Alex Kibkalo worked for Microsoft for seven years and left the company after apparently receiving a poor performance review.It is easy to take for granted leaks of information about upcoming
products, especially in the tech world, and particularly in the consumer
mobile space. Such decisions made by people need to take reality into
account, however, and that reality is that companies would prefer that
such confidential information remain confidential.
Of course, a lot of companies undoubtedly leverage such resources to
pique interest in upcoming products. There is a line between leaking
information and outright stealing it though.A former systems architect with Microsoft, Alex Kibkalo, is charged with
breaking into Microsoft’s Redmond campus, stealing code from a server,
and leaking that information. Alex used to work for Microsoft in Russia
and Lebanon. Among the information he allegedly stole included
information related Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows RT as well as the
source code for Microsoft’s Activation Server Software Development Kit.
He passed this information to a French technology blogger.The blogger apparently cautioned Kibkalo against leaking too much
information, after he sent the SDK to the blogger with the prospect of
allowing people to reverse engineer the code. Kibkalo also sent
pre-release data about the Windows operating system to the blogger.In late 2012, the blogger sent the SDK to a Microsoft employee to
confirm if it was authentic. The employee sent it to a Microsoft
executive instead. From there, Microsoft was able to find an email
linked to Kibkalo. He was arrested on Wednesday in Seattle. The
blogger was not named in court documents, but he was traced to Kibkalo
through the blogger’s Hotmail account. The case is being held before US
Federal Court in Seattle.
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