FTC Goes After Spammers
klaun writes: "Yahoo has an article about the FTC launching a crackdown on deceptive unsolicited email.
Basically they are after scammers offering easy money quick, not the average 'get porn here' type of spam. There is more info at the in a press release at the FTC's website." TheGreatGraySkwid amplifies, saying that this story "tells of an FTC crackdown on Spammers, that had resulted in charges (settled) against 7 chain-letter ring spammers, and several pending cases. I know I could use some Spam relief..." The settlement, unfortunately, isn't exactly stern stuff: the seven spammers "agreed to refrain from participating in deceptive schemes in the future, or lying about the legality or potential earnings from any such schemes."
FTC Launches 'Spam' E-Mail Crackdown
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal regulators kicked off a crackdown on the junk e-mail known as ``spam'' on Tuesday with an announcement that they had settled charges against seven people accused of running an e-mail pyramid scheme.
The Federal Trade Commission said that the seven defendants had participated in a chain-letter scam that promised returns of up to $46,000 for a $5 payment. Such chain letters are illegal in the U.S.
The chain letter eventually drew in more than 2,000 participants from nearly 60 countries, the FTC said.
While the consumer-protection agency has targeted some 200 Internet-based scams over the past several years, it has not until now gone after spam.
FTC Chairman Timothy Muris said the agency now had e-mail scams in its sights.
``We're going after deceptive spam and the people who send it. We want it off the Net,'' Muris said at a press conference.
The agency plans to settle several more cases within six months, said Eileen Harrington, the FTC's assistant director of marketing practices.
Spam has long been a hot-button issue for Internet users, who often find their inboxes clogged with unsolicited offers for pornography, fake diplomas, and get-rich-quick schemes.
Internet users received an average of 571 pieces of unsolicited commercial e-mail in 2001, a number expected to rise to nearly 1,500 by 2006, according to Jupiter Media Metrix.
Nineteen states have passed anti-spam laws, but attempts to pass a national law have stumbled over opposition from direct marketers who say their activities would be unfairly limited.
FTC officials said they will go after spam using existing laws that prohibit false or deceptive trade practices.
In addition to chain letters, pyramid schemes and other scams, the agency will target spammers who use deceptive return addresses or do not respond to consumer requests to be taken off their contact lists, said Howard Beales, head of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
Spammers are not likely to face jail time or large fines from FTC actions. In deceptive-trade cases, the agency can usually only force companies to give back profits and pursue ''structural'' remedies that modify future behavior.
The seven spammers, who had been sent letters of warning by the FTC in September 2000, agreed to refrain from participating in deceptive schemes in the future, or lying about the legality or potential earnings from any such schemes. In addition, the defendants must return any money they take in from the chain letter in the future, can not share their lists of recruits, and must submit to FTC oversight of their actions.
Some 2,000 other participants in the chain letter received a warning letter from the consumer-protection agency.
While the FTC is preparing a national ``do not call'' list for telemarketers, a ``do not spam'' list would probably not be effective, Harrington said.
Harrington said Web users should forward spam to the FTC for analysis, using the e-mail address uce+ftc.gov. The agency has amassed a database of 8.5 million spam messages, and takes in an additional 10,000 per day, she said.
------
Random, useless fact: I type in startx entirely with my left hand.
If there was any justice in the world, they'd be getting ass-raped with splintered broomhandles for the next fifteen years.
I think these senators don't comprehend the reality with spam; that is, 99% of it has false origin information and has an opt-out scheme that doesn't work or only results in more spam.
However, I don't believe in making laws against spam. They'll always be outdated and interfere with legimate uses of email, since it can be very hard to define exactly what is spam. (Someone taking my address from a newsgroup posting and trying to sell me printer toner is spamming, but how about an email from a company I bought something from a year ago?)
Adam Back has an interesting proposal called Hash Cash. The idea is that if you want to send me an email, you have to burn some CPU cycles to compute a partial hash collision. I choose how many bits are required. Friends and family can send me email for free. I'll charge a few bits for the store I shooped at last week, and even more for people I don't know. If you're in ORBS or MAPS, perhaps I'll charge even more.
I think the names of spammers should be released to the public...or at least thier personal email addresses, this way we can retailiate =)
I SURVIVED THE GREAT SLASHDOT BLACKOUT OF 2002!
I had a fax spammer hit our Chicago office about a dozen times last fall. They were a discount travel brokerage out of Baltimore, MD. Despite repeated attempts to get them to stop, we had to resort to a cease and desist letter from our attorneys to stop them. Previous calls to them generated abusive language and hang-ups. Sent emails to the contacts at the FTC with no response. None.
