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.. Home .. Certifications .. Microsoft .. News ..News Story Tuesday, September 09, 2003

Save 30% on CertCities.com's Guide to IT Certification on the Cheap


Cheet-Sheets.com Owner Pleads Guilty; May Face Jail Time


8/27/2002 -- Oregon resident Robert R. Keppel, owner of the now-defunct braindump Web sites Cheet-Sheets.com and CheetSheets.com, pleaded guilty in federal court Friday to a charge of theft of trade secrets, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1832(a)(2).

The charge resulted from allegations made by Microsoft that Keppel was selling questions and answers to Microsoft certification exams.

When he's sentenced on November 1, Keppel faces up to 10 years in prison and $250,000 in fines. He also forfeited a Lexus RX300, a 1997 Ferrari Spider and $56,000 in cash as part of a plea agreement. CertCities.com attempted to reach both Keppel and his attorney for comment, but did not receive a response before this story was posted online.

Assistant United States Attorney Annette Hayes, who prosecuted the case, said this is first application of the theft of trade secrets statute to procure a conviction within the realm of IT certification testing. In June, police in Bexar County, Texas seized the assets of TestKiller LTD and its owners citing the same felony charge, but criminal charges have not been filed in that case.

Previously, most "braindump" cases were pursued in civil court, citing copyright and trademark violations. "The [theft of trade secrets] statute is not that old... which is probably why there hasn't been many [criminal cases of this type]. But there's nothing unique about this case," said Hayes. "We picked this statute because it was the one that applied."

According to Microsoft, the case began when the company received allegations from customers that the content of Keen's CheetSheets contained live exam items. Microsoft made a criminal complaint to the Federal Bureau of Investigations during the summer of 2001, which turned the investigation over to its Computer Crimes Division.

In Sept. 2001, the FBI's Computer Crimes Division issued search warrants and seized the cash and cars listed above, as well as papers and other evidence. According to the government, this evidence showed that Keppel began selling the questions some time in 1999. He began buying exam questions from a source in Pakistan in January 2001, which he then incorporated into his test materials. (The government declined CertCities.com's request for the name of the Pakistan source.) Records from a NOVA credit card merchant account, opened by Keppel in July 2000, show that the business earned at least $753,633.03 while that account was active, the government said.

Hayes said that criminal charges were never filed in this case. When her office was given the case in late 2001, they initiated contact with Keppel, and eventually negotiated the guilty plea through Keppel's attorney. The government then filed a Statement of Information with the court on August 8, paving the way for Keppel to enter his plea on Friday.

Hayes told CertCities.com that her office will make sentencing recommendations in late October. According to Hayes, Keppel is currently out on "pre-trial" release.

"I think it's important to note that the government is pursuing these types of cases and we will continue to do so," said Hayes.

Word of the plea spread over the weekend after the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published a short news story online.

"I was ecstatic when I heard the news," said Craig Callaway, president of Self Test Software. "Yes, it's good for [test question] vendors like us, but this is really about the industry as a whole. There's got to be a concerted effort to protect the integrity of certification."

"[This plea] will raise awareness of this problem," said Robert Pedigo, executive director of the Information Technology Certification Security Council, an industry organization that works to preserve the integrity of IT certification exams. "It is probably fair to take this as a shot across the bow of anyone who is attempting to cheat."

Pedigo said that certification vendors are working on improving exam security through a variety of means, including tighter nondisclosure agreements, greater scrutiny of testing centers and legal action, but they are also looking to the certified community for help. "This is an active concern that every single person who holds a certificate should bear in mind. By becoming certified, one is a member of a professional group. And it's important that one defend the integrity of that group."

The owner of one braindump site who wished to remain anonymous told CertCities.com that the plea was not that big a concern. Unlike CheetSheets.com, which commercially packaged live exam items, the source explained that most braindump sites are free collections of thousands of questions submitted by end users. "There's a big difference between looking at 150 screenshots [of actual] questions and poring through a thousand questions -- you can't memorize a thousand questions," the source said. "I think the certification programs realize this."

Even so, the source added that this case may influence his/her site: "I'm thinking of moving away from actual questions and more toward study guides."  - B.N.

