Saturday, July 31, 2010

Dell tech accused of downloading customer's nude pics

Dell tech accused of downloading customer's nude pics


SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Dell Computers has confirmed a report that one of its outsourced technicians in India downloaded nude pictures from a Sacramento woman's computer during a technical support call.
Tara Fitzgerald, 48, said the incident happened in December 2008 when she authorized Riyaz Shaikh, a Dell certified technician working for Sitel India that provides outsourced technical support, to assume remote control of her Dell computer.

Fitzgerald couldn't find a number of erotic photographs she and her boyfriend had taken and saved to her hard drive, and she sought help from Dell support to find them before her teenage daughter did.
Fitzgerald said she watched as Shaikh found the pictures and downloaded them to the host computer in Mumbai, India. Sixteen nude and semi-nude photographs later turned up on a vulgar website that Shaikh claimed to own.
In a written statement from Dell, spokeswoman Elizabeth Shine confirmed Fitzgerald contacted Dell about the incident last year.
"We investigated the issue, which involved a technical representative at one of Dell's vendors," Shine wrote. "We contacted the vendor about the allegation and can confirm that the representative no longer handles Dell calls. We've been in contact with Ms. Fitzgerald regarding this issue and continue to investigate her claims to best assist in a resolution."
The statement did not say whether Shaikh still works for the vendor, Sitel India.
Fitzgerald said Shaikh also used her Dell Preferred credit card to purchase an $800 Dell computer system for a woman in Tennessee he met through a technical support call.
Fitzgerald said the only response she had received from Dell prior to her going public with her story was an affidavit offering her the opportunity to disavow the unauthorized charge on her credit card. The company had not acknowledged the improper behavior of its outsourced representative, she said.
Fitzgerald produced message logs showing that Shaikh used his official Dell messaging account last year to apologize for the unauthorized charge and to offer repayment. As recently as this week, Shaikh contacted Fitzgerald from his personal account seeking to establish an installment plan.
Fitzgerald said the unauthorized credit card charge is the least of her worries.
"He still has my pictures," she said. "And that scares me."

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