[iwar] MSGate (no, not a proxy) and Industrial Espionage


From: B.K. DeLong
From: bkdelong@pobox.com
To: iwar@egroups.com

Fri, 16 Jun 2000 00:20:51 -0400


fc  Thu Jun 15 21:21:14 2000
Received: from 207.222.214.225
	by localhost with POP3 (fetchmail-5.1.0)
	for fc@localhost (single-drop); Thu, 15 Jun 2000 21:21:14 -0700 (PDT)
Received: by multi33.netcomi.com for fc
 (with Netcom Interactive pop3d (v1.21.1 1998/05/07) Fri Jun 16 04:21:07 2000)
X-From_: sentto-279987-412-961129250-fc=all.net@returns.onelist.com  Thu Jun 15 23:20:45 2000
Received: from ci.egroups.com (ci.egroups.com [207.138.41.176]) by multi33.netcomi.com (8.8.5/8.7.4) with SMTP id XAA20009 for ; Thu, 15 Jun 2000 23:20:45 -0500
X-eGroups-Return: sentto-279987-412-961129250-fc=all.net@returns.onelist.com
Received: from [10.1.10.35] by ci.egroups.com with NNFMP; 16 Jun 2000 04:20:50 -0000
Received: (qmail 21657 invoked from network); 16 Jun 2000 04:20:49 -0000
Received: from unknown (10.1.10.27) by m1.onelist.org with QMQP; 16 Jun 2000 04:20:49 -0000
Received: from unknown (HELO smtp.net-resource.com) (216.204.5.6) by mta2 with SMTP; 16 Jun 2000 04:20:48 -0000
Received: from bkdelong (216-164-248-216.s470.tnt3.sbo.ma.dialup.rcn.com [216.164.248.216]) by smtp.net-resource.com with SMTP (Microsoft Exchange Internet Mail Service Version 5.5.2650.21) id M8JSBX02; Fri, 16 Jun 2000 00:20:46 -0400
Message-Id: <4.2.2.20000615231946.03b84470@pop.ma.ultranet.com>
X-Sender: bdelong@pop.ma.ultranet.com
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Pro Version 4.2.2 
To: iwar@egroups.com
In-Reply-To: 
From: "B.K. DeLong" 
MIME-Version: 1.0
Mailing-List: list iwar@egroups.com; contact iwar-owner@egroups.com
Delivered-To: mailing list iwar@egroups.com
Precedence: bulk
List-Unsubscribe: 
Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 00:20:51 -0400
Reply-To: iwar@egroups.com
Subject: [iwar] MSGate (no, not a proxy) and Industrial Espionage
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

This just in: MS and Industrial Espionage

http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB961105810825579561.htm

June 16, 2000


---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
----


Police Probe Attempt to Buy
Garbage Linked to Microsoft
By TED BRIDIS
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


WASHINGTON -- On the evening of June 1, Jose Lopez and Erminia Morales of 
P&R Enterprises were going about their normal office-cleaning duties when, 
they say, a woman approached them and offered in Spanish to pay between $50 
and $60 to each of them for the trash of the Association for Competitive 
Technology here. The trade group is heavily funded by Microsoft Corp. and 
has been relentlessly pro-Microsoft in its work.

The cleaners said the woman identified herself as Blanca Lopez and asked 
them to bring the bags of trash to Upstream Technologies, on the same floor 
of the building. The cleaners declined.

Less than one week later -- exactly one day before U.S. District Judge 
Thomas Penfield Jackson ordered the breakup of the software giant -- the 
value of Microsoft-related trash rose dramatically.

Lou DeLeon, the general manager for the cleaning service, said Ms. Lopez 
returned the evening of June 6 and repeated her request for the trash. This 
time she offered $500 each to the two cleaners and $200 more to their 
supervisor. When they again declined, Ms. Lopez handed over a copy of her 
business card and asked that Mr. DeLeon call her, saying she was 
"investigating a criminal case and wanted the trash from these suites," 
according to the cleaning crew. Mr. DeLeon got the business card but never 
called her.

The cash-for-trash offers came just days before a mysterious break-in at 
Microsoft's offices here in Dupont Circle. So far, no one has been charged 
with anything. Microsoft officials say it doesn't look like any valuables 
were stolen in the weekend break-in. And police say the bizarre 
trash-buying attempt -- which may have been totally unrelated to the 
break-in -- probably wasn't even against the law.

