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(follow-up) Childs found guilty in SF network password case

Posted on April 28, 2010 by Dissent

Robert McMillan reports:

Terry Childs, the San Francisco network administrator who refused to hand over passwords to his boss, was found guilty of one felony count of denying computer services, a jury found Tuesday.

Childs now faces a maximum of five years in prison after jurors determined that he had violated California’s computer crime law by refusing to hand over passwords to the city’s FiberWAN to Richard Robinson, the chief operations officer for the city’s Department of Technology and Information Services (DTIS).

Read more on Computerworld.

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