California Sues Spammer for $2 Million
KilroyTheVeg writes "The Mercury News reports that the California Attorney General, Bill Lockyer, filed suit against Internet marketer PW Marketing LLC, accusing the company of illegally spamming millions of Californians. The Story is here and the Sidney Morning Herald also has the story here.
The suit named PW Marketing LLC (note:subpoena in link is third one down the page) and its owners Paul Willis and Claudia Griffins defendants in the suit which seeks "at least" $US2 million from them for allegedly flouting several state consumer protection laws banning spam mail. All I can say is Make 'em pay, it's the only way to hurt 'em where it counts." Update: 09/30 22:02 GMT by T : Note, that's Sydney Morning Herald.
Lawyers spamming us with
"make money fast!!!
SUE US!!!"
Looking for people to chat about multicopters, coding, music. skype: gtsiros
I live in California and think this is great, but I'm also realistic enough to know that this will be stuck in the courts for years....
some Californian politicians were unimpressed when they're penis didn't GROW FOUR TO FIVE INCHES OVERNIGHT. Also, it seems that some lesbian twins didn't want their 'hot bodies' after all.
Its nice to see that a spammer is getting in trouble for the annoyance that they've caused. However, its one spammer, in one state, in one country. There are so many other spammers, how can destroying even one really make a difference?
If this were to start a trend however, it may help destroy spam comming from North America.
The State of California issued a subpoena for their email list, and then emailed everyone on the list asking if they'd received spam and would like to seek damages?
paintball
As with banned books, controversial music and NC-17 movies, negative press will definitely hurt them where it counts.
The only way that spammers will stop sending you email is when people stop complaining about it (because that means it's working) and stop replying to it or responding to it in any way. Much like a 5 year old child, the only way to shut them up, IMO, is to just ignore them. Pretend they don't exist.
Stop spam locally, ignore spam globally.
.. but I shudder to think of a world where I couldn't get daily reminders on how to increase my penis size or my breasts. [Most spam sites obviously don't keep gender in their databases]
It will be a brave new world without spam.
Live web cams
The antitdote to spam has been staring us in the face all along. How do you combat hordes of greedy unscrupulous spammers? Get hordes of greedy unscrupulous lawyers to go after fat cash settlements. Paging Mr. Dershowitz......
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
All the poor guy did was spam
Just because he only steals a couple of cents from a million people, doesn't mean it's not theft.
What if we arrested multiple mailers to real mailboxes?
Well, if they forged stamps in an attempt to send millions envelopes, I'm sure you would.
Not only is Sydney spelt wrong, the link is also broken
Why should they sue them? I bet they can make at least 2 million at home in less than a year using the spammers "work at home" program!
All I can say is Make 'em pay, it's the only way to hurt 'em where it counts."
/. they won't charge the spammers
Just go to overture.com and put bulk email in the search and click on every link you see you will cost spammers several dollars per click the reason i didn't put a clickable link is because they can tell where your comming from and if they see 1000 people come from
http://Lenny.com
4 great justice!
My suspicion is that most of the worst spammers are slimy con-artists types, who run MLM scams, "make-money-fast" deals, and probably run their "business" on a cash-only basis. This old article, assuming it is true, shows the archetype: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=00/06/07/131825 2&mode=nested&tid=111
I bet that few of them report their ill-gotten gains to the IRS properly. Seems like one quick IRS operation could put a lot of them out of business in short order, without the need for any new laws to be carefully crafted or executed.
Yes, Debbie, it does!
Laugh! it's funny!
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
But what I'd like to know is why my spam, which has hovered around 40 a day for months, suddenly doubled in the past few weeks. Some duplicates, but I'm wondering if there's a connection with the return to school time and spam. Do college students spam? I know Nigerian college students created some innovative scams (aside from the money in the bank one, which is still making the rounds) back in the early days. Are others jumping on the bandwagon?
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
From the story:
:o)
"Statistically, California residents are the most responsive consumers to e-mail advertisers who offer various products and services," the PW Marketing advertisement said.
Of course, what they don't tell you is that the responses you get are "stop spamming me you $$%^*&&^%&*!!"
Cut the bastards hands off for theft of service!