 


Post your comment below, or better yet, go to our Discussion Forums and really post your mind.
Current CertCities.com user Comments for "Cheet-Sheets.com Owner Pleads Guilty; May Face Jail Time"
10/24/02 - Anonymous says: What will happen to all the current MCSE's and MCP's who have purchased these sheets will they all be de-certified? or warned not to purchase them in the future? or would this be too much to enforce ? if could probably half the current number of certified people looking at the sales figures
10/24/02 - Anonymous says: "If you're not cheating, then you're not trying"-- Jim Rome
10/31/02 - Anonymous says: Please also do something for Testking.com.This is the site which provides exact real time live questions. After this action they have just changed the format and instead of giving exact question they have just changed the contents.
11/5/02 - Andrey  from DC says: If the owner of cheatsheets.com pleads guilty, why the site is still alive? Who's running it now?
11/5/02 - Becky Nagel  from Editor says: FYI -- Keppel's sentencing has been postponed until the 22nd of November. Andrey, cheet-sheets.com (Keppel's site) is currently down. I think there are other sites with similar domain names.
11/15/02 - MJA  says: I studied Win2k on my own...then went to Microsoft School and the MCT there just blurted the stuff out of the damn MOC kits. I was not much wiser when I finished the course. The instructor also asked us to go to the braindump site. I paid good money to be educated but not to learn to cheat ! I'm quite fed with the whole business with schools offering bootcamp. Just look at the Windows 2000 Resource kit ! A lot of stuff in there if you want to be proficient... but I just cannot believe what value is the MSCE out of 18 days bootcamp . Now I have 20 (twenty no kidding) PC in my house and network them and go through the exercise in Microsoft books and whatever books (I really spent a fortune buying MS books and others). I have been at it for over two years. I can make something out of that Windows 2000 that even MCSE NT (BRAINDUMP)consulted me how to get going! I am just not happy with MS tricks and esoteric testing. BTW I'm also an FAA certified Pilot. I got to sit the written on the PC but then there is also the oral and actual flight test with the FAA examiner. If you don't know your stuff , you just don't make it. I don't understand why damn MS want to charge a lot for taking its computer test. Microsoft must realise that there honest people around who work their guts out to support MS products. Make it easy for people to prove their true competence and that will prove win-win situation all round.
11/25/02 - David Barselow  from Silicon SandBar Cape Cod says: WEll Well The sh*t finaly hit the fan and the poor bastard might go to jail. Who cares not me! here I am busting my ass to get a degree in Network and Administration Information; Associates degree and almost all my professors put Microsoft through the meat grinder. I mean some of the things they say like they could have done that years ago but they would not have made as much money if they had. Or something like it is marketing reasons why they had so many versions of Microsoft Dos let me see somthing like 2.? all the way to 6.22 while there was a program called DR.Dos taht gave all the commands to us in a what I believe to be a one time version. I can go on and on it is all bull sh*t to me. And one other thing if you folks think that ther is still a IT boom you are crazy I seen that the Internet was a Fad after the first quarter of 1998 and thought it would go bust and it just about did. Well over and out there good buddy 10-4
11/25/02 - IT Man  says: Hey this is only another one of microsoft scams to sue someone associated with the IT world who is not associated with microsoft to scrape some more money. Nothing else.
1/17/03 - Big E  from Not Redmond says: I agree,if anyone is a cheater, it is Microsoft. They are constantly changing their cert requirements and rules all for their own economic gain. It helps to see some examples of MS questions, since they usually don't reflect real-life answers. It is unfortunate that cheetsheets used the actual questions, when they could have used similar questions to give customers an idea of what type of material to study.
1/30/03 - technologyman  says: Has anyone forgotten the constitution. Freedom of speach? Microsoft banning these study guides from the internet are supressing peoples right to post whatever they wish on the website and supress the consitution right of the american test taking public to share information. if microsoft is really worried about test questions, alternate pools of questions every 6 months. Hmmmm that would actually take work, and microsoft tries to do everything half assed, that's why there are questions still on the exam from January 2002. support the consitution of America, support free speach and support the braindumps sights who do no more wrong then discussion forums like this that post comments and questions.
