Apple Computer sues three for posting Mac OS X ‘Tiger’ on Web
Tuesday, December 21, 2004 - 04:09 PM EDT"Apple Computer Inc. has sued three men for illegally distributing test copies of the next version of its Mac OS X operating system on a file-sharing Web site, court records showed on Tuesday," Duncan Martell reports for Reuters. "The lawsuit is the second in as many weeks by the maker of the popular iPod digital music players and iconic Macintosh personal computers to thwart the release of its software and details of its unannounced products."
"Apple claims in its suit that two different versions of Mac OS X, code-named Tiger, were made available on the Web on or about Oct. 30 and Dec. 8 of this year. The company has said it will ship Mac OS X 'Tiger' in the first half of 2005, after previewing it to the Mac community at a trade show last June... According to the suit, the men released the software on a Web site that employs BitTorrent file-sharing technology, which is used to rapidly distribute large files of electronic data, and is also widely used to distribute pirated copies of motion pictures via the Internet," Martell reports.
Full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: It's a virtual festival of lawsuits emanating from Cupertino this holiday season!
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Apple sues anonymous people over leak of unreleased Apple product info on Web - December 17, 2004
RUMOR: Apple preps analog to FireWire audio device for GarageBand users - November 23, 2004

Good for Apple. Sign an NDA, honor that NDA. Steal the software, pay the consequences.