When contacted by The Wall Street Journal, Blanca Lopez said, "I know 
nothing of this," and referred questions to Martin Lobel, a Washington 
antitrust attorney. Mr. Lobel said Monday that he was paid "a nice 
retainer" by an executive at Upstream Technologies, whose name he declined 
to reveal, to investigate the trash-buying incident. But he said Blanca 
Lopez was not his client. The next day, Blanca Lopez hired attorney Pamela 
Bethel, a former assistant U.S. prosecutor, and stopped talking to Mr. 
Lobel, he said. Ms. Bethel declined to comment.

Upstream Technologies is itself shrouded in mystery, with no evidence that 
it exists as a corporation. Its three-month lease next to the Association 
for Competitive Technology was arranged to begin May 1 by a Robert Walters, 
according to a copy of the credit application he made for the property.

An Upstream lawyer identified Mr. Walters as a former investigative 
reporter. A New York Times article in August 1998 identified a Robert 
Walters as a former newspaper reporter who had links to Investigative Group 
International Inc., a high-powered research firm led by Terry Lenzner that 
has been employed by lawyers for President Clinton. Larry Potts, former 
deputy director at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is IGI's chief 
operating officer.

Sitting on a special board of advisers created by IGI is George Vradenburg, 
senior vice president for global and strategic policy at America Online 
Inc., a fierce Microsoft rival. An AOL spokesman, Andrew Weinstein, said 
Mr. Vradenburg agreed to sit on the board at the request of Mr. Lenzner, a 
personal friend. But Mr. Vradenburg hasn't attended any board meetings and 
isn't involved with the work of the company, Mr. Weinstein said.

In a statement, Edward Federico, corporate vice president and director of 
operations for IGI in Washington, said, "It is IGI's longstanding policy 
not to respond to media inquiries relating to client, personnel or other 
business issues. However, at the specific request of Mr. George Vradenburg 
of America Online, a member of IGI's advisory board, I can confirm that 
neither AOL nor Mr. Vradenburg is a client of IGI."

In correspondence with the building's management, Mr. Walters named three 
others from Upstream authorized to use the office, including one person 
identified as Grant Stockdale. Mr. Stockdale was listed as the IGI 
spokesman on a May 1 news release. But a woman answering the telephone at 
the number provided for Mr. Stockdale on the release said that no one with 
that name worked at IGI.

Mr. Walters didn't return repeated messages left at his home and office and 
with business colleagues. By Friday, a woman answering the office telephone 
number that had been accepting messages for Mr. Walters said she did not 
know anyone by that name.

Aside from the hiring of Mr. Lobel and the opening of the office, there is 
no evidence that Upstream Technologies exists as a corporation. On a credit 
application for the office suite, Mr. Walters said the company was involved 
in "technology development," and listed an address on Main Street in 
Laurel, Md. That address is of a telephone answering service, where the 
owner and employees say they have never heard of Upstream. Maryland state 
records show no firm incorporated there.

Mr. Walters wrote that Upstream wanted to rent the office for "selected 
company employees" to make telephone calls and catch up on work while they 
were downtown. Telephone logs for the Upstream office for the entire month 
of May show only five outgoing phone calls, none lasting longer than 48 
seconds and almost all of them made late in the evening. Three were made to 
the home of Mr. Walters in Washington or to his wife at work. The other two 
were to voice-messaging systems.

The new Upstream lawyer, Mr. Lobel, says he doesn't know any details about 
the company either. "They tend to be very low-profile," Mr. Lobel said. He 
complained that "so far nobody has returned my calls."

The head of the pro-Microsoft trade association, Jonathan Zuck, and some 
Microsoft insiders believe industry rivals may be behind the break-in and 
the two attempts to buy the unshredded trash at Mr. Zuck's offices. They 
note the plethora of leaks of confidential Microsoft e-mails to the press 
during the antitrust investigation to bolster their case.

Police are continuing to investigate the break-in at Microsoft's offices here.

The cleaning crew who turned down $1,200 for the trash at Mr. Zuck's 
building, meanwhile, were rewarded this week by their boss. "We appreciate 
the honesty of our employees," Mr. DeLeon said. He gave them checks for 
modest amounts -- far less than $500 each, he admitted -- and a pizza party.

Write to Ted Bridis at ted.bridis@wsj.com
--
B.K. DeLong
Research Lead
ZOT Group

617.542.5335 ext. 204
bkdelong@zotgroup.com
http://www.zotgroup.com


------------------------------------------------------------------------
GIVE YOUR WIFE A BREAK! Lowest prices on maids, lawn care, carpet
cleaning, painting and remodeling services in your area at our new FREE website.
http://click.egroups.com/1/5572/7/_/595019/_/961129250/
------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------
http://all.net/