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Jan de Wit, the 20-year-old who wrote
the Anna Kournikova virus, went to trial on Thursday, but the prosecutor
asked for a relatively light sentence with no jail term--240 hours
of community service.
Public prosecutor Roelof de Graaf
also asked the court not to return de Wit's computer, and a CD-ROM
containing computer viruses.
De Wit was charged with spreading
data through a computer network, with the intent to cause damage.
The maximum penalty for the offense is four years' jail and a fine
of up to 100,000 Dutch guilders (U.S. $41,130).
It is the first time in Dutch history
that a writer of a computer virus is being tried. De Wit had written
the worm with a worm-making toolkit, then posted it on an Internet
newsgroup, from where it spread across the world.
De Wit's lawyer claimed that there
was "no convincing evidence" that his client had caused
any damage or disruption of service and asked for his client be
released, and his belongings returned.
Actually, the FBI had sent a fax to
the prosecutor saying it had identified 55 victims of the Kournikova
worm, and damages of US$166,827, but the prosecutor said the claim
was not specific enough.
On his part, de Wit admitted being
fascinated with computer viruses. "I was fascinated. Such a
small program that can create that much damage," IDG news service
reported him as saying. He had collected and catalogued thousands
of viruses and Trojan horses.
However, he claimed ignorance of the
effect of his worm, which purported to be an e-mail with an attached
picture of tennis star Anna Kournikova. Once the attachment was
opened, the worm sent itself to addresses in the user's Outlook
and set the computer up to visit the Web site of Dutch computer
store chain Dynabyte, de Wit's employer.
"I just clicked away," he
said. "I did this without thinking and without overseeing the
consequences and without the intend to cause damage to anyone."
By Susan Tsang
ZDNet Asia
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