"Statistically, California residents are the most responsive consumers to e-mail advertisers who offer various products and services"
When enterred into Babelfish, returns:
"Statistically, California residents are the most stupid."
paintball
From:
Subject: Spam Email
"All your spamboxes are belong to us."
% for(;;) sendmsg()
-- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
Slashdot: We're libertarians, except when it comes to spam.
Sure, make them pay. But then, chop them up into small pieces, put the pieces into gallon jugs of gasoline, set the gas on fire and throw the burning jugs into SF Bay on national tee vee.
Spammers have proven to be so stupid that only the most Flagrantly Over the Top Demonstration of Hatred will teach some of them a lesson.
That's right, spammers: you're all incoherent stumble-bums, whose ravings are not listened to in polite society. When we can legally kill you, we will.
Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
The link is broken, as well. Someone forgot to put an "http://" in the url.
And for his next trick, the California Attorney General will squeeze blood from a turnip, unless those "make money fast" spam emails really were true, hmmmm... Don't get me wrong, sue away. Personally I wish they would make the spammers donate organs until they can pay up if/when they lose.
I Am My Own Worst Enemy
Libertarians have never enjoyed theft. Since email spam is theft (advertising is NOT protected speech, and even it were protected, I wouldn't have to pay to hear it), spammers are thieves, mere common criminals, not first amendment martyrs.
Try again, DMA troll.
Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
is here (PDF format).
I have an email address that is currently based in California.
This doesn't seem to be a class-action suit, so who gets the cut?
Linux - Because Mommy taught me to Share.
"All the poor guy did was spam!"
"What if we arrested multiple mailers to real mailboxes?"
Spam is totally different from mailers. It is free to take the time to empty my snail mailbox, but spamers can send files to my e-mail that I have to pay to download. This is why spam and fax spam is wrong: they both pass on unrequested costs to the receiver, and for stuff I didn't ask for!! I recently got some java-scripted spam that was over 5M! That is totally unacceptable.
Lawsuits working in conjunction with laws banning spam seem like the best legal (as in not illegal, NPI) way to teach folks that spaming is not a money-making business.
So you've updated the story once already, but maybe you should also add an "http://" before the URL for the "Sidney (sic) Morning Herald" link?
bork bork bork
I have no special gift, I am only passionately curious. --Albert Einstein
The more the government gets involved and stops these e-mails from being sent, the less we'll see, in my opinion.
It won't stop JoeBobSmith from sending the Get Rich Quick e-mails, but it could stop the "legitimate" company spams. I get about four e-mails (each) a day from E-Mode, Classmates.com, and credit card companies.
Plus, stopping these companies could help reduce the overall spam; if they are not collecting e-mail addresses to sell, there will be less lists to buy.
Ohh and unsubscribe? Tried that. I have a feeling that when you click the "unsubscribe" links, you are putting yourself on a "I am here!" e-mail list that is even more likely to get spam..
- It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
You're an idiot. What about the theft of service that spammers are guilty of? Just ask any ISP how much extra money they're spending on bandwith because of spam.
And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
White sport socks and all.
If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
... would be the next logical step.
Hopefully this lawsuit will be the first of many. If enough states jump on the bandwagon & make it easier for private individuals to sue, this crap can at least be pushed out of the US (or any other country that set a good precedent). A few class-action lawsuits with only 10-20,000 offended parties receiving $100-500 apiece plus legal fees would go a *long* way to making spam economically unfeasible.
Tracking spammed e-mail addresses and affected ISPs would be the biggest challange, but a database set up to process forwarded spam (such as (uce@ftc.gov) could provide plenty of evidence as to the extent of the problem and damages. Set up a system so persons who use it reap the rewards of successful spammer prosecutions & you have the perfect incentive to get people to report this superficially "harmless" crime.
I totally agree with you when it comes to e-mail spam, and costing money. On my dial-up a 500K (a rather large) spam letter would like 1 minute. I used by dial-up about 500 minutes a month. I paid $19.95 for it. That's $.04 there. Multiply that by maybe 100 a month. That's $4.00 in per month that It's costing me to download and delete this stuff.
