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Police Department Accused of Updating Their Radios With Pirated Software
samedi 2 mars 2019, 18:34 , par Slashdot
Winnipeg's police department used encrypted radios to stop the public from listening in to their conversations with police scanners. But did they pirate their software keys?
Long-time Slashdot reader Curtman shares this report from CBC News: Winnipeg police have arrested a manager with the city for allegedly updating police radios with fraudulent software he got from a person considered to be a security threat by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, CBC News has learned. Back in 2011, Ed Richardson allegedly obtained millions of dollars worth of illegal software and instructed city employees to use it, police said in a January 2018 sworn affidavit, submitted to the Provincial Court of Manitoba when officers were seeking permission to search the man's emails... In the affidavit, police said the Motorola radios needed frequent updating, which could only be done if the city purchased a 'refresh key' or licence from the company to unlock the proprietary software. Motorola charged about $94 per update per radio, the document said, and a radio shop employee told police Richardson didn't like that. '[The employee] does not believe his actions were for personal gain; he believes that Richardson likes the idea of not giving more money to Motorola,' the affidavit said. The affidavit alleges that Richardson gave one employee 65,000 refresh keys, and told him that 'you don't want to know where these came from.' In the affidavit, the employee adds that they 'clearly' didn't come from Motorola. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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