2/3/03 - Dis Allusioned  says: Microsoft thought it had a problem with keeping MCSE's when they where going to pull the certs for NT4 if they didn't get 2K certified, wait till they pull these. Now it will be harder for those trying to get into the feild, and new minds and fresh ways of thinking will be removed from the work force. "Your not certified we can't hire you." "You don't have experience to get your certs. Yes, it is a two edged sword and I see the need for certification protection, but I believe that if there was not a need it would not have come to pass. I have taken Certs and if you did not pay for Microsoft or any other company's partner schools or training center then you could not pass them. I see no difference in going to these sites, at a much cheaper cost, than paying a higher cost to go to New Horizons and and other partner training programs that do nothing but teach the cert exam anyway. So all your doing is shopping for the best price for the exam any how. On another note, what about those that use these sites as additional study material. Students, Teachers, Network administrators all there for possibly differenent reasons. Would this have been a crime if the material was posted for free?
2/4/03 - MCT, CCI,CCNE,Masters 12 years in etc  says: The sites are legitamized, by the very fact they are allowed to exist. If they are there, people at the end of the day will purchase their products. This is especially the case with the current economic climate, I'm increasingly finding delegates etc, turning up on MOC courses with the sole aim of passing the respective exam. They hope that by having some sort of professional qualification they are more secure come the next round of redundancies. Unfortunately the MOC courses are not designed to get delegates through the exams, MS are quite clear about this. This frequently puts, people like myself in awkward situations, I've twelve people in a class all needing to pass exams, and i'm delivering a course that in the main is not going to help them do that. Occasionally I've referred people to sites if I think it will help. It's very difficult not to, when I've a guy with a wife 6 kids a mortgage etc and he's being told he has to get these exams otherwise he's out! There is one thing I do always point out to people, braindumps in theory are great, you learn the questions, you sit the exam and you pass, with just two days work, wonderful!. It gets you an interview and you meet someone like me, then what you will find is that it starts to go wrong. As quite a few people have found out, I'll ask you to show me what you know in an interview, ie set it up on a dummy network, only normally the basics, but enough to know if your genuine or not. The end of the day if you have the qualifications, great, how you got them is up to you. But at the end of the day you have to know the product, if not you are at some point going to come unstuck !
2/13/03 - Michael McCabe  from Denver CO says: Well Ive sat here and read through all this hoopla and only have a few things to say. I am 24 and have been in school and taking these types of tests for many years. The first time dicking with microsoft test questions was for my MCSE in NT 4.0 and managed to get through it without cheating but my success in getting MCSE and all that in 2000 was much harder. To be frank it gets old screwing with Micro crap that doesnt even happen in the real world. All the money I have spent to become certified for this Micro crap just seems stupid now. Anymore it seems that it isnt getting anyone a job and the test questions are becoming so impossible that I wouldnt blame someone for using a cheet sheet. I havent seen a single peice of software, transender, or even books that make you 100% ready to sit down and take a timed test that you may not even get through. I have done really well when it comes to test taking but thats just me and I will admit that I have used cheet sheets for a few of the tests that after studying my ass of and failing one found myself just wanting to get through it and quit wasting my cash. Microsoft just says the more money the better. In trying to make these test harder all they have done is make so hard that a person feels as if they need to cheat. And still the stupidest thing about it is that as your studying, spending money, and trying so hard to pass, it doesnt even matter as the job market presently sucks a**.
3/16/03 - Anonymous from Seattle, Wa. says: This whole industry is a fraud! The original reason for certifications was so that companies could rely on a "quantifiable" level of experience and knowledge. I found it quite comical when someone would get their MCSE cert, all you heard was "he's a paper MCSE..I have EXPERIENCE along with my certification!". Then Windows 2000 came out and all of those "experienced" technicians cheated their way into that MCSE certification as quickly as possible so they could call all subsiquent passers as paper MCSEs again. CLUE!!! You were all paper MCSEs at that point...it hadn't been around long enough to really be proficient. Personaly, an MCP is good enough for me...MCSEs don't get paid THAT much more than I do...it's not worth having to pass 7 new tests every 18 months just to wear a badge of honor that nobody respects anymore. ("Hey, you should know that...you're an MCSE"):-)
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