Now compare that to where I work. I'm divulging(sp) payrates here, but not names, not like you care much anyways. The person who sorts the mail daily makes about $9.00 an hour. It takes her about 20 minutes a day to sort all the mail. About %20 of all the mail is junk mail that goes to me alone! In one working month (about 22 days) it costs about $13.00 for her to sort MY junk mail. Add in the time I spend sorting through and trashing the mail, about a hour a month @ 11.00/hr, and that puts the total to $24.00 a month or myself alone!
Obviously, in our case, snail-mail spam is much worse than e-mail spam as far as costs go. I'm definatly not condoning(sp??) e-mail spam, but snail mail spam is big business also. While I doubt it, maybe a postitive anti-spam decision about e-junk mail could spill over into my regular mail-box... we can always hope!
Is this thing on?
If the ISP has a problem with spam and wishes to specifically disallow it, then they have a case against spammers. However, that still doesn't justify government blanketly outlawing spam--that amounts to nothing more than a bill of attainder.
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
Yeah, California is really going after the spammers to protect the people. The 2 million they are trying to get will go straight into their coffers (or pockets) so all they are doing is making themselves rich in the name of the people. Where did all the money from the tobacco lawsuits go? Certainly not into healthcare or education. It went to balance budgets and programs that states wanted to keep going.
I hate spam as much as the next person, but I'm not interested in seeing greedy states like California get rich off of our problems without solving them. If you think there is going to be even one less Email in your inbox after this then you are kidding yourself. In fact, there may be more spam to make up for the lost money.
These kind of actions I hold the utmost distain for, even worse than armed robbery. It's just so fucking slimy and underhanded. The levels to which these people will go would be considered incredibly resourceful if they weren't so pathetic.
Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
No, they're equally important. You forget that businesses are owned by people, who have rights themselves.
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
Spammers have every right to exist, yes. And if they trespass on private property, to wit the privately-paid-for mailboxes of ISP subscribers, the subscribers have every right to sue the spammers for trespass and the state has every right to prosecute them for trespass. If the spammers don't like this, they can not trespass.
This has been my position all along. There's a lot of obstacles to going after unsolicited commercial email. The Direct Marketing Association quickly gets involved, since overly harsh penalties can excessively punish people that want to direct market to known consumers but screw up somehow. They have lobbying ability and tend to stifle legilslative debate.
And then there's the entire problem of *enforcement*. If I'm running a bulk emailing operation out of my basement and its now illegal, why don't I just rent a couple of systems in some foreign country where its not illegal that doesn't bother with a lot of American laws?
I'm far more convinced that if you put the effort into enforcing the current anti-fraud laws *now* on the books it would decimate the business that spammers need to stay spamming. The problem isn't UCE, the problem is fraud is going on unchecked on a massive scale and no one seems interested in stopping it.
Government has no right interfering in the business activities of spammers.
How about
"Government has no right interfering in the business activities of mafia."
Theft is illegal. Spam is theft.
Government has every right to "interefere" with such "business" activities.
It is? So you make less than the $9/hour the person who makes the mail does?
How much time do you spend sorting the spam from your mail? What about setting up the filters?
... I'm not sure if it will even make a dent in my daily dose of > 150 spams.
But it really was from Jones campaign, and the campaign website, advertised by the spam, got cut off by the hosting company in the last days of the campaign.
A write-up of the incident is on wired.
Prime numbers are exactly what Alan Greenspan says they are -S. Minsky
I just grabbed 700+ snail mail and email addresses from my local Chamber of Commerce web page. I was thinking about a snail mail marketing spree about once every 3 months to let other businesses in my town know that "I'M HERE IF YOU NEED HELP"! From what I see here (yes I'm in California), it may be illegal to send out unsolicited e-mail on a one-shot basis? Please correct me if I'm mistaken. Can I even say hello to my neighbors and not get sued? How about snail-mail? What's up wit dat?
I may be bad with names, but I'll never forget your IP address
Yes, I agree with that. Read some of my responses to some of the other replies here.
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
They waste time to download and thus eat up our ISP time and therefore money.
Maybe we should make them illegal?
Have you ever thought about all the things that cost us money?
