A US citizen is suing
Microsoft
for $200,000 after Internet Explorer failed to delete his history of pornography
sites.
Michael Alan Crooker bought an
HP computer running
Windows XP and Internet Explorer from retailer
Circuit
City, and said that he was assured it would protect his privacy.
But when he was arrested on firearms charges, police cracked the PC's
security and found his internet surfing history, along with videos of himself
and his girlfriend engaged in sexual acts.
Crooker used a common security utility known as DriveLock which shuts down
the hard drive if a password is not given.
But the FBI were able to bypass this by taking a mirror image of his hard
drive which revealed his complete internet history, despite Internet Explorer
being set to delete all records every five days.
"Any day beyond those parameters is supposed to be permanently deleted and is
not supposed to be recoverable," Crooker stated in the lawsuit.
He added that he suffered "great embarrassment" over the details and other
information found on the computer.
Crooker is now suing Microsoft for $200,000 and claims to have already
reached settlements in similar cases with HP and Circuit City.
The man is currently residing in a Connecticut jail awaiting trial for
selling illegally modified firearms and possessing bomb-making equipment.
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