s.ky uk fraudster sentenced to 12 months for card sharing

There are 11 replies in this Thread which was already clicked 1,529 times. The last Post () by mondeo.

    • Official Post

    Computer expert cost *** TV £236,000 by selling hundreds of hacked decoder boxes via his brother's eBay account


    Aron Lees is a computer expert and hacked into *** TV decoder boxes
    Made a *** TV card work repeatedly through a 'card sharing' technique
    Lees then sold cut-price *** packages through his brother's eBay account
    Packages were listed at £110, when they would normally cost around £700
    In less than a year sold more than 300, making around £30,000 from sales
    He made around £3,000 a month by selling the hacked decoder boxes
    Lees admitted he had breached the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act


    A computer expert tampered with *** TV boxes to sell pirated packages through eBay, costing the company almost £250,000.
    Aron Lees, of Urmston near Manchester, used his coding expertise to hack into boxes and make one account work again and again in a technique called 'card sharing' so he could sell cut prices boxes to customers for £110 a time.
    He listed the items on his brother Sean's eBay account and sold more than 300 boxes in less than a year, netting almost £30,000.
    The fraud was uncovered after B***B investigators posed as a customer to buy a fake box and then tracked down Lees' IP address from his computer.
    *** calculated that they would have charged around £700 for each box with subscription for a year - meaning they lost around £590 on each eBay sale. Over 338 transactions were completed between March and December 2013, with a total of £28,176 deposited into qualified mechanic Sean Lees' bank account.
    The company received no money from the sale of the boxes, and would have lost around £236,000 over the course of the fraud.
    Aron Lees, who made around £3,000 a month from the enterprise, admitted hacking into the boxes and selling them online, contravening the copyright and patents act.
    Sentencing him to a 12 month prison sentence, suspended for 18 months, Judge Timothy Mort said he had used his university education in a 'good way and bad way.'
    Minshull Street Crown Court heard that the frauds took place between March 2013 and December 2013 when police raided Aron Lees' home.
    Jennifer Birch, prosecuting, told Minshull Street Crown Court: 'From March 2013 an eBay username under slees2012 had made 338 transactions through the sale of decoder boxes, a user name registered to Sean Lees' home address.
    'In August 2013 B***B became aware that the username slees2012 was selling satellite equipment that gave access to *** premium packages without subscription - known as card sharing.
    'This is when a legitimate *** user has the encryption key stolen which is then shared with decoder boxes over the internet which are then added to the network.'


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    Under an agreement between the two companies, eBay passed details of the account used by Lees to B***B so they could track him down.
    On December 4 2013, police raided Aron Lees' home and found dozens of decoder boxes. He admitted the fraud and his computers were seized, which even showed emails between him and customers when they complained that their boxes were malfunctioning.
    Ms Birch added: 'This was a fully-functioning business. Aron Lees was interviewed and made full admissions, he accepted buying the boxes, programming them and selling them on eBay using his brother's account. He denied he would be charging customers for a renewal as they were sold on the basis of a 12-month package.'
    Aron Lees, 29, admitted offering unauthorised decoders for sale contrary to the Copyright, Designs and Patent Act. He was sentenced to 12 months in prison suspended for 18 months and ordered to carry out 100 hours of unpaid work.


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    A separate hearing will take place to determine how much money he must pay back from his criminal enterprise.
    Sean Lees, 25, from Streford pleaded guilty to money laundering and was ordered to carry out 120 hours of unpaid work
    Michael Lavery, defending said: ' It was his enterprise. It is sophisticated in the sense that most people probably could not do it because of the coding, but you can measure the sophistication in that he was using his own brother's PayPal account and email which meant it was very easy to track what he was doing.
    'A sophisticated enterprise it may be in the code itself, but a sophisticated criminal premise it clearly is not.'


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    Philip Barnes, defending Sean Lees, said he acted out of 'misplaced loyalty to his older brother.'
    He said he initially didn't know what his brother was doing was illegal and later allowed him to continue when he found out.
    Judge Mort said: 'What you did Aron Lees, it has to be said, you simply used your university education in a good way and a bad way. Having acquired your skills in computers, you bought *** decoders and reprogrammed them so people could have *** premium without paying the cost of it.
    'Really, the nearest analogy is that it is a form of fraud so far as *** are concerned. I'm astonished it has taken until January this year for you to be charged with the offence and the mental trauma you have been through is significant punishment.'

  • Quote

    Aron Lees, of Urmston near Manchester, used his coding expertise to hack into boxes and make one account work again and again in a technique called 'card sharing'


    What a joke, those reporters are idiots - "Hacker" my arse :10lol:

  • Let this be a lesson to other clowns selling on ebay and selling in the pub , you are not immune to being caught once you sell you are in the public domain ,LOL at computer expert he didnt even have the brains to use a VPS even as a payserver , looking forward to more being caught soon :)


    :34_002:

  • All these articles do is put it out there to people who dont know about it, they then google and the circle begins again.


    What *** dont see is that the people buying these are people that "wouldnt sub" to *** anyways, so tbh they havnt lost any revenue.


    Its not just people like the above causing issues to "your" hobby, you yourself are doing this also, 1 subs to sports 1 subs to movies and so on, then shares with someone who dont have sports gets sports but never paid, yes its being paid for once, but a number of people are seeing the 1 sub, so really "were all to blame" not just pay servers, also devs, and the hobby ones, as it fits into the catagory "hobby" what ever way you look at it or want to call it, its still theft, end o the day, cause you paid for it once dont mean your entitled to share it to 50 people

  • What *** dont see is that the people buying these are people that "wouldnt sub" to *** anyways, so tbh they havnt lost any revenue.


    I agree with you on that part, its a bit like when they go after pirated DVDs, the film industry has not really lost anything as the people who buy those DVDs would not have bought the DVD at the full retail price or gone to the cinema to watch it and would have waited for it t come on their TV on a FTA channel a couple of years later.


    Maybe if *** wasn't so greedy or paid a bit less to cover the premier league, they could offer their services at a more reasonable price and offered individually tailored packages to cover just the bits that people want instead of putting so many things in this package and so many in that one then more people would possibly pay for a package.
    Similarly with DVDs and Blu Rays, if they were not exploiting people by charging so much then they would sell many more.
    After all, who would buy a dodgy rip or download a film if they could have a good quality legit copy at a reasonable price that still returned a good profit to the film industry, especially if they didn't pay the film stars such ludicrous amounts per film.

  • Quote

    what ever way you look at it or want to call it, its still theft, end o the day


    Strangely enough I have to agree, people who cardshare and view channels they dont pay for ARE infringing copyright laws.
    CS is NOT and never will be a hobby, that is just sugar coating what it actually is.
    The guy with a motorised dish and a proper FTA receiver without a lan connection who scans for FTA channels and unencrypted feeds is the true hobbiest.
    All cardsharing infringes the providers T&C so you could argue till the cows come home, just because an end user has never been prosecuted does not mean he's doing nothing wrong.
    A strange argument for and against may continue but none the less what I say is true :)

  • So the Crooks (Sly) said they calculated that they would have charged around (£700 for each box with subscription) for (a year) - meaning they lost around £590 on each eBay sale
    So who is stealing C/S or (sly)
    And (sly) subscription will increase with the 3 billion for football rights
    Just bring your prices down you muppets

  • this bit makes me laugh


    Judge Timothy Mort said he had used his university education in a 'good way and bad way



    university education my ass


    he went on a sat forum and copied and pasted someone's cfg files ffs

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