Maybe they will actually fund and staff the elctronic incident center, but I doubt it. If they won't deal with spammers in the U.S. what is the chance that they will contact overseas abusers?
My two cents.
if they would go after the troll posts around these parts.
Basically they are [going] after scammers offering easy money quick, not the average 'get porn here' type of spam.
I personally feel that the porm spam can be just as deceptive as the EZ $$$ NOW! scams.
I mean, let's be honest -- I'm sure we've all received dozens and dozens of emails saying that someone's site has a ton of free pics and videos of the hottest girls. But generally that's a blatant lie, and the lewd site is a reseller of explicit pornography. They simply tell a fib to get you to click on over to their site, which upon being rendered throws a half-dozen pop-up windows on the desktop.
Let's aim higher rather than just taking out the con artists alone.
Listen To My Latest Recording @ EricKrout.com
If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
I'll believe it when my junk email is reduced by even 1% over the course of a month. Even without engaging in 'spam-risky' internet behaviour, ie - using real email address on newsgroups, web boards, signing up for free porn etc, I get a very large load of spam daily. One program that has been great is Mailwasher. This little utility allows you to bounce, blacklist and delete your spam before you download the actual message from your server. I then monthly take the blacklist it generates and add the email address or sometimes a whole domain to my email servers reject file... But still spammers get craftier and craftier. If only I could make a filter that would filter out anything like 12k3jhk213 and asdfl231.. hmm..
Don't Tread on Me
> agreed to refrain from participating in deceptive schemes in the future, or lying about the legality or potential earnings from any such schemes
... in fact, they were encouraged to visit an FTC hyperlink where they could enter their email addresses opt-out of receiving any warnings or punishments in the future. ;)
"Old man yells at systemd"
Just got a spam message today that was in the format of a returned mail message. Even from Mail Delivery Subsystem. The attachment was an ad for pr0n.
I hate spam as much as the next guy, but, damnit, that's almost ingenious.
Yes, my girlfriend is a BitchX
This is just a slap on the wrist for spammers. What they need to do is impose a per-email fine per recorded spam from a particular company, and if the violations keep stacking up, blacklist them from ISPs or start posting names/addresses of the spammers involved. All of those would be good. Ruin their reputation even more, take away most of their earnings, and make it damn hard for them to get decent internet access again. And if they do get internet access, it should be monitored for large amounts of outgoing mail. Maybe a per-day quota could be set up for the spammer.
Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
Most of the pr0n spam I get seems to be deceptive too. Grabbing one from my spam box, I find "Wanna See Britney Spear's Teenage Pussy getting fingered by an OLDER Fan??? ". I've not been there, but I'm 99.99% sure, that's not what I'm going to find there.
"Internet users received an average of 571 pieces of unsolicited commercial e-mail in 2001" so there are several hundred folks out there that get absolutely no spam at all to account for the 10,000 or so pieces I get a year...
its just not possible to get all the bastards... sorry, it just cant be dont to get the most annoying ones
Crackdowns on spam have been largely unsuccessful, partly because they pit concerns about privacy against free-speech issues. In addition, although many states have adopted anti-spam measures, spammers have argued that there is usually no way for them to know an e-mail recipient lives in a certain state where some types of junk e-mail are illegal.
Support Texas Troops use TXGoogle
I wonder which Congress person got burned on the pyrmaid thing THEN screamed it was SPAM.
"If you are on fire you can just stop, drop, and roll. If you fall into Lava you are just dead." - my 5yr old daughter
I like the court briefs for the various spammers they have alreadfy acted against. And I also link them going after more than a thousand more. although it is more in the realm of real crime (chain letters, etc) vs just ordinary spam, what ever that is.
don't forget to forward your spam with full headers to uce@ftv.gov.
the only good spammer is a jailed spammer. although I would love a huge obscene fine to beat them with.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
sPh
The Chinese government just ordered all ISPs in China to start monitoring
,It is glad
email for subversive phrases and the like, so just reply to
Chinese spam with little replies of the form at the end of this spam.
Might be a useful tactic on companies who think that unsolicited
email is "just regular advertising".
Bill
"Jack(export manager)" wrote:
>
> Dear Sir
> How are you .
>
> We are a lighting factory in China
> to introduce ourselves to you:
>
> I am XUBIN (Jack) , XUBIN is my chinese name , you can just
> call me Jack !! , I am export manager of [deleted] ,
> China, our group have four factory
[snipped]
>
> Here is our company profile :
>
[Rest of sales talk snipped]
(And now, the reply)
Thank you for your coded order. The weapons and ammunition
will ship by way of the usual route in ten days, and you
already know our secret Swiss bank account number to
wire the payment to.
It is a pleasure doing business with you for so long,
and I hope your cause will prevail. I am new to this
particular computer, so I hope the encryption is
working and the monitoring authorities cannot read
what I am sending you.
Long live the Falun Gong! Free Tibet!
Best regards,
Your arms supplier
There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
Seems to me this is old news, I submitted the FTC spam crackdown announcement almost 2 weeks ago...
"Good things don't end with eum, they end with mania or teria." - H. Simpson
From the FTC press release:
Chances are you will receive little or no money back on your "investment." Despite the claims, a chain letter will never make you rich.
Speak for yourself. I made over $46,000 dollars in 90 days, and you can too! and it's totally legal. To learn how, just mail me $5.00.
I Heart Sorting Networks
Do you wish for eternal happiness, and a greater purpose in life?
If so, mod this post up.
Eternal happiness and a feeling of fulfillment of life are guaranteed.
My understanding is that they are going after the chain mail and pyramid schemes, not trying to shut down all the porn email (oooooh, hot girls waiting just for ME!!! WOW!!!) So it won't do anything about the deluge of unwanted email pouring into your inbox, just keep people that are dumb enough to answer the ads from hurting themselves. Like putting nerf corners on the world of email for them
I would rather see some kind of legislation that holds spammers accountable if their "remove' methods do not work. I think a "do not call" type of list would be better than nothing. Filters don't always work, no matter how well you configure them. Maybe a new version of the SMTP protocol that would require a secure connection or authentication by you to be able to send you an email
--insert comment to the effect of "what has slashdot come to posting this type of story
--insert comment to the effect of "if you weren't such a loser you wouldn't get spam"
--insert comment to the effect of "jane you ignorant slut that's not what it says at all"
--insert comment to the effect of "this is all the fault of M$ and their monopolistic practices"
"For a successful technology, honesty must take precedence over public relations for nature cannot be fooled." -Feynman
Defendants in the FTC cases are: Paul K. Boivin, also known as Paul Bowen, Paul Boevien, Paul Bowvien, and Paul Brown; doing business as (DBA) Destiny 1999, Destiny 2000, and Destiny 2001. The defendant is based in Clearwater, Florida and the case was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division. Chad Estenson and Megan Estenson, DBA CMJ Enterprises and Rockin' E Marketing. The defendants are based in Warwick, North Dakota, and the case was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of North Dakota. Fernando Pacheco, also known as Frank Pacheco, DBA E-Solutions and E-Solutions 101. The defendant is based in North Providence, Rhode Island and the case was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island. Arnold W. Larsen, also known as Arnold Larson. The defendant is based in Sarasota, Florida, and the case was filed in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division. John Lutheran. The defendant is based in San Diego, California. The case was filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California. Dario Va. The defendant is based in Weston, Florida. The case was filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
I Heart Sorting Networks
Ok follow along, I'll go slowing for the gov't FTC workers... FTC: "you spammes are thieves and liers! Quit pulling these scams." spammer: "You are right, we are liers." FTC: "So does this mean you'll stop?" spammer: "Sure"
thirsty*i^2
"Ya I finished that last week, it just doesn't work"
is posting / allowing to be posted an account from which I periodically 2-3 times a week send out responses to spam mail I receive to administrators etc who host these sites. I've seen several closed down due to my tracepath'ing, etc...
If at least 10% of people gettting spam did this 2-3 times a week I gurantee that the people hosting these sites would quickly close up shop on these guys due to the amount of extra work involved. It would be the equivlent of a Slashdot mass-email bomb but would be legit.
Actually it'd probably work with 2% of the receipients following up with the hosting companies.
There's a gorilla from Manilla whose a fella that stinks of vanilla and has salmonella.
Any commercial (i.e. they want your money) automated email that solicits your attention to a service or product should say so in the email header.
My simple ten steps to bitchslap a spammer.
1) look at the source
2) find the domain of the sending server (nine times out of ten it's hotmail or yahoo in my case)
3) select the spam and hit the forward button
4) paste the entire message source along side the original
5) send it to abuse@whateverdomain.com it came from.
6) delete the message
7) delete the reply from the isp when you get it
8) there is not eight
9) go back to what you were doing before
10) ummm...er that's it.
Not gurentied to work everytime, but it at least requires that they get a new mail account generally. With practice the whole process should take about 5 seconds per message, depending on your mail client. Of course you could just write a script, if you're lazy.
Maskirovka
My spilling sux. git uver et.
That worried me more than actual spam. I'd hate to get falsely accused of sending out "HOT SCHOOLGIRL, GOAT, AND LHAPSO-APSO ACTION!" messages.
Personally, I don't think having the FTC involved will make any difference to the number of spam emails being sent and received.
The only solution I can imagine is somehow preventing it at the receiving end, because of the number of mail servers (something like 5%, IIRC) that allow relaying. Till that becomes 0%, there won't be much relief there.
Sadly, the chances of this happening are slim to none, since there is no registered emailing system, such that only emails from registered sources will be accepted, and all otheres routed to /dev/null. I don't see this happening in the future either.
Also, the current options are relatively easy to circumvent. Most involve checking that your email is in the "To" field of the message header. Doesn't help much to people that already have your address, and insert it in there as part of the email. Not exactly a fortress of security there.
It would be to hear some constructive solutions in this thread somewhere amongst the ways we would love to punish spammers.
How exactly does one become a spammer? And does it pay well? If so, why wouldn't I take my Linux box, registered domain, and a couple of scripts to automatically take care of business for me and make some extra money? Is it really that bad?
I think the FTC needs to crack down on these so called "Nude Teen Cheerleader" websites. If they're nude, how do you know they're really cheerleaders?
I am demanding that the FTC require (under penalty of large fines) that all nude teen cheerleaders be photographed with their high school ID showing their date of birth and their high school yearbook turned to the page where their cheerleading squad group picture is.
I think if the web site says "cheerleader" and then the model was actually in the pom-pom or flag squad, the fines should be TREBLE.
If anyone has info about how I can increase my penis size by 1 to 3 inches without surgery or how to increase my ejaculation by 651%, please email me.
bgates@microsoft.com
Shouldn't that be billg@microsoft.com?
miles and miles of spammers nailed to crosses and doused with highly corrosive acids, screaming and wailing thru the night. *sigh* what lovely music it would make.
When a user clicks on the "unsubscribe" option, their email address is logged by the FTC. The FTC sends an autoreply indicating that using the "unsubscribe" option on spams is dangerous.
-jbn
Heck, I got 58 copies of that spam today alone!! You'd think someone was trying to tell me something.
Program Intellivision!
Yes Spammers and what not are pretty annoying but the real problem is the new JavaScript messages. Us g33ks find SPAM quite annoying but usually no more (it just takes a tap of a key to delete it). The real problem is to the non-l33t who have a windows machine that will cause JavaScripts to popup. That is "harmful" to their machine as the email can cause the computer to crash. What will the policy towards these people be? Methinks that they may be branded terrorists (while some of you may agree) but that is too harsh a title.
A new policy MUST be drafted that outlines what the governments' (all of them) response will be to any email or computer threat. The main problem is that we need competent (computer competent) lawmakers, yet most lawmakers represent the average constitient and thus does not fully understand what new law/policy to make (thus branding many as terrorists).
Perhaps the best solution is for us not to write letters but to report spammers as quickly as possible or inform the less informed on how to block unwanted email.
internet like monkeys'
I'd volunteer myself. Replying to spam is not a solution. Only hitting them hard in the head will work.
unfinished: (adj.)
This isn't about free speech, or "corporate right to send me ads if I opt-in." Don't worry, those companies make sure they pay someone to remind your senators that their god-given-right to send you ads should be permitted. Too bad the rest of the spam won't really let you work part time from home making $10,000/month while watching a legal cable descrambler, happy with a clear credit record, a really large penis, limitless virility, instant weight loss on demand, and the occasional degree from a prestigious unaccredited school.
There are two reasons spam continues. Welcome to economics:
a) there's still no effective financial deterrent to sending spam, regardless of whether it's ambiguously relevant direct marketing, or utter fraud
b) there is some financial benefit for the senders, regardless of amount
There are plenty of other things you could debate...such as when did spam become accepted? Was it when you -- yes YOU! -- made the unconscious decision that "just deleting" the message is OK. You don't have the time to follow up on the headers. If you're in one of the states that actually ban it, you don't have the time to do something...hell it's not worth the effort. It's just an email, right?
Think of this in another way: If random people each stole one cent out of your bank account every month, would you consider it worthwhile to pursue them? Would you want your bank to develop filters to block all small transactions? Would you think such a loss is unacceptable?
Quite honestly, the actions of civil libertarians and "we'll fix this with technology" advocates has not helped. I filter, you filter, we all delete. Guess what, spammers will continue to find ways around filters, so long as conditions A & B hold true. And every online provider will continue to spend lots of money trying to stop this crap. And every user will continue to hit delete. And people will constantly change email addresses to avoid it, spam filters will continue to mislabel valid email as spam. Stop dealing with the symptoms, deal with the problem!
This isn't a technology issue. You will never get every mail server, client, system, whatever to comply to a block-spam standard. Just look at how long it's taken to get even the basic don't-relay habits in place. This isn't a "but what if I want Amazon to send me my favorite buy-me-now specials." This is an issue that someone in power doesn't give enough of a damn to do something effective to create a financial deterrent that makes it preferrable for these people to steal your money some other way. And yes, unfortunately, we're talking legislation, otherwise you will not send a clear message or provide an effective deterrent. Inconsistency on this means ineffective.
Wow, looking back I'm feeling sorry for the rant. It's simply that this kind of cluelessness annoys me. Time to go delete a couple more messages.
Basically they are after scammers offering easy money quick, not the average 'get porn here' type of spam
so basically some ijit (such as a congress-critter) fell for this scam and got burned and threw the FTC on the case... right... gotcha.... waytago...
Oh god, that woman is John Romero!
Nineteen states have passed anti-spam laws, but attempts to pass a national law have stumbled over opposition from direct marketers who say their activities would be unfairly limited.
/. everytime something about spam comes up, people are quick to say that we shouldn't fight this with laws, we should fight it with technological means, but that obviously isn't working. I don't care how many people post procmail filters or whatever. Even if you filter it, your bandwidth is still wasted.
Why do we listen to the complaints of these direct marketers.. No where in the constitution, do it say you have the right to annoy the piss out of random people and force solicitations down their throats. There is no such thing as good direct marketing. We need to end this bs and outlaw spam at the federal level.
I know on
I must say that as a person who is responsible for email marketing, that we also need to be careful that any laws we pass aren't so vague that some of the get rich quick FROM spammers schemes don't start surfacing. I had one person (who actually claimed he was a Slashdotter and had previously posted his plan to stop spam at some point), who I found was trying to scam my company. He downloaded our software, provided a fake email address. When we marketed to him, he wouldn't opt out of the email list, would only autoreply with a message that said if you send us any emails, we will take you to court. If you reply to this email, we will take you to court. In the mean time, the word "fee" was his user name for his email account.
I am all for not getting unwanted emails, but everyone is up in arms about spam, when I STILL get 5 pieces of junk snail mail a day. You know what I do with those, I throw them out. If you post your email address anywhere, you are leaving yourself open for spam. Just like by listing your address in the phone book, you are leaving yourself open for phone solicitation and junk snail mail. At a certain point, the anti spamming movement becomes similar to the recording industry's efforts to stop music sharing. Let's pass laws to punish people that can and will get twisted and actually prompt abuse that goes further than actual spam. Geesh! If you had to do anything more than hit delete to get rid of an unwanted email, I could see getting angry about it. Why don't you just use filters like I do?
Sigh.
-me
Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
Your "free speech" ends at my inbox, dickhead. You fuckheads came after our resources - now we're coming after you. Squeel little piggy.
is here
We have the best government that money can buy.
In many cases, the spam includes an URL where their Enlarge-Your-Penis-Breasts-And-Hairline scams are hosted, and generally it isn't hosted on the same ISP as the spam came from...
In these cases, I like to traceroute to the server hosting the URL and cc the ISP that the spammer is hosting their scam on. Most ISP's have clauses in their acceptable use policy forbidding ANY spamming, even from other ISP's.
The spammer may not care that his throwaway dial-up account gets canceled 5-times-per-week, but if their scam site goes down, there goes the whole purpose for sending the spam in the first place...
Hacker Public Radio is our Friend
I and my company pay for internet access. It's not a free for all domain. You can't advertising wherever you want.
You know what?
Mod this post up and then add your name to the thread. Three more people will mod you up and then post so that three more people can mod them up. If you get in on the ground floor of this breakthrough opportunity, you can soon be basking in karma bliss and not ever have to work for mod points again! Don't be a karma whore! Get your points the easy way! Just listen to some of the...
You know what?
So, does the FTC have a place to forward unsolicited crap so it can be taken care of? It's about time, but they need to actually hold to their promise.
I signed up with AltaVista for free email, and after sending out four resumes, my account was shut down. I inquired and was told that I am a spammer. I complained and they didn't reply. I filed complaints with the Better Business Bureau and did not receive replies from them either, which is very odd because I've gotten written responses in the past when complaining with the BBB. I must say something shady appears to be going on these days in security. Anyway, you are warned, AltaVista accused me wrongly.
However, imagine this.... Some plantiff's lawyer looking for the next well funded target to suck dry realizes that a lot of people get sexually explicit spam at work, i.e. "increase ejaclautions by 600%!" (I guess the scientists have been hard at work; just a few months ago they could only acheive a 581% increase.) Employees who have to read through and delete this spam are faced with a sexually harrasing workplace environment every day.
The plantiff's lawyers can sue based upon the fact that the corporations in question are knowledgeable about these harrassing emails, but are not doing enough to prevent them. Now of course, I don't know what the law is here, but I'm sure that some bottom feeding lawyer can bleed at least one, if not several, decent sized settlements out of a few corporations. This would suddenly send quite a few corporations who have a well resourced lobbying ability to start addressing the spam issue. Since they have money to spend and campaigns to contribute to, government should finaly start listening seriously.
The problem is that the corporations would be primarily concerned with reducing their liability, and not reducing the volume of spam recieved. However two messages would be heard fairly loudly in government and the public at large. The first being that despite what the Direct Marketing Assocaiation and others like them say, Spam is mostly people pushing pornography and trying to rip off unsuspecting, clueless consumers. It is not a legitiamte marketing device which is used by legitimate and intelligent businesses, because the reality is that spam annoys real customers. Second, is that the cost of spam (which is born not by the spammer but by the recipient) is not only the cost of bandwidth and resources, but potentially much greater. If the recipients of spam become civily liable for the spammer's message, people will begin to panic. Combined with a consumer led movement, you might see some real progess in government on this issue.
My spam, usually 30-40 a day is about half over the last week, something's happening and I doubt it's my ISP, as they're probably laidoff everyone but CEO.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
And yes, this is also the behavior of cautious prosecutors in antitrust cases...
davecb@spamcop.net
This always makes me think of BSIAMS and to whatever may have happened to him lately, after his spamming activities (and threats to sue!!) were originally reported on slashdot.
Anyone has had some news, or has received a resume from him ?
Make it unprofitable. That is the only way to stop spamming.
/. say they work for ISPs that have done this, and that the spammers just refuse to pay. If the ISP charges the spammer's credit card, they dispute the charge and the credit card dings the ISP.
There is no need for a law - ISPs simply need to add a $10000 per incident "clean up fee" to their contract.
Now, I've seen some folks here on
Here's a possible solution to this. Since the spammer signed the contract agreeing to pay, then refusing to pay, along with the prima facia evidence that the spammer was planning on spamming all along should equal fraud, a criminal charge, right? And since the amount is over $1000, it is FELONY fraud, right? So, if the spammer disputes the charge, file fraud charges against them. Get a lein on their house, and hit them in civil court as well.
Get one precident that a clean-up charge in the contract is permissible, and you can start costing those bastards.
And as for all the spammers in fum buk tu, China - block those netblocks at the routers.
www.eFax.com are spammers
Me Too!
a) In the long term an opt in solution will be necessary and I hope the US and EU gov email addys will be spammend enough so that those people start to think about such a solution.
b) But here is a short term solution. AFAIR since I'm not a US citizen I only can recall what I read, there are several states who already have fees on spam. Why don't users collaborate with a local lawyer who files a court case for a bunch of spammed people and collects part of the fees. This way the spammer would got what he deserves (aka he has to pay back several thousand people in the worst case) and the lawyer could collect fees as well similar to class action lawsuits. I wonder why no lawyer already has seen the opportunity to make easy money there.
I found this interesting. It's too bad the record companies and movie studios couldn't have taken the same tact as the FTC and used existing copyright laws to go after copyright violators, then we wouldn't be subject to such nonsense as the DMCA and (possibly) the SSSCA.
.. it's about enforcing existing laws against scams and con artists.
It is ALREADY illegal to send out chain letters, pyramid schemes (frex most MLM), and suchlike. The METHOD by which such scams are promoted doesn't matter -- whether I stop you on the street and whisper it into your ear, or spam your inbox (snailmail or email), it is still illegal.
The only difference here is that the FTC has finally noticed that spam is now the primary vehicle for promoting these scams, and has decided to pursue it.
~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?