraud claims with $510m settlement

Free Report - "High-level Best Practices in Software Configuration Management: How to deploy SCM software to the maximum advantage"

Don’t Miss

Warning: roadworksNetbooks and Mini-Laptops

Buyer's Guide They're little and we love 'em. But which ones are best?

SSL covers security embarrassments with EV figleaf

Whitepaper Helping you know scammers from Adam

Emails show journalist rigged Wikipedia's naked shorts

Overstock's Byrne vindicated amidst economic meltdown

Warning StopYours truly, angry mob

Book extract Bringing Nothing To The Party: Cleaning up the net, one satirical vigilante page at a time