The junk postal mail receive takes us time to throw away -- and time is money. If we recycle it, it costs our local recycling center money to transport it. We pay taxes for that. That is money.
Heck, pretty much anything that anybody does that we aren't *in favor* of will somehow inconvenience us and cost us money. The kid next door downloaded pr0n slows down my cable modem -- is he *stealing* from me?
Get real people. It doesn't cost you much money to download less that 1k messages. Especially if you have a *free* email account like yahoo, excite or hotmail. If you are careful about who you distribute your email too you can reduce a lot of your spam.
Spam is just another annoyance of civilization. Sure most of us hate it, but it is really worth the almost certainly futile effort to find it with ineffective laws -- especially when much spam comes from other countries.
A final note - the one that will probably make this post be labelled as "flamebait" - how can we advocate stealing from the RIAA in the form of trading copyrighted music but have *zero* tolerance of spammers who are little more than a tiny annoyance in our lives?
I think I see the problem here: you consider occupying space and using bandwidth paid for by the recipient, when the recipient hasn't agreed beforehand, to be a legitimate business activity. The state and most of us consider it trespass, just like if you used our front lawn to host a business get-together without asking us first.
The only guy remaining with an IT job in California, and they sue the poor bastard.
Table-ized A.I.
Here.
The problem with California going after spammers in Sydney is the reverse of the problem with, say, France or China going after US companies that are violating their laws against say Nazi related items or free-speech related pages in China. The extra-territorial nature of this is
0 20 3&mode=thread&tid=153 (italian police censor blasphemous websites)= 02/07/15/18 37255&mode=thread&tid=153 (Yahoo censoring portal)2 /07/17/16 17225&mode=thread&tid=158 (Crypto restrictions - well it is illegal in Iraq, Britain, so you must block it in the US).
0 2/09/02/02 46224&mode=thread&tid=153g /article.pl?sid=02/09/12/13 27238&mode=thread&tid=153
Now, don't get me wrong, I don't like spam either, but what is sauce for the goose (California going after companies in Australia) WILL BE sauce for the gander (France going after Google, Chine going after others etc).
This brings up other questions too:
1. If online gambling is illegal in your jurisdiction, can you stop it where it is based?
2. Suppose you have a data haven off the coast of Britain...
What California, China, France and Italy (among many others) are trying to do is to export their laws by extending their jurisdiction extra-territorially. Instead of a free Internet, you have an Internet governed by the most restrictive laws instead of the least. This is a bad thing for freedom on the net.
For example see:
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/07/10/045
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=0
Etc...
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=
http://yro.slashdot.or
If you just type in "France censor" you can find a ton on here.
We have a vigiliante group in my town that is running a "Shame the John's" campaign. The target is the John's who get caught with their pants down literally.
Why won't this work for the advertisers who advertise by spam. It is really easy to track them down as they can't hide because no one would be able to order their crap without a valid address and phone number!
My 2cents...
From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
And the web site of the SYDNEY morning herald is http://www.smh.com.au.
SYDNEY SYDNEY SYDNEY
OIH! OIH! OIH!
(our national, inspirational, feindishly hard, and totally original way cry! OK, for the national cry we replace "SYDNEY" with "AUSSIE").
I got spam today from panoramic.net saying it was for my own privacy (yeah, right) & they wanted to give me the opportunity to opt out before they send me any spam & oh, btw check out this great deal. At the bottom they even included a disclaimer saying that by continuing to receive spam from them I would be opting in to thier (non)privacy policy & they will collect & share my any personal info I'm stupid enough to give them.
Hmm, if they are going to try to hold me to thier disclaimer, maybe I should send them a message with a disclaimer saying that by continuing to send any email to my address they are agreeing to pay me $500 per message & $1000 for any bit of personal info they share with thier "marketing partners."
Hold the bus..... check it out.
If you really want to know the TRUTH about libertarians, you can go to http://www.lp.org which is the main entrance to the libertarian party website.
Being a libertarian myself, I can speak as to this spam issue, and also being someone who tracks down spammers quite often, I even give my own opinion on what should be done about the UCE problem.
