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Home Front: Tech
Alleged hacker is Microsoft employee
2004-07-12
A man accused of hacking into search engine company AltaVista’s computer systems about two years ago now works at Microsoft Corp., the company said Friday. Laurent Chavet, 29, was arrested by FBI agents a week ago in Redmond, Washington, acting on a warrant issued in San Francisco. The U.S. attorney’s office for the Northern District of California alleges that Chavet hacked into AltaVista’s computer system to obtain software blueprints called source code and recklessly caused damage to AltaVista’s computers.

Microsoft spokeswoman Tami Begasse said Friday that Chavet, who lives in suburban Kirkland, is an employee of Microsoft. She declined to comment further on Chavet, citing a company policy not to discuss personnel matters. But in general, she said: "We’re confident in our policies and procedures we have in place to protect our code and to ensure that employees do not bring third party code into the work place."

A woman who answered the phone at Chavet’s house Friday said he would have no comment. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, citing anonymous sources, reported for Friday editions that Chavet had been working on Microsoft’s MSN Search effort. In a research paper on search technology published in IBM Systems Journal, Chavet is listed as a search expert who works at Microsoft and was previously with AltaVista. In 2003, AltaVista was acquired by search company Overture Services, Inc., which in turn was acquired by Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo Inc. later that year. Microsoft’s MSN Web site currently uses both Overture’s and Yahoo’s search technology. But the Redmond company has begun an aggressive effort to develop its own search technology as it tries to compete with search engine leaders Google Inc. and Yahoo. Microsoft, which has acknowledged it lags in search, hopes to play catch-up with a broad-based search tool that allows users to also scour through e-mails, documents and even big databases.
Posted by:Mark Espinola

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