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Japan’s Supreme Court rules cryptojacking scripts are not malware

Posted on January 21, 2022 by Dissent

Laura Dobberstein reports:

A man found guilty of using the Coinhive cryptojacking script to mine Monero on users’ PCs while they browsed the web has been cleared by Japan’s Supreme Court on the grounds that crypto mining software is not malware.

Tokyo High Court ruled against the defendant, 34-year-old Seiya Moroi, on charges of keeping electromagnetic records of an unjust program. That unjust program was Coinhive, a “cryptojacking” script that mines for Monero by pinching some CPU cycles when users visit a web page that includes the code. Moroi ran the code on his website.

Read more at The Register.

Category: Commentaries and AnalysesLegislationMalwareNon-U.S.

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