How can Ebay allow an ad that promises to deliver information that will allow you to “ruin” someone? Is this covered under first amendment protections?
Look at that seller’s feedback. Surprised they’re still registered. Re: legal ads: I saw a bootleg CD and just tracked it for the heck of it. It had a high bidder, but then the link became unavailable after the auction closed. I think ebay may have disallowed the sale.
It’s not illegal to ruin someone, as long as you don’t commit any illegal acts in the process of ruining them.
Not to mention the stuff on that CD is pretty much a zero in the illicit materials department. I took a class taught by a private detective where he showed us how to track down all the information listed on that auction, and it was sponsored by the local University. Not particularly shady business… basically you go to the library and ask the librarian for the relevant addresses and paperwork.
The rest of it is a collection of software you can download yourself off the web for nothing… file encryption tools, Ad-Aware, file recovery software, etc. If you’re interested, here’s a good place to start.
Maybe I should be auctioning off garbage like this, if he’s already got twenty bidders at 10 bucks a pop in less than a week. I do wonder if Lavasoft knows this outfit is including their software (Ad-Aware) on that CD. Maybe I’ll forward them the link.