UCE is theft, and spam is theft of my bandwidth, which costs money. It is theft of my time, which shortens my life, and that makes me totally livid, which is why I track spammers down, and do everything possible to get their accounts nuked, and all headers forwarded to the FTC (uce@ftc.gov) so that there is a record of it.
If a spammer gets busted, I believe they should be banned from using any computing device ever again. I think that would pretty much end all spam coming from the United States. I am going to ignore other countries, because there is not much you can do about that depending on which country.
Now this ORIGINAL discussion had nothing to do with Movies or MP3's and the association therewith libertarians, however I also have an opinion on that as well. It pisses me off when I see some lamer associate behavior and
So here divides "official libertarian party member opinion and my own personal opinion" I am sure there are a few spin-meister-social-engineering assholes who will attempt to change what I say into something it is not. To them, I say they better pray I never catch them. At least I am self thinking.
Being a linux user, I believe there should be a DVD player for Linux, and this has nothing to do with piracy. There are laws for piracy already, we don't need anymore laws for it.
Regarding MP3's I take an interesting approach, being also a musician, it is my belief that the quality of an mp3 makes it worth less than a cd. If you don't believe me then rent an 800watt amp and run an mp3 through it and listen to all the noise!
I buy tapes and cds and dvd's, I don't pirate anything. I have and do downloaded songs that I have bought which the original media was destroyed. I sleep perfectly at night knowing this. If you want to lable me a pirate for this then I say your wrong, you need to be looking somewhere else, if you want to associate libertarian with pirate your wrong again. If you want to crucify me for thinking for myself, and straying off the beaten mainstream path that's fine.
If you want to stray off the path, don't point fingers and say, "hey look at what the libertarians do. They do X, Y, and Z." Because in fact this is not true. I am a libertarian because I have a HELL of a lot more integrity than a lot of other people who are doing serious damage to our country as I speak this very moment.
Before I was a libertarian, I was a democrat, I used to smoke crank, weed, steal, lie, cheat, drink and drive, does that make all democrats bad? No, Before that I was a republican, I had my own business, but once in awhile I liked to do a couple lines of coke and keep a few extra dollars from the IRS, does that make all republicans bad? No.
So before you label people. Get the facts straight.
Well, that's not the only way, is it? Now that the names of the spammers are public, what if some physical harm were to come to them, or their property? That might make other/future spammers think twice.
Spammers do have a right to exist... in the bottom of the Atlantic wearing a pair of concrete shoes. In other words, the service I choose to block spam is a mafia hitman.
For the last 75 years we've been spamming the universe in our area, up to 75 lightyear with all kinds of spam. Crappy radio and TV shows, daiper commercials, etc. If we continue at this rate, I'm sure we'll get either sued or attacked by some aliens who can't receive their local sports channel due to earth interference.
Then prosecute theft. What about people who don't mind spam, and server and network operators who don't mind channeling it?
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
As I said in an earlier post on this thread, if they commit an act of theft or trespass, prosecute them for theft or trespass. There's no legitimate reason to outlaw spam in and of itself--what about people who don't mind receiving it, or network and server operators who don't mind channeling it?
Interestingly, this poses an interesting thought. Let's say that an ISP doesn't have a problem channeling spam through their servers and network. As their users are free to choose to use or not use the ISPs services, if they choose to connect to their network then they agree to accept whatever spam whatever may come their way.
"Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"
Prosecuting under the law for this particular form of theft and trespass is exactly what the California AG is doing. They merely passed the law because, in the case of spam, it's impossible not to commit trespass and theft by doing it. Oh, some people might not mind, but you didn't know that when you did it.
As for the ISP, well, only if the ISP's TOS includes a "you must accept spam" clause. If it doesn't, then while the ISP might not have recourse the individual subscriber does because the spammer's still trespassing and taking up the subscriber's disk space and bandwidth without permission. If it were the ISP paying it might be different, but the ISP isn't paying and the subscriber has the bill from the ISP to prove it.
How can the first post be "redundant?" What is the sound of one hand clapping?
I did notice a few of the Usual Suspects still there - maybe not as many of the same services, though some names sounded familiar, but many of the same harvester products. I don't know if the lists of "300 million brand-new verified addresses" have changed since then :-)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
"Spammers have proven to be so stupid that only the most Flagrantly Over the Top Demonstration of Hatred will teach some of them a lesson."
