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- <text id=94TT0514>
- <title>
- May 02, 1994: Your Chips or Your Life!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 69
- YOUR CHIPS OR YOUR LIFE!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Gunmen invade glossy laboratories and make off with microprocessors
- in a new global crime wave
- </p>
- <p>BY JOHN GREENWALD
- </p>
- <p> Reported by Barry Hillenbrand/London and David S. Jackson/San
- Francisco
- </p>
- <p> They are the soul of the personal computer and worth more than
- their weight in gold or cocaine. Small wonder then that these
- tiny, high-tech chips have become the latest target of the international
- crime set. A few tales from the cyberfront: in Greenock, Scotland,
- three knife-wielding masked men overpowered a factory guard
- last month and stole $3.7 million worth of chips and related
- computer parts; in Fremont, California, burglars disarmed a
- security system and made off with more than $1.8 million of
- chips and computer equipment in a January warehouse heist. And
- outside Portland, Oregon, five gunmen bound and gagged 12 workers
- at a semiconductor plant last fall and fled with $2 million
- worth of chips.
- </p>
- <p> The idea of stickups inside some of the world's glossy, high-tech
- laboratories and computer warehouses is a bit incongruous, unless
- one considers that computer chips are a robber's dream--very
- precious (up to $900 for the newest models) and easy to conceal
- (the size of matchbooks when sealed inside their cases). And
- these days they are in high demand: the worldwide market for
- personal computers grew 8%, to $68 billion, in 1993. The main
- target of thieves is the Intel 486 chip that powers most new
- IBM PC and IBM-compatible machines; such chips are now in more
- than one-quarter of the world's 110 million personal computers.
- Also coveted is the newer and faster Intel Pentium chip, which
- the Santa Clara, California-based company recently developed
- to run the latest generation of IBM PCs. In all, thieves last
- year ripped off up to $40 million worth of chips from California's
- Silicon Valley, according to the FBI.
- </p>
- <p> So concerned is the agency that earlier this year it opened
- a high-tech-crime office with a dozen agents in San Jose, California,
- to clamp down on chip thefts. Among other things, the agents
- have found a rising threat of heist-related violence. "We're
- seeing more weapons being used," says special agent Rick Smith.
- In one stickup a robber put his gun to a chip retailer's head
- and pulled the trigger, but the weapon failed to fire. "No one's
- been killed yet," Smith says, "but it's going to happen."
- </p>
- <p> Many robberies are the work of gangs of Chinese or Vietnamese
- immigrants with ties to shady electronics brokers in the U.S.
- and Asia who purchase the stolen chips. The gangs first appeared
- on a small scale in 1987, when they began preying on mom- and-pop
- Asian distributors based in Silicon Valley. "It's been a real
- progression," says Santa Clara police sergeant Mark Kerby. "Now
- they're no longer just robbing Asians. They're robbing everybody."
- </p>
- <p> Unlike rare jewels, chips have had the advantage of being untraceable,
- so they can be quickly unloaded on gray and black markets. "Computer
- components are fast becoming the dope of the '90s because they're
- so easy to get rid of," says Kerby. In Silicon Valley thieves
- typically sell batches of chips for 50% of their market value,
- so the brokers they work with pay about $250 for an Intel 486
- chip that might otherwise cost up to $500. The chip may change
- hands a dozen or more times within 72 hours, with each transaction
- pushing up the value. All that leaves an unsuspecting computer
- maker to purchase the chip at its regular price and install
- it in his product. "Then John Q. Public walks into a computer
- store, and he can't tell whether it's a legitimate chip or if
- it started out in a crook's pocket," says Sergeant Jim McMahon,
- who heads a four-member San Jose Police Department task force
- that focuses on high-tech crime.
- </p>
- <p> What the consumer doesn't know can hurt him because he could
- wind up with a computer chip that failed a quality-control test
- but still reached the market. This is less likely to happen
- to purchasers of big-name computers such as Apple, IBM or Compaq,
- however, since major companies either make their own chips or
- purchase them straight from the manufacturer.
- </p>
- <p> Recent sting operations have slowed the Silicon Valley heists
- a bit but have shown few signs of stopping them. In campaigns
- with code names such as "Operation Gray Chip" and ``Winter Sting,"
- law-enforcement officers rounded up 43 suspects in January,
- including 13 who were caught while trying to steal more than
- $1 million worth of computer parts from an electronics warehouse.
- Officers seized a total of $2 million worth of chips and other
- computer equipment, together with nylon masks, duct tape, ropes,
- gloves, walkie-talkies and five loaded guns. But while 20 suspects
- were swiftly tried and convicted, most face sentences of no
- more than six months to a year in jail and could soon be on
- the street again.
- </p>
- <p> To discourage theft on a worldwide basis, Intel last month began
- etching serial numbers on its Pentium chips, and will do the
- same with its 486 line this summer. That will enable the company
- and law-enforcement officials to trace the chips to their source,
- and thus could make stolen goods harder to fence. With the numbers
- in place, Intel hopes its hottest products will avoid becoming
- hot chips.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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