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Harry Potter 0Day - Harry Potter Book 7 Allegedly Stolen By Hacker Who Posts Spoilers

J.K. Rowling’s publisher, Bloomsbury Books won’t confirm or deny the validity of a post by a hacker named Gabriel who claims that he obtained a digital copy of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book Seven) by using an e-mail virus.

I’m a bit skeptical after reading Gabriel’s post but it has rocked the publishing world and the fans who are anxiously waiting for the book to come out. Book 6 had copies stolen pre-publication and the culprits were arrested. That’s harder to do when you’ve got hackers pulling down digital files from countries that won’t prosecute or extradite for cybercrimes.

Post-publication, Book 6 and its predecessors were available almost immediately online as teams scanned parts of the books, compiled them, and posted them on peer-to-peer (P2P) networks. The Internet age makes copyright protection almost a lost cause…and begs for a different model for profitable publishing.
Here’s the link to the alleged Harry Potter hacker spoiler post. Note that “spoiler” means that he’s giving away key plot details (if he is telling the truth). Written in broken English, the spoiler refers to the fates of Harry, Ron, Hermoine, Hagrid, Voldemort, Snape, Malfoy, and Hogwarts.

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About the Author

With an advanced international law degree from Georgetown University and more than 14 years of real world legal experience, Attorney Mike Young shows entrepreneurs how to protect and grow their businesses online. He's the author of Internet Marketing Legal Secrets Revealed. Not just a lawyer who focuses exclusively on Internet and marketing law, Mike’s been working with computers for more than 27 years (his first computer was an Atari 400 with 8 KiB RAM) and started representing Internet businesses back in 1996.

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