Use of unnecessary force in apprehending the spammers has been approved.
In other words, they want to Make Moolah Fast by suing spammers....
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
"As I said in an earlier post on this thread, if they commit an act of theft or trespass, prosecute them for theft or trespass. There's no legitimate reason to outlaw spam in and of itself"
If the majority of the voters in a state don't like it to the point where they feel that a new law against it is necessary to protect their rights to own and use their property as they wish, I think that's a damn legitimate reason to ban it. If that doesn't show that it's in the public's interest, I don't know what does. This is exactly what happened to junk faxers and this is exactly what should happen to spammers.
"what about people who don't mind receiving it,"
Two words: opt-in. Spam by definition is unsolicited.
Of course, if someone actually likes the spam they receive, they are perfectly free not to press charges. But their desire not to press charges shouldn't inhibit my desire to see them punished for the spam I received.
My hypothetical neighbor throws some pretty wild parties in his house and just about any stranger can come and do whatever they want there. Does that somehow mean I let those same strangers to the same at my house? Should the practices of my neighbor inhibit my ability to to use and protect my property as I see fit?
"or network and server operators who don't mind channeling it?"
They can find themselves named as accessories to the crime with their blatent disreguard of my property rights if they so wish. If they have a history of consciously turning a blind eye to spam if not actually promoting it, I see no reason for me not to name them in my complaint.
" As their users are free to choose to use or not use the ISPs services, if they choose to connect to their network then they agree to accept whatever spam whatever may come their way."
It's legitimate only if the potential customers are made well aware that this is the ISP's policy. And since most people in the spam trade already seem to have a great deal of difficulty in meeting truth-in-advertising requirements... Let's just say I'll believe it when I see it.
Also, there are jurisdictional problems - the State asserts that the defendants are doing business in Santa Clara County (northern California) so they can be tried there instead of down in southern California where they live, based on the assertion that spam was sent to email addresses in Santa Clara County - even though the one spam they're quoting in the complaint clearly says that they do business in Canyon Country, CA, and they don't list any recipients who live in Santa Clara county. That's basically equivalent to busting a snail-mail-order business from a remote jurisdiction because they mailed advertising postcards there.
I haven't read all the business regulation laws referred to, so some of the sections are probably legally correct interpretations of some of California's really bad laws, but the processes still seem inappropriate. A couple of examples:
("Canyon Country" is a city in Southern California), and if it's not in the US, it's not California's jurisdiction and California business regulations shouldn't apply to them.
All told, it's a terrible case, and it ought to be possible to either find a much better set of sleazy spammers to make an example of, or do a competent and Constitutional job of prosecuting them properly
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
spam is not profitable. well, the act of spamming is not profitable, the only people who make a profit on spam are the people selling address lists to people who think spamming itself is profitable.
When you get spam, look up the contact for whatever domain sent the spam in the "Whois" directory, and give them a call. I do it all the time. I did it today. Works like a charm because they want to talk to you less than you want to receive their spam.
Let them opt in. I'd have no problem with spam if it was opt in. I have not acquiescenced. It's been forced upon me. If they'd like to pay my monthly ISP bill, they can send me whatever they want. While I pay for it, I do not want it.
Please don't humanize the morons around me. It makes me very uncomfortable.
Awesome.. now anyone (everyone) who has a Hotmail account is protected
Registrant:
Hotmail Corporation (HOTMAIL-DOM)
1065 La Avenida
Mtn. View
US
Domain Name: HOTMAIL.COM
Administrative Contact, Technical Contact:
Records, Custodian of (COR58) enforce_policy@HOTMAIL.COM
MSN Hotmail
1065 La Avendia
Mtn. View , CA 94043
(650) 693-7066 (FAX) (650) 693-7061
it would be an even bigger shame if someone (or lots of someones) ran something like the following script from cron every 10 minutes or so.
