TuxDave
Lifer
- Oct 8, 2002
- 10,571
- 3
- 71
I paid a price for it, to an Intel employee no less,
What an idiot. That ranks pretty high on the "dumb ways to get fired".
I paid a price for it, to an Intel employee no less,
OMG guys, it was an i5-2400. OK?
Wow, you guys are just incredible. And no, I'm not going to report him, I have no idea how he got it, the NDA contract could've expired, the chip could have been decommissioned or gifted, I have no clue. I'm simply going to return it and that's the end of story, period.
OK, now let's stop the speculation and prying, it's getting ridiculous.
And once you get your refund, politely inform him that he can get fired for this in case he sold it because he lacks common sense.
OMG guys, it was an i5-2400. OK?
Wow, you guys are just incredible. And no, I'm not going to report him, I have no idea how he got it, the NDA contract could've expired, the chip could have been decommissioned or gifted, I have no clue. It's not my duty or yours to question him about it. I'm simply going to return it and that's the end of story, period.
OK, now let's stop the speculation and prying, it's getting ridiculous.
LOL everyone wanted to see you fail and say it was a IVY-E, and it wasnt working in LGA2011...
(man the internet is mean...)
:biggrin:
But yeah, id go the civil route, try to get a refund b4 he pulls the @#$#@ route and extends your refund for a ridiculous period.
Why would he not tell the guy? ^_^
The "Intel employee" sells OP a system. The system has an ES CPU that was in essence stolen. So the "employee" set OP up for Receiving Stolen Property. Back when I worked in jails I talked to plenty of guys who were in there on RSP charges.
Based on aigomora's comments, I would be tempted to talk to a criminal defense lawyer before doing anything. It may be that simply returning the chip or the system to the seller would be insufficient to stay out of trouble.
I would recommend that OP not only save all the messages between him and the seller, but print them out as well.
Crims have an easier time of it: they simply proceed as if they will never be caught -- until they are. Most crims are not caught, but those that are, well, they knew it could happen. OP, OTOH, is an innocent purchaser. That makes a difference to us, but I don't know if that will make a difference to the cops, on the admittedly small chance that OP will be caught.
On the gripping hand, if the "employee" is in the business of peddling ES's, maybe he will get scooped up, and his purchasers too.
I don't know what he should do, but having the appropriate information is always good.
If you check out a book from your local library and then sell it on craigslist, would that be any different?
I really don't understand these sort of "it isn't unethical unless you can define how it is under the narrowest of exceptions and exclusions possible" positions.
Do people really walk around looking to steal anything their neighbors don't have under lock and key by using the excuse "well it must not have been important to them, otherwise I wouldn't have been able to steal it so easily, so its fair game, not unethical". The rural farmer in me is scared by the moral-less and ethics-less people who post in these threads D: Thank god our neighbors weren't like you lot, we'd never get any food grown (it would all be stolen before harvest time).
I don't have access to ES CPUs to really know, I assume people are given and Intel doesn't bother asking it back because controlling this would cost more money? and these CPUs end in the hands of sellers, collectors, enthusiasts...
I don't follow the rest of your post, looks irrelevant here... I assume these sellers are not breaking into some warehouse and stealing CPUs?
quick ebay search for ES CPU gives me 400+ results, does ebay allow stolen products to be sold?
Ebay doesn't allow stolen goods to be sold, at least on paper. But it does seem that they are closing an eye with so many listings of es cpus.
It's because they don't like the answer they received. They want to justify it anyway they can. Just like downloading music/movies/games.
A: "Is doing such and such illegal?"
B: "Yes. There are laws against it."
A: "It's not stealing because yada yada yada, moral, ethical blah blah !!!"
Then why ask if they already have their mind made up on what they want to believe. lol