Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Editor-in-Chief Andrew W. Pimlott '97 said he hopes to make the bulletin accessible to those who are not mathematically-oriented...
David M. LaMacchia, a 21-year-old senior at the Cambridge University, was charged last April with conspiracy to commit wire fraud for allegedly running a computer bulletin board that allowed people to make free copies of more than $1 million worth of copyrighted computer software...
LaMacchia, an electrical engineering and computer science major, operated an electronic bulletin board called Cynosure through his MIT computer, through which other computer users were able to make free copies of many commercial software programs...
LaMacchia, who is from Rockville, Md., operated an electronic bulletin board called Cynosure through his MIT computer. Because MIT's computer system is part of the Internet--a global data communications network--computer users all over the world were able to gain access to Cynosure...
From November of 1993 until MIT shut down the system in January of 1994, these users accessed the bulletin board to make free copies of commercial software programs, such as Microsoft Excel 5.0, WordPerfect 6.0 and Sim City...