/usr/bin/perl
;
& Keywords=bulk%20email';
/xargs/i ; ;
;
obvious TODO ideas are a) fetch the second and subsequent pages from the search cgi, and/or b) only fetch the first 10 results rather than all of them and/or c) only fetch results which cost >$1
#!
use strict
use LWP::UserAgent;
use HTML::TokeParser;
my @URL;
my $action = 'http://www.overture.com/d/search/?type=home&tm=1
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new(env_proxy => 0, keep_alive => 5, timeout => 10);
$ua->agent('Mozilla/4.51 (Macintosh; I; PPC)');
#$ua->proxy('http', 'http://localhost:3128/');
my $request = HTTP::Request->new('GET', $action);
my $response = $ua->request($request);
my $p = HTML::TokeParser->new(\$response->content);
# build the list of URLs
while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) {
my $url = $token->[1]{href} || "-";
my $text = $p->get_trimmed_text("/a");
next unless $url =~
push @URL, $url
}
# now fetch each URL
foreach (@URL) {
print "$_\n"
my $request = HTTP::Request->new('GET', $_);
my $response = $ua->request($request);
};
Suggested remeides:
For penis enlargement spamming:
Forced 5" lengthening by pulling HARD without anasthetic
For breast enlargement spam:
forced DD surgical implants for male spammers, (same for females, but the get them in the buttocks)
For MLM get rich quick spam:
Sending $1 to every name at the top of the list, $5 to every name on the next line, $25...etc
For hot naked chick webcam spam:
Locked naked in apartment full of chickens with central heating on full - streamed over web, ofc.
For hentai spam:
Rubber tenticle orifice violation.
Copy any DVD or playstation game spam:
Copying full binary content of playstation game disk onto paper with a biro.
A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
Why not tax e-mails? The reason there is so much spam is that is so cheap to send out. If spammers had to pay 1 cents per e-mail their costs would go up. Now they can send out 100,000 e-mails with little cost, just some cheap computer time. But what if it cost them $1000? It may also stop my sister in law from sending annoying jokes. Government and education could be exepmt from the tax and a few cents per month would not be to much for the average net user.
Ahhhhhh,
..... *goodbye*.
See, this is why I use PINE. Who needs all the bells and whistles of Outlook or Netscape anyway?? If I get an email, any email with an HTML header
Simple, plain, non-formatted ASCII text. That is what email is all about! Shell to my mail server, open a Pine session. Oh ... look at that 100 MB file stuck in my inbox. *D*elete! Muhahahahah!
sighs I miss the old days of the internet when we didn't need all this fancy flash driven commerce bull5h!7
"Genius may shine aloof and alone, like a star, but goodness is social, and it takes two men and God to make a Brother."
The LAST solution to any problem that anyone should ever propose is a tax, and then it should be rejected immediately. Never underestimate the insidious, spreading nature of a tax.
make em pay, don't make em pay, I don't care!
Just make the fuckers STOP!
These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
SPAM is not a clearly definable quantity. I might be interested in knowing about specials on inkjet cartridges, while others would rightfully consider such an offer SPAM.
Thus it is a relation between the reader and the content that determines if something is SPAM. Consequently the determination and selection should be placed near to the reader and not in a law or a regulation.
While this may not be a popular point of view, it is all the more practical. You can run, but ou can't hide. Spammers will just move their operation outside your reach and in the end only the lawyers will directly benefit from all this bruhaha.
I receive approximally 120 emails a day of which a majority is SPAM. But I have content filtering on my email and so I catch 95%+. They can send it to me, but I choose to exercise my right to throw it away.
With all those wonderfull machines, technology and software which excludes fitness for any particular purpose, it leaves me wondering why I can filter emails so easily while the ISPs have no such personalized filtering generally available.
Then prosecute theft.
Perhaps you hadn't noticed, but that's pretty much what's happening.
Spammers are stealing bandwidth, and the government is passing laws against it, and then prosecuting the spammers.
What was your point again?
I can't do it through my corporate network
e .asp?eid= 9077&lid=13&email=******@*****
The IP is 216.34.211.29 and 216.34.211.89
The offender network is exodus.net.
They do not answer or act on my non-munged Spamcop reports (for weeks now)
Therefore, somebody please nuke them....
The link is as follows
http://clicks.sportadvisors.com/subscrib
Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha