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Spamhaus Responds To Spammers' Lawsuit

ShaiHulud-23 writes "A suit was recently filed by EMarketersAmerica.org, a fledgling secret organization of spammers, against the Spamhaus Project, (and other anti-spam sites) seeking to prevent the publication of the anonymous plaintiffs' IP addresses in the Spamhaus Block List (SBL). The suit requested a response from the named defendants, and Spamhaus director Steve Linford has provided one, dismantling the spammers' case point by point."

442 comments

  1. Crap, my first story has a typo by ShaiHulud-23 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Should be "defendants"

    Also, here's some amusing dirt on the lawyer who filed the suit (and registered the EMarketersAmerica domain.)

    1. Re:Crap, my first story has a typo by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

      CmdrTaco, could you hire this guy? He actually recognizes and corrects typos. Thanks in advance.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    2. Re:Crap, my first story has a typo by littlerubberfeet · · Score: 1

      Speaking of emarketersamerica.org and its apparent owners...The WHOIS databases seem to lack information about the owner and registar of the domain name. Anyone know why the whois databases (even interNIC) don't have any info on the domain?

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    3. Re:Crap, my first story has a typo by hndrcks · · Score: 1

      That's OK, the spammers have a typo in the tagline of their press release:

      "U.S. Economy Will Suffer if Anti-Spammers Get Their Way and
      Crippled the Billion Dollar e-Mail Marketing Business


      (Bold added to highlight BAD ENGLISH.) Lawyers live and die by their words. Poor grammar = poor lawyering!

      --
      Everyone will start to cheer when you put on your sailin' shoes.
    4. Re:Crap, my first story has a typo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh...

      Organization:
      Emarketers America
      Mark Felstein
      555 South Federal Highway ste 450
      Boca Raton, FL 33432
      US
      Phone: 561-367-7990
      Email: mefels@aol.com

      Registrar Name....: Register.com
      Registrar Whois...: whois.register.com
      Registrar Homepage: http://www.register.com

      Domain Name: EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG

      Created on..............: Wed, May 07, 2003
      Expires on..............: Fri, May 07, 2004
      Record last updated on..: Fri, May 09, 2003

      Administrative Contact:
      Emarketers America
      Mark Felstein
      555 South Federal Highway ste 450
      Boca Raton, FL 33432
      US
      Phone: 561-367-7990
      Email: mefels@aol.com

      Technical Contact, Zone Contact:
      Register.Com
      Domain Registrar
      575 8th Avenue - 11th Floor
      New York, NY 10018
      US
      Phone: 902-749-2701
      Fax..: 902-749-5429
      Email: domain-registrar@register.com

    5. Re:Crap, my first story has a typo by Anonymous+Cow+herd · · Score: 1

      Registrar Name....: Register.com
      Registrar Whois...: whois.register.com
      Registrar Homepage: http://www.register.com

      Domain Name: EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG

      Created on..............: Wed, May 07, 2003
      Expires on..............: Fri, May 07, 2004
      Record last updated on..: Fri, May 09, 2003

      Administrative Contact:
      Emarketers America
      Mark Felstein
      555 South Federal Highway ste 450
      Boca Raton, FL 33432
      US
      Phone: 561-367-7990
      Email: mefels@aol.com

      --
      Ita erat quando hic adveni.
  2. They're not very good yet by Red+Warrior · · Score: 5, Funny

    EMarketersAmerica.org, a fledgling secret organization of spammers

    NOTE: secret organizations should NOT file public lawsuits.

    --
    "If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
    ~Epictetus
    1. Re:They're not very good yet by orkysoft · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nah, they filed it before the Secret Court.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    2. Re:They're not very good yet by milktoastman · · Score: 1

      Watch out then...you'll be the 20th spammer without ever actually having solicited by email.

    3. Re:They're not very good yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not to secret organization.... the South Florida Business Journal has been doing some digging on EMarketersAmerica and have a good story on them at: http://southflorida.bizjournals.com/southflorida/s tories/2003/05/12/story1.html

    4. Re:They're not very good yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Thinking back to the Alan Ralsky incident...

      Emarketersamerica.org
      555 South Federal Highway
      Suite 450
      Boca Raton, FL 33432

      T: 561.367.7990
      F: 561.367.7980

      www.emarketersamerica.org
      admin@emarketersameri ca.org

      Not suggesting anything at all, really. ;)

    5. Re:They're not very good yet by evilviper · · Score: 2, Funny

      Funny, just a few minutes ago I was watching a show that gave a tour of a "secret" government communications installation. In fact they said it was "top secret" just a minute or so after they said where it was exactly.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    6. Re:They're not very good yet by cHiphead · · Score: 2, Informative

      Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations

      Ya, lets file a lawsuit in Florida, that'll work... now spamhaus just needs to make a request for production of their list of membmers and we got all the bastards.

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    7. Re:They're not very good yet by Associate · · Score: 1

      You see, that is how it works. They wave a giant banner saying, "Hey look at our secret stuff over here!" Just like Area 51. They talk about it all the time. Now what I'm REALLY interested in is Area 52! Bet they got some really cool space crap over there.

      --
      Someone hates these cans.
    8. Re:They're not very good yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should always use a mailto: url with email addresses, like this: admin@emarketersamerica.org. That saves typing for people who want to mail them.

    9. Re:They're not very good yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Secret as "doing secret things", not as where the heck these guys live secret...

      Makes sense to me.

    10. Re:They're not very good yet by beowulfcluster · · Score: 1

      Was it hosted by Geraldo?

    11. Re:They're not very good yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rotflmao

      That's one email addy I'd rather not have right about now ;-)

    12. Re:They're not very good yet by c1pher · · Score: 1

      let's not forget about Mr. Felstein's AOL address in the admin contact listing either - mefels@aol.com

      --
      The Adult Happy Meal - "I'm lovin' it!"
  3. IANAL... by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Someone please, please tell me there are perjury-charge meriting falsehoods in the documents filed by the spammers. The claims that Spamhaus is a commercial organization and is maliciously blocking traffic are particularly suspicious.

    After all, they got Capone for income tax.

    1. Re:IANAL... by Cramer · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, having delt with one spammer in particular (yes, listed by Spamhaus), I'll just say they are very open liars. This individual said -- and I wished I'd been recording the call "for quality assurance purposes" :-) -- Spamhaus was a company run by one of his competitors. We had to mute the phone for a few minutes. They insist they are not sending "spam" -- even tho' I have spam reports from every batch of crap they sent.

    2. Re:IANAL... by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the plaintiffs don't expect Steve Linford to appear. They expect to get a default judgement. Excatly what they will do with this I don't know.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    3. Re:IANAL... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Don't they have to execute service on someone before they can do that?

      Or perhaps Florida judges are just ultra permissive about filing suit against foreign nationals.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  4. ironic.. by v_1_r_u_5 · · Score: 5, Funny

    we're in effect giving an anti-spam company a DDOS with the /. effect. way to go, guys.

    1. Re:ironic.. by Adam9 · · Score: 1

      ~10 comments or so and the site is toast. I suspect the subscribers may be pre-/.ing it. This has been happening to a lot of other stories too.

    2. Re:ironic.. by afidel · · Score: 1

      spamhaus is NOT a company, important distinction. Note the .org at the end of the domain, although some companies get stupid and register in .org spamhaus is not one of them.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    3. Re:ironic.. by Cramer · · Score: 1

      .net, .com, .org... there's been almost zero distinction since around '97 or so. Companies (and even individuals) routinely snarf up foo.everything-they-can-aford. InterNIC only breifly enforced the distinction (or tried to.)

      And being in the UK, I don't think Spamhaus really cares about some idiot lawyer-spammer(s) in the US. (Ok, maybe if they're bored.)

    4. Re:ironic.. by afidel · · Score: 1

      Yes and I think it's a shame that they didn't do a better job. Of course I guess I'm just talking as an old geezer that's been on the net since 1991 or so back when the distinction was imposed through proper reading of RFC's and peer pressure =)

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    5. Re:ironic.. by Cramer · · Score: 1

      InterNIC didn't start to enforce it until it was far too late. Back in the day, people asked for what they wanted to use (or thought they eventually would) instead of the modern day hoarding of domain names... register everything that exists and hold it ransom.

      In fact, when I registered troz.com, Network Solutions offered up all three in one package.

    6. Re:ironic.. by taernim · · Score: 5, Funny

      Looking to stop getting DDOS'd?
      Tired of the /. effect ruining your business?

      WE CAN HELP!

      For 6 easy payments of $49.95....

      ^_^

      --
      "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
    7. Re:ironic.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, I'm visiting that http://www.EMarketersAmerica.org site, instead. Maybe they have great deals for us!?

  5. That's nice... by Hilleh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No really, that's great. I'm happy for all you guys. Biiiiiiig group hug? Everybody feel better that we're fighting the evil, evil spam now? Okay, good.

    Seriously, I hate having my inbox clogged up as much as the next guy, but wake me up when something actually HAPPENS. I'm sick of hearing the two sides verbally piss on each other, I think we can all agree that's been done to death. How this rehashing of the same old crap is newsworthy to anyone is beyond me. Different face, same words.

    1. Re:That's nice... by ShaiHulud-23 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The original lawsuit was newsworthy because it was a cartel of spammers attempting direct legal action against a system which blocks their messages, claiming that Spamhaus restricts their free speech and free trade.

      The Spamhaus response is just a followup to the earlier story, and is an interesting insight into the fraudulent dishonest mindset of spammers by pointing out the falsehoods in the suit.

      This whole issue is newsworthy because it calls attention to the overall deceptive sleaze of spam in general, it is NOT a legitimate business. While the racketeering story posted earlier isn't quite the right solution, I do think that if the courts are made more aware of the shady (and sometimes outright illegal) business practices of spammers, more anti-spam suits will be won and more anti-spam laws will be passed. Spam is a crime that just hasn't been made illegal yet.

    2. Re:That's nice... by Hilleh · · Score: 1

      The phrase "preaching to the choir" mean anything to you? We all know spam is bad, but unfortunately I'm going to assume that posting about it to slashdot isn't going to change a judge's mind.

      Unless he's a goatse troll, then that would just kinda rock.

    3. Re:That's nice... by dboyles · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, I hate having my inbox clogged up as much as the next guy, but wake me up when something actually HAPPENS. I'm sick of hearing the two sides verbally piss on each other, I think we can all agree that's been done to death. How this rehashing of the same old crap is newsworthy to anyone is beyond me. Different face, same words.

      I'm with you as far as being tired of seeing this sort of thing go on for ages without any discernable progress. But you've got to understand, this is how things of this nature are hammered out. They say politics is the process of deciding who gets what in a society. This is just two different interest groups fighting for what they want. And, despite the negativity associated with the phrase "interest groups", they're not always evil.

      As far as it being newsworthy or not, I think it is. You've heard it before, this is News for Nerds, and lots of /. readers are a part of one of these interest groups.

      --
      -- "Complacency is a far more dangerous attitude than outrage." -Naomi Littlebear
    4. Re:That's nice... by BuckaBooBob · · Score: 1

      HELLO!!! Legislation will not make spam go away! Its simply does not have enough power to work... the internet is a global resource!!! how can the US do anything that still works on a gobal scale? Invade and occupy every country that remains the home of Spam?!?! SMTP needs to be fixed.. its broken... if it wasn't spam thrive... SMTP is a useless protocol thanks to spammers... I wrote a big todo about this is the last Spam post ...

      --
      Who needs WiFi when we can have Packet Over Sheep! http://datacomm.org/PoS-InternetDraft.txt
    5. Re:That's nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're right posting on slashdot alone won't help. a good expensive lawyer to file a bulletproof answer and engage in discovery will. so i'm ready to pony up $100 for the effort, because it was posted on slashdot.

    6. Re:That's nice... by rifter · · Score: 1

      Invade and occupy every country that remains the home of Spam?!?!

      Yes, and in the immortal words of SNL "liberate the hell out of them." ;)

  6. UK in American courts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    After reading through that, I cannot believe how easily that lawsuit by the spam assholes of america - a subdivision of satan, inc, - will be thrown out of court.

    How do you get an American court to have jurisdiction over a company that does not sell products to US consumers - since it does not sell anything - and does not have any divisions in the US?

    A UK only company being sued in an American court? Why bother? Isn't it obvious?

    1. Re:UK in American courts? by snoochyboochy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Obvious??? This is supposed to be obvious to the guys who think I need a merchant account to access my home mortgage to enlarge my goods for that date with the girl from the e-card whom I can buy prescription drugs for, should she get a migraine from trying to sorth through all her "legitimate" emails in a day?

    2. Re:UK in American courts? by CausticWindow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not at all obvious.

      We are coming to a point in history where US law is converging to global law. Military might talks. Mind you, it doesn't work the other way.

      The spam assholes of America are some of the least dangerous assholes though. The US is brim full of more dangerous assholes.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    3. Re:UK in American courts? by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 4, Interesting
      How do you get an American court to have jurisdiction over a company that does not sell products to US consumers - since it does not sell anything - and does not have any divisions in the US?

      You don't. That's why the plaintiff had to lie about the Spamhaus' and Steve Linford's whereabouts, about US residents being principals in Spamhaus, and to falsely suggest that it might have a US office. Otherwise the suit would be thrown out at as soon as it landed on a judge's desk.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    4. Re:UK in American courts? by cyril3 · · Score: 2
      How do you get an American court to have jurisdiction over a company that does not sell products to US consumers - since it does not sell anything - and does not have any divisions in the US?

      The American legal system will find a way, don't you worry about that.

      After all this is the legal system that thought that it should arrest a russian who did something in Russia (Skylarov) that was illegal in the USA but couldn't believe the temerity of Russians wanting to arrest Americans (the FBI) who did something in the USA that was illegal in Russia.

      American law seems to admit no boundaries on the reach of its law but does not like to accept judgement by any other jurisdiction on its citizens or interests. Only an American legal system could persuade a free Court to accept the Camp X-Ray bullshit.

    5. Re:UK in American courts? by aaaurgh · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Isn't it led by the most dangerous one of all - Shrub himself?

      I don't mean to offend the good citizens of the U.S. but, shit, I'm daily getting more frightened of the States than of any other country or organisation.

      --

      Go permanent? In your dreams and my worst nightmares.
    6. Re:UK in American courts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, etc. Nonetheless, as far as I know, diversity jurisdiction, commonly used to extend state jurisdiction beyond state lines (e.g. I can sue you, a resident of another state, in my home state) also applies to foreign diversity of residence. In other words, despite the apparent silliness of such a situation, American civil law (mind you, this applies to tortious claims, not criminal codes) can and does apply to individuals outside of the US in so far as they conduct business or interactions with Americans.

      For a good case in point, a federal judge recently ruled in favor of the plaintiffs in a suit alleging liability on part of Saddam Hussein for the attacks of September 11 (story here).

    7. Re:UK in American courts? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Would have made more sense to sue in the UK too. The Libel laws are stronger (although listing a "direct marketer" as a spammer is not exactly libelous) and it's easier for the plaintiff to get costs awarded.

    8. Re:UK in American courts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on, the US is the good guys; just because we're slowly slipping into fascism and imperialism doesn't mean you can't trust us -- remember, we're the good guys, and we have thousands of nukes to prove it (and no, you can't have any).

    9. Re:UK in American courts? by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > (although listing a "direct marketer" as a spammer is not exactly libelous)

      Y'know, I was just about to say that calling "the gigantic slimy turd I just shat out this morning" as a spammer would certainly be libel - against the innocent bacteria that make up a goodly portion of the mass of aforementioned fecal mass.

      And then I realized that even if I'm right - so are you. Calling a "direct marketer" a spammer, hell, that ain't libel at all, because truth is a defence.

    10. Re:UK in American courts? by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      Would have made more sense to sue in the UK too. The Libel laws are stronger (although listing a "direct marketer" as a spammer is not exactly libelous) and it's easier for the plaintiff to get costs awarded.

      The Plaintif also has to pay the costs of the defense when they lose and recent changes to the libel laws have made it very difficult to get a judgement that is more than the non-recoverable part of the costs.

      The other problem is that some of the spam senders Felslime has represented in the past have criminal convictions which would pretty much make any UK libel case moot.

      A final problem is that the defendants can pay a trivial amount into court, say 50 quid in an offer of settlement. If the Plaintif accepts the money the case is over, if not the defendants reclaim their costs from the plaintif on the much higher indemnity scale.

      Given the previous convictions of the probable clients behind this case a UK court would be very likely to allow a defense motion for surety for costs.

      One final problem is that the UK bar is not like the US bar. It is much harder to find a solicitor who will take what he knows to be a vexatious case and very likely that a barister will refuse it as well.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    11. Re:UK in American courts? by jkrausyao · · Score: 1

      Both UK and US are members of the Hague Conference on Private International Law, http://www.hcch.net/e/members/members.html

      This allows for the enforcement of court orders in member contries.

    12. Re:UK in American courts? by LarsG · · Score: 1

      Both UK and US are members of the Hague Conference on Private International Law

      Yeah, what is happening to Hague? Last I heard it had stalled due to rather heavy disagreement.

      --
      If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
  7. i'm getting some bonus points ... by Triumph+The+Insult+C · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... if I go to Florida and take this guy out. not only does he defend our favorite utility meat, but he's a lawyer. that has to be, like, an 11th commandment in some religion.

    --
    vodka, straight up, thank you!
    1. Re:i'm getting some bonus points ... by Grog6 · · Score: 1

      After you get through with the Spammers, will you Please go after the MP/RIAA?

      --
      Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    2. Re:i'm getting some bonus points ... by Dopefish128 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thou shalt not suffer a spammer to live?

      --
      "Knowledge is power. Power corrupts. Study hard. Take over the world."
  8. These guys have no shame by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Funny

    From the main page at emarketersamerica.org :

    Everyone hates spam... and that includes e-mail marketers.

    Gee, I'd say, I wouldn't want to eat my own crap ...

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:These guys have no shame by Cramer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      These people piss me off...

      Billion dollar industry... blah, blah, freakin' blah. Prove the damned numbers. Unlike RIAA and MPAA, no one is going to let spammers make up their own balance sheets. There are numerous reports world wide giving hard proof of the costs brought about by all the stupid spammers. The only people who stand to be finacially injured and unemployed (and unemployable after a background check) are the asses sending all the spam.

      I'll see their billions and raise by trillions -- the costs of software development and administrator headaches addressing the problem of spam, software development and administrative overhead to block loopholes in internet protocols, ever increasing server and bandwidth needs to move, process, and store all this crap... SPAM is a very expensive problem with the burden everywhere but the spammer.

      Laws are useless unless swiftly and strictly enforced. Speeding is illegal, but that hasn't made much of a dent.

    2. Re:These guys have no shame by yuri+benjamin · · Score: 1

      I just looked at the emarkets site.

      This guy bleats about anti-spammers hurting "permission based" bulk email.
      WTF?
      If I subscribe to something that SBL would block, then I don't use SBL - duh!

      The defendant correctly rebutts that anti-spam services only block spam when the owners of the receiving mail servers want to block spam.

      I can't wait for this suit to be thrown out.

      Yuri

      --
      You make the mistake of thinking you can educate the fundamental stupidity out of people. You can't.
    3. Re:These guys have no shame by Oscar_Wilde · · Score: 5, Funny

      The line I like the most is:the Anti-Spammers, many of which hide in Europe

      Hide in Europe? What evidence to they have that the anti-spammers are hiding? What would it matter if they hide in the EU and not the US?

      Last time I checked it wasn't the anti-spammers that needed to hide....

    4. Re:These guys have no shame by Openadvocate · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I have even gotten ye olde directory attack on my mailserver from one company(on worldcom) that said on their home page that all their emails was opt in. :)
      So why did they try to guess my email accounts, and why did they fake reverse dns to a public school.
      I still don't get how they can run their company. Their methods are clearly different from the ones they state. I would have thought that with a little collective effort, it should be easy to bring them down. I like to see how these guys can fake them through the trial. If any real evidence of how they really work, it should be clear to everyone why you would want them of the face of the planet, warn about them and block them in your router.

      --
      my sig
    5. Re:These guys have no shame by keller · · Score: 2
      If they are hiding, they must be terrorists. So now the EU is hiding terrorists. Just a matter of time before we are invaded I guess...

      Bet he would like that!

      --

      Enig? Det alt for hot det smor!

    6. Re:These guys have no shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's not "invaded", it's "liberated". Thank you.

    7. Re:These guys have no shame by ipfwadm · · Score: 2, Funny

      Actually, according to the whois for emarketersamerica.org (registered through register.com), his email address is mefels@aol.com. I encourage everyone to forward all your spam to Mr. Felstein with the header "You are receiving this because you opted in to receive penis enlargement and viagra offers by connecting to the Internet. This is NOT spam."

    8. Re:These guys have no shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roger That!

    9. Re:These guys have no shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it really that hard to make a hyperlink out of the address? Here: mark@EmarketersAmerica.org

    10. Re:These guys have no shame by valmont · · Score: 1
      YUP telemarketers, although also pure filth, have more of a leg to stand on when stating their industry generates jobs. Because it actually, most of the time, takes humans to make those calls and talk to people who answer their phones. But i've also argued in a letter to my congress girlie that the quality of such jobs would be greatly improved with the ubiquitous adoption of do-not-call list, as people answering their phones might be more likely to be receptive to a sales pitch.

      ON THE OTHER HAND, email-bound spam generates ZERO JOB. look at alan ralsky's operation. that fucker boasts his self-run business, from his new $700K+ house, and his network pipes. he just prolly contracted some goon to write some software for him and just milks the fuck out of it. and bickity-baaam. One machine. spreads its filth to countless other machines on the internet. ISPs. open mail relays. the second he opens the floodgates, the whole fucking internet pays the price and he fucking doesn't.

      fuck spammers. fuck them right in the ass. no lube. sand-paper-laced condom.

    11. Re:These guys have no shame by Oddly_Drac · · Score: 1

      To: Admin@emarketersamerica.org

      I spotted your website address on another site, so I thought I'd take a look, all I can say is amen to the first line.

      "Everyone hates spam... "

      Could you tell me if it's possible for the emarketersamerica to ensure that they have an 'optout' list run from a publically available server that would be honoured? That way you could ensure that everything you send doesn't become lumped in with UCE.

      Toodles,
      xxxxxxxx

      I'm not really expecting a reply back, but why don't you guys form yourselves into state action groups and keep hammering the point home that corporations/non-profit organisations don't vote?

      I suspect that Florida should be the first port of call

      OD

      --
      Oddly Draconis
      Too cynical to live, too stubborn to die.
    12. Re:These guys have no shame by meringuoid · · Score: 1

      The only reason people live in Europe is so that they can trample on the frea speach rights of upstanding American ethikul biznesmen and be immune from lawsuits. Nobody actually, you know, gets born here, it's a continent of people hiding from the law.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    13. Re:These guys have no shame by Larsing · · Score: 1

      it's a continent of people hiding from the law

      No, that's Australia... ;-)

      --
      Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
  9. Any chance of countersuing them? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    (Subject line says it all.)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by debest · · Score: 1

      Probably not. The suit was brought by a non-profit company, probably with no assets, formed with the specific purpose of initiating this lawsuit.

      The guy who "runs" eMarketersAmerica is also the lawyer bringing forth the suit. He's also a big-time spammer's personal attorney (see the bottom comment in Spamhaus' response). You can bet that this Felstein guy has made sure that there's nothing to countersue for.

      --
      Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
    2. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

      Then how about a complaint to the Florida Bar Association regarding filing frivolous, false, and nuisance suits? Also, the tactic of posting one the the SpamHaus folks (and father's) personal information in an effort to intimidate and harass isn't kosher.

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
    3. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comments in news.admin.net-abuse.email from certain people named in this suit indicate that there are a lot of things they can't talk about yet but will be able to soon.

      Countersuing them would probably be overkill considering how many blatant lies there are in the document. I'm betting on some severe public humiliation possibly coupled with a fine (something about wasting the court's time?).

    4. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by coolgeek · · Score: 1

      I think you'd have better results complaining to The Better Business Bureau.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
    5. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Is it not possible for the named co-defendants to counter-claim libel and defamation of character? After all, this guy is claiming that the named people acted in concert to put his various buddys out of business, that they hijacked his ip addresses and, perhaps worst of all, hijacked his servers.

      Never mind that the suit is poorly written from the technical point of view, he's basically accusing the named co-defendants of acts of terrorism against a US-based company...

      Also never mind that the most of the co-defendants are located outside the US, are not US citizens, and therefore couldn't give a rat's ass about 1st Amendment protected speech...

      OK, so maybe the plaintiff has no assets, yada, yada, yada, so any damages awarded would never be paid, but maybe they could get a judge to smack the idiot lawyer for stupidity.

    6. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      Probably little chance of suing them per se, and even less chance of a tangible outcome, but they could make life interesting for the rest of us by issuing a request for discovery of all the names of the "offended" parties should the case be accepted by the courts. Of course, the usual IANAL disclaimer applies to all of the above commentary . . .

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    7. Re:Any chance of countersuing them? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      Probably not. The suit was brought by a non-profit company, probably with no assets, formed with the specific purpose of initiating this lawsuit.

      I was thinking of something along the lines of claiming that the suit itself was harassment - barratry - at which point it ought to be possible to "pierce the veil" of a corporation formed for the purpose and go after the principles' funds.

      But maybe I'm confused.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  10. Interesting... probably by SamBC · · Score: 1

    I will read the Spamhaus response, when I can actually get to it.

    In any case, one can only hope that this somehow bites the spammers on the butt more than if they hadn't bothered in the first place. And why does everyone act as if the US courts have global jurisdiction?

    1. Re:Interesting... probably by nexex · · Score: 2, Informative

      because for civil lawsuits, you can bring a suit against anyone in the world, they dont have to pay though, as long as they dont come to america. its like that lawsuit that awarded a judgement of $150,000,000 or what ever for 9/11 victims families against the taliban, saddam hussein, and bin laden

      --
      Winter 2010: With Glowing Hearts
    2. Re:Interesting... probably by Samari711 · · Score: 2, Funny

      actually, because it's a florida court that means that they just have to avoid florida. so theoretically, if the spammers were to win, when they asked steve linford what he was going to do after he stopped spammers he couldn't say "i'm going to disney world!"

      --

      I never said I was smart, I just said I was smarter than you

    3. Re:Interesting... probably by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      because for civil lawsuits, you can bring a suit against anyone in the world, they dont have to pay though, as long as they dont come to america.

      And what happens if someone who's been sued in this way does visit the USA at some point? Do they put him in jail until payment is made or something? If I go somewhere it's not like I carry the deeds to all of my property and the complete contents of my bank accounts along in my suitcase. Someone might be able to seize the $20 in my wallet, but how would they go about getting my other assets if they are not conveniently in my pocket at that moment?

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    4. Re:Interesting... probably by catman · · Score: 1

      RTFA. The suit is filed in a FEDERAL court which happens to be in Florida. (And I have to abandon this e-mail address soon, it's on
      millions of "millions of addresses" CDs -)

    5. Re:Interesting... probably by will_die · · Score: 1

      If you had a legal right to get the property you could then present the papers to the UK, and based on agreements between the US and the UK go that way.

  11. Obligatory Google Cache by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    They're used to fighting spam...not a slashdot...so here's the cache. Google Cache

  12. No ground by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I think the key point here is that use of an IP blacklist is entirely voluntary. So this sleazeball can hardly claim that Spamhaus is actively trying to "block his business".

    Talk about clueless and groundless.

    1. Re:No ground by secolactico · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Talk about clueless and groundless.

      Groundless, yes. Clueless, I don't think so. They are simply playing dumb and hoping to stir the hive to get some honey (wich might very well end in them getting stung).

      Some believe that thieves are the best security advisors. This guy probably knows all about spam and anti-spamming methods, and if he doesn't, he probably has a tech person who does.

      And if, as a lawyer, he seriously expect this lawsuit to prosper, he is even more incompetent than Lionel Hutz (yes, this is a gratuitous Simpsons reference).

      --
      No sig
    2. Re:No ground by shut_up_man · · Score: 4, Informative

      The other key point in the document is that the Spamhaus Black List (SBL) blocks spam at the destination, not the source. This is a nice implementation of the "you're free to say whatever you like, but I'm free not to listen" aspect of free speech, which is often used by spammers to justify their annoying practices.

  13. GC by Adam9 · · Score: 2, Informative

    GC

  14. Read the google mirror by Cirkit · · Score: 1

    Google has the Spamhaus reply. Go go google. :)

  15. are they stupid? by OmniVector · · Score: 1

    Ok, you're an organization that sends UNSOLICITED emails, and you're attacking an organization who keeps a list of ips? No one is forced to use spamhaus's list -- they use the list because they don't want to receive your crap.

    --
    - tristan
  16. Yet Another Solution to Spam by ceswiedler · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think it's inevitable...

    Since it's impossible to verify the actual sender of any email, we need to be stricter about validating the server who sent it (most recently). AOL and MSN and the large corporations will eventually ban all email not coming from a small (< 100 domains) set of 'trusted hosts'. This will hurt small companies and small ISPs; the answer is that they will have to route their mail through a trusted host (or through someone else, who in turn...). These trusted hosts will become something like (and possibly run by) Verisign and other CAs. The small senders will have to pay for the authentication the trusted host provides (which they will pass on to their customers). This is already something like what ISPs do, when they refuse to forward SMTP mail except from their own block of IP addresses.

    If a trusted host allows spam to be sent through it (on a large enough scale), then it is in danger of losing its 'trusted' status. Unless of course, it acknowledges its spammy status and pays (bribes?) the other trusted hosts to allow it to remain. The end result will be that spammers will have to pay (considerably) for the privilege of sending spam through a trusted host. Normal users will have to pay (a small amount) for the privilege of sending non-spam through a trusted host.

    This isn't a radical idea, it's simply whitelists taken to their logical, structured conclusion.

    1. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      You just reinvented Usenet. :-)

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    2. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Kpt+Kill · · Score: 1

      Why cant ISPs check header information and check to see weather or not 111.111.111.111 is a valid block for the domain someone@somewhere.net if it is, then let it pass. if not throw it out. isnt this how spamcop (http://www.spamcop.net) checks for spam-ness?

    3. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent. I can see Verisign starting up a business to list your mail servers as guaranteed non-spam sending hosts. Essentially, the reverse of the RBL - listing servers we trust. Send unsolicited email, get kicked off the list. Sign up for a subscription to the list (what, you think it'll be FREE?) and get your domain/servers listed for free.

      The spammers will have nowhere to go.

    4. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Sounds to me like a de facto corporate email tax. Count me out. I'd just as soon have the USPS take over the email infrastructure.

      Seriously, I don't think is the right direction to go. We need to wean ourselves from SMTP and replace it with a protocol that isn't so credulous. If decent authentication was built into the mail protocol, it wouldn't be long before every spammer was blacklisted.

      One thing I've been wondering about: if the big ISPs really hate spam so much, why don't they make their dial-up IP ranges easily accessible, public knowledge? Blocking dial-up users is an effective way to throttle a large percentage of spam, but the only way I know to currently get a comprehensive list of those IPs is to purchase it from MAPS.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    5. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by amuro98 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Some places do, but that won't catch a lot of spam.

      I get a lot of spam (and legit mail) that doesn't include a domain name.

      I get a lot of spam from malconfigured mail/proxy servers, or from compromised, unsecured machines elsewhere on the network. In these cases, the IP# really does match the domain that sent the mail, but the content is 100% spam.

      I guess you *COULD* configure your mailserver to reject email from IP#s that aren't listed as mailservers for that domain according to their DNS records...but again, domains running malconfigured mailservers (like the country of korea is doing), or those domains that deliberately use fake/munged DNS information will still get their spam through.

      In short, there is no single rule to detect spam 100% of the time with no false positives. The best system I've seen is SpamAssasain which can be configured to use the SBL, SPEWS, or other blacklists, and uses a series of configurable rules to assign a "weight" to each message. Even then, you'd be suprised at how legitimate, innocent mail will get such a high weight sometimes.

    6. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Because a great deal of the internet isn't configured the way it should. Most mail handlers will do some basic verification of who the sender claims to be, but that usually stops at making sure the domain exists ("HELO foo.com".) Very few check forward and inverse DNS.

      And almost zero process the headers of the incoming spew (that's left to the user/admin to do after the message is received.) At any rate, once you've received the entire message, what's the point? You've already "paid" for it. Spammers go to unbeleivable lengths to randomize their spew to thwart pattern recognition systems.

      I've been very tempted to build something like LaBrea to trap spammers. "You can send me that spam... at one character per hour, and I'm not listening."

    7. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      One thing I've been wondering about: if the big ISPs really hate spam so much, why don't they make their dial-up IP ranges easily accessible, public knowledge? Blocking dial-up users is an effective way to throttle a large percentage of spam, but the only way I know to currently get a comprehensive list of those IPs is to purchase it from MAPS.

      Try http://www.blackholes.us/

    8. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by letxa2000 · · Score: 2, Informative
      I've been very tempted to build something like LaBrea to trap spammers. "You can send me that spam... at one character per hour, and I'm not listening."

      I did this last year. I modified my Sendmail to analyze incoming messages in real-time. If the source IP was known spam it took about 60 seconds between SMTP replies. Problem is, once you get to the DATA phase which is where the bulk of their transmission is, it's a single-shot with no flow control. I would have loved to have accepted their payload at 1 character every 10 seconds, but unfortunatelly once they issue the "DATA" command it all comes through in a single hit.

      Also, if you take too long to SMTP reply to their commands, they hang up and do it again. So instead of dealing with the SMTP conversation and spam once, you deal with the SMTP conversation until they get sick of trying (which sometimes is never, literally).

    9. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Blymie · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.

      Sounds like a job for bandwidth limiting on their IP. ;) CBQ could slow it down to a bunch of characters per minute ;)

    10. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Well, technically, this would not be managed by sendmail. And I can do this for almost nothing on the router...

      Go find a version of LaBrea and learn how it does it. (arp spoofing to deal with nimbda.) It's actually pretty damned evil and 105% effective.

    11. Re:Yet Another Solution to Spam by thogard · · Score: 1

      uucp mail would be better. I've played with taking email messages and finding out how far their /24 is from a list of known usenet sites (from the top 1000) and that gives me a very good metric for spam. If they are close, its most likly not spam. Maybe its time to dig out the uucp-paths code and plug it back into sendmail.

  17. slapped down already by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    spamhaus.org really should have learned from the LAST time a /.'ing smacked them off the internet. Geez!

    Hopefully someone mirrored it. :)

  18. Text of the site, part 1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative



    The Spamhaus Project, London, UK

    Answer to Case Number 03-80295
    Filed in United States District Court, Southern District of Florida by EMarketersAmerica.org (aka Mark E. Felstein) on behalf of anonymous senders of Unsolicited Bulk Email ("Spam").

    The Spamhaus Project receives a great many threats of legal action from senders of Unsolicited Bulk Email (aka "spammers"). The cases attempted to-date have either never been accepted by a lawyer for filing or have been thrown out by the courts as being without merit.

    Lawsuit 03-80295, filed by an anonymous group calling itself EMarketersAmerica.org (registered only 4 weeks ago to one Mark Felstein, the same lawyer who filed this case... i.e: the Plaintiff is the lawyer), is a SLAPP suit intended to harass those named. With regards to Spamhaus, the suit seeks an injunction to stop Spamhaus from publishing the IP addresses of the anonymous entity the Plaintiff represents on the Spamhaus Block List ("SBL"), an IP Preference List used freely and voluntarily by 140 Million Internet users to reject incoming spam emails from confirmed spam senders. The Plaintiff clearly believes he has a right to force SBL users to receive his spam. Spamhaus categorically rejects the argument that any Sender has a right to force the users of our SBL system to receive unsolicited bulk email messages.

    The lawsuit requests an answer. The following is the answer of Spamhaus director Steve Linford on behalf of The Spamhaus Project:

    GENERAL ALLEGATIONS, JURISDICTION, AND VENUE

    I . Plaintiff, EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG, INC., (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "EMARKETERS"), is a Florida Non Profit Corporation with its principal place of business in PALM BEACH County, Florida. EMARKETERS' membership base consists of email marketers, internet services providers domiciled in and throughout Florida, and other related businesses, which operate their businesses throughout the United States and the World.

    2. Defendant, SPEWS.ORG d/b/a THE HERMES GROUP (hereinafter referred to as "SPEWS"), is a United States of America based entity, which operates
    a blacklist of other's Internet Protocol addresses. Additionally, SPEWS and its principals sell products which block the electronic transmission and Internet communications of American citizens and businesses. SPEWS
    posts on the Internet and intentionally delivers information in its express efforts to interrupt and block the internet traffic of lawful
    businesses and individuals. SPAMHAUS maintains a list of other's Internet Protocol addresses and servers. SPEWS operates and conducts its
    activities through the Internet at www.SPEWS.org. Plaintiff is informed and believes that SPEWS has two offices located in California and one in Illinois.

    3. Defendant, SPAMHAUS.ORG d/b/a THE SPAMHAUS PROJECT (hereinafter referred to as "SPAMHAUS"), is a United Kingdom based entity, which operates a blacklist of other's Internet Protocol addresses.

    Specifically, Spamhaus operates the Spamhaus Block List ("SBL"), a DNS-published advisory list of IP addresses of confirmed junk email senders, known as the SBL Advisory, which allows SBL users to reject incoming spam emails.

    Additionally, SPAMHAUS and its principals sell products which block the electronic transmission and communications of American citizens and
    businesses.
    Spamhaus does not sell any product whatsoever and never has sold any product. The SBL is published free of charge and does not block the transmission of email, it specifically blocks the receipt of junk email by computers belonging to SBL users.

    SPAMHAUS posts on the Internet and intentionally delivers information in its express efforts to interrupt and block the Internet traffic of lawful businesses and individuals.

  19. Text of the site, part 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The "Internet traffic" (i.e: email) of 'lawful businesses and individuals' (i.e: senders of spam, the sending of which is illegal in 27 US States), is not blocked at the sending mail servers (the servers owned/operated by the spammers EMarketersAmerica allegedly represents), but is blocked by the recipients' own private mail servers, i.e: the blocking occurs at the point of ingress into the private mail servers of SBL users.

    The SBL is used by SBL users (and SBL users alone) freely and voluntarily to reject unwanted spam email messages at the SBL users' own private mail servers. It does not prevent, interrupt or block the IPs listed from sending email, it merely prevents the known-to-be-unwanted messages they send from trespassing on the private computer equipment and networks of SBL users.

    SPAMHAUS maintains a list of other's Internet Protocol addresses and servers. SPAMHAUS operates
    and conducts its activities through the Internet at www.SPAMHAUS.org SPAMHAUS is believed to have an office in the United States, but the whereabouts are unknown.

    Spamhaus does not have any office in the United States. The sole office is in the UK.

    SPAMHAUS has at least six (6) name-servers, all
    of which are pointed, directed, and which transmit through Defendant, CSL GMBH JOKER.COM.

    Spamhaus has a total of 22 Name Servers in 10 countries. Had the Plaintiff bothered to query the DNS for the SBL zone (sbl.spamhaus.org) he would have seen that none of the SBL servers are pointed, directed or transmit though" the German Domain Registrar Joker.com

    4. Defendant, CSL GMBH JOKER.COM (hereinafter referred to as "JOKER"), is an authorized registrant of domains on the world wide web within the internet. JOKER is a corporation organized under the laws of Germany. JOKER registered SPAMHAUS and SPEWS, but has failed to provide a proper and correct addresses to the public for same.

    The address Joker.com provides for Spamhaus.org is the true and correct address of Spamhaus.

    5. Defendant, STEVE LINFORD (hereinafter referred to as "S. LINFORD") is an individual and is believed to be a resident and domiciliary of the
    United Kingdom, but has concealed his whereabouts.

    Steve Linford has never concealed his whereabouts. Steve Linford is a British Subject and resides in the United Kingdom exactly where he has always said he does and his address and phone number is available to anyone who bothers to ask.

    S. LINFORD is otherwise sui juris before this court. Plaintiff is informed and believes that S. LINFORD is an officer, director and principal of SPAMHAUS and SPEWS.

    Steve Linford is the director of Spamhaus. Steve Linford has absolutely nothing to do with SPEWS, nor would it be feasible for him to run two separate anti-spam organizations. Aside from the madness of doing so, Steve Linford does not agree with the methods and policies of SPEWS. He does however support SPEWS' right to exist.

    6. Defendant, JULIAN LINFORD (hereinafter referred to as "J. LINFORD") is an individual and is believed to be a resident and domiciliary of the
    United Kingdom, but has concealed his whereabouts. J. LINFORD is otherwise sui juris before this court. Plaintiff is informed and believes that J. LINFORD is an officer, director and principal of
    SPAMHAUS and SPEWS.

    Julian Linford is Steve Linford's brother who has resided permanently in Italy since 1997 and has absolutely no knowledge of Spamhaus (except what he possibly reads in the press) nor the faintest idea what SPEWS is, nor whom any of the other persons named in this SLAPP suit are. He is categorically not an officer, director or principal of any anti-spam group or organization, Spamhaus or otherwise.

    7. Defendant, ALAN MURPHY (hereinafter referred to as "MURPHY") is an individual and is believed to be a resident and domiciliary of the State
    of Washington. MURPHY is sui juris before this court. Plaintiff is informed and believes that MURPY is an officer, director and principal
    of SPAMHAUS and

  20. Can anyone answer me this? by Sandman1971 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've always wondered about this. Excuse my possible ignorance, but I'm from Canada where the legal system is different than the States.

    How can spammers sue anti-spam list maintainers? RBLs are purely voluntary. Companies/ISPs aren't forced by law to use RBLs. They implement RBLs out of their own volition (hopefully after doing a bit of research of the RBL in question).

    I can see a point of a non-spammer is accidentaly added to the list and the RBL company refuses to remove the 'offending' company. But in this case, these are known spammers. They don't deny that they send out spam. It just doesn't make any sense. The spammers should be charged with wasting the court's time.

    --
    It's better to burn out than to fade away
    1. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

      Here in the US you may sue anyone for any reason. Whether or not your case is thrown out of court is another matter...

    2. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Sandman1971 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ack, meant to hit preview, not submit... oh well... Other thoughts: How are RBLs any different from other anti-spam services like Brightmail, or even firewalls (IE: I host my own mail, and I've pretty much blocked all of China and Korea so far, along with a few dozen overseas ISPs). All these are done voluntarily. Does this mean an ISP in China has a right to sue me just because I decided to block their CIDR block for the constant flow of spam that came my way (usually thru open relays)? Does this mean companies like Brightmail should be sued, even if they only block specific emails, and not domains/IPs like RBLs do? Does this mean that any ISP or company can sue me since I block all mail from sources that don't resolve reverse DNS?

      I'm a sysadmin for a large ISP. We sometimes are added to RBLs (happens when you have millions of users. Either the user knowlingly did it, or got hacked, or has a trojan). Does this mean we should have a right to sue the RBL company for adding us to their list?

      --
      It's better to burn out than to fade away
    3. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by chota · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think that's exactly the point, and why Spamhaus responded the way they did. No, common sense is the same in the States... at least among non-idiots. ;) Let's just hope they get a good judge that immediately tosses this one out, and, yes, must pay reparations for wasting the court's time. chris.

    4. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by jcr · · Score: 1

      How can spammers sue anti-spam list maintainers?

      Oh, you can sue anyone for anything. The question is whether you can win, and whether the judge will decide to bitch-slap your attorney for wasting the court's time.

      I'm looking forward to some serious counter-charges here.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    5. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Ironica · · Score: 5, Informative

      How can spammers sue anti-spam list maintainers?

      In the US, you can file a suit for anything. You risk countersuit and charges for frivolous lawsuits for filing blatantly false and harrassing lawsuits, which is what happened in this case.

      EMarketersAmerica.org claims in their suit, among other things, that:

      - Spamhaus and SPEWS are run by the same people.
      - Steve Linford's brother, who lives in Italy and knows nothing about Spamhaus, is one of those people running both sites.
      - Spamhaus has an office in the US.
      - Spamhaus sells products.
      - Spamhaus' products "destroy" and "intercept" legitimate email transmissions.
      - Spamhaus has *appropriated* IPs belonging to EMarketersAmerica member organizations for their own use and profit. (Tell me, how on Earth do you do that? I want to steal MS's block...)

      They make many other false statements, but those are the doozies.

      These are people who make their living by digitally date-raping whoever they can find. (And, yes, I use that word... please, I get emails about enlarging my member on a daily basis, and I'm a WOMAN, for crying out loud. At least send me breast enlargement ads instead.) They have no compunction about breaking more laws by filing a frivolous and false lawsuit in hopes that it will scare someone off.

      The good news is, Steve Linford, if he has the time and money to do so, now has an excellent countersuit, which could make a lot of those spammer's documents public record. Big ifs, but stranger things have happened.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    6. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      The only similar case I can think of is where a website published the home numbers and addresses of people who worked for a collection agency, which this is generally accepted as being wrong. No one wants to get phone calls related to work while home, but at the same time, the list maintainer might be justified providing contact information for people who make harrassing phonecalls.

      But your ignorance is understandable. I don't know of anycase in law, american or otherwise, where it was considered inapproperate to post a list of mail server IP addresses. I mean, I would guess that the suit is based on the simple fact that any spam list maintainer does indeed do *damage* to spammer companies, which is exactly what they are trying to do. But the only logical connection I can think of are cases of slander/liable where the plantif only needs to prove that damages were done, and the defendant needs to prove that statments made are accurate.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    7. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      digitally date-raping whoever they can find. (And, yes, I use that word... please, I get emails about enlarging my member on a daily basis, and I'm a WOMAN, for crying out loud.

      Sorry, that is not the same. Getting email about enlarging your none-existent dick is not the same as forced sex.

    8. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny


      Sorry, that is not the same. Getting email about enlarging your none-existent dick is not the same as forced sex.


      Um... wait.... I know this one....

      Forced sex is the better one, right?

    9. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Ironica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry, that is not the same. Getting email about enlarging your none-existent dick is not the same as forced sex.

      Nor is unsolicited commercial bulk email the same as a certain "meat" product made by Hormel. However, being forced to sort out graphic, unwanted emails from the real stuff is to having to cope with some man trying to force himself on me, as unsolicited commercial email is to Hormel's answer to the hungry American. Therefore, the use of the word "digital" to preface the phrase. (Also, date-rape as opposed to stranger-rape, as it is as much about people's f'ed up sense of what rights a person has over their own experience than about violence.)

      Sorry to have confused you. Hope this helps.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    10. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by amuro98 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The lists maintained by SPEWS, SBL, etc. are little more than opinions saying I think the following ISPs are irresponsible and/or are harboring spammers..."

      The fact that admins of domains can then use that information to allow their mailserver(s) to allow/reject mail from those domains is a separate matter.

      There are then services, like Brightmail, which provide filtered email services to end users or ISPs. Brightmail's website will provide you with details on what they use for filtering, be it SPEWS, SBL, something else, or (most likely) a combination of all of the above.)

      At any rate, organizations like SPEWS and SBL only provide the data. They do not implement it. As an ISP, your only legal recourse for being blocked due to a listing would be to go after each individual ISP that is blocking you. Even then, unless you had a contract with that ISP saying they MUST accept all mail from your domain, there's not a whole lot you can do. Laws vary from place to place, but the concept of "private property" seems pretty universal - and that's what every domain, and ISP network is - PRIVATE PROPERTY. No domain anywhere is *required* to accept mail from all of the internet.

      Most lists provide documentation on their listing and delisting policies. This is both for admins wishing to use the list (do they agree with the criteria), as well as for admins wondering what happend to get them listed in the first place.

      As for your employer's situation, getting onto a list usually occurs for the following reasons:

      * Signing up of a spammer who's so infamous, that he and the poor sucker of an ISP that signed him up are immediatly blocked as a preventative measure. (ie. it's not a matter of IF he'll spam...)

      * Preceived slack/slowness/cluelessness of your employer's abuse desk. This doesn't mean you have to have your abuse desk write personal responses to each and every person who sends a complaint...just have them do their job, and eliminate your misbehaving customer.

      No reasonable person is going to expect instantaneous action, either. I think 2-3 days (TOPS) should be enough to deal with most cases, even with a 1% spammer infestation. Again, most people aren't going to expect a personal reply. Not getting the same spam from your customer is usually good enough. (and will keep you off the lists!)

      Finally, you might want to look into proactively discouraging spammers from signing up by creating a new clause in your customers' contracts stating that if the account is terminated due to spam, you will charge the customer a clean up fee (usually $500-$2000.) ISPs that have enacted such a clause see the spam emanating from them drop off quickly - and hey, if someone is STILL stupid enough to spam, use the money to throw a beer bust. :)

      Seriously though, if your abuse desk does their job in a timely manner, you shouldn't have any problems with listing services.

    11. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by zogger · · Score: 1

      --you have the right to sue, but if you want to stay on the good guys side, you have the right to educate all your customers as well. I'm sure most folks who get hacked or used as relays really don't want that to happen, they are just ignorant of what happens and what to do about it. Have you and your company done much in the way of educating those folks with _detailed_ instructions on how to maintain their machines and be good "netizens" then? Do you filter at the ISP level at all? Wouldn't efforts like that be better than just joining the endless sue, block, counter sue, counter block wars? You can even offer all your customers your partial solution, ask them if they would like to have their email address added to the nation domain blocking. I bet you'd get a lot of takers-not all, but a lot. maybe that is possible. I'm sure there are more solutions as well out there, but that isn't the main point.

      The old saying goes like this --> "it is better to light one small candle than to curse the darkness".

      SPAM is everyones (on the net) problem, so any solution that actually *works* will have to involve this "everyone" guy.

    12. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by yuri+benjamin · · Score: 1

      Finally, you might want to look into proactively discouraging spammers from signing up by creating a new clause in your customers' contracts stating that if the account is terminated due to spam, you will charge the customer a clean up fee (usually $500-$2000.)

      This is actually an excellent idea. $500 would be about right for chasing down all blacklist operators and negotiating removal. It does, after, take a paid admin considerable time to sort out the mess.

      --
      You make the mistake of thinking you can educate the fundamental stupidity out of people. You can't.
    13. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Sandman1971 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your answers, but I wasn't really looking for them ;) I know what Brightmail is, I know what RBLs are, (and why we sometimes get on them). These were not questions, but statements. After all, as I stated above, I am a sysadmin for a national ISP, not some lil mom & pop shop ;)

      --
      It's better to burn out than to fade away
    14. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 2, Funny
      These are people who make their living by digitally date-raping whoever they can find. (And, yes, I use that word... please, I get emails about enlarging my member on a daily basis, and I'm a WOMAN, for crying out loud. At least send me breast enlargement ads instead.) They have no compunction about breaking more laws by filing a frivolous and false lawsuit in hopes that it will scare someone off.

      Care for a trade then? I'm a guy and I get numerous breast enlargement spams these days. (I knew it was a bad thing to claim I'm female on those online forms years ago...) With our combined spam, I can finally have my 50 foot penis and you can have a ZZZ372 cup! (back aches included)

    15. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by valmont · · Score: 1

      Dave? ;]

    16. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Ripplet · · Score: 1

      And in fact, how is this different to any website blocking software, which uses similar means and similar lists? Anyone?

      --

      Skiing? Check out The Independant Skiers Portal

    17. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Duckling · · Score: 1

      - Spamhaus' products "destroy" and "intercept" legitimate email transmissions. - Spamhaus has *appropriated* IPs belonging to EMarketersAmerica member organizations for their own use and profit.

      Ahh.. what a beaut.. These must be my favourite points of the spamming idiot's suit. I mean.. how dumb can you get?

    18. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Bigbutt · · Score: 1

      Dave's not here.

      --
      Shit better not happen!
    19. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Asprin · · Score: 1


      Spamhaus has *appropriated* IPs belonging to EMarketersAmerica member organizations for their own use and profit. (Tell me, how on Earth do you do that? I want to steal MS's block...)

      Did they actually use the abbreviation "IP" specifically with respect to TCP/IP address bocks? I wonder if by "IP" they meant "Intellectual Property"?

      It makes more sense than believing these morons can understand how internet addesses and packet routing works well enough to set up a fairly sophisticated and successful network of systems designed to deliver email messages by deceiving every other internet system in existence about their true intentions, AND THEN go on to sue someone else for somehow using IP addresses allocated to them without reconfiguring all the other routers on the internet.

      This is just stupid.

      --
      "Lawyers are for sucks."
      - Doug McKenzie
    20. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I knew it was a bad thing to claim I'm female on those online forms years ago...

      Gasp! Dark Lord Seth... you mean... you aren't really... a woman?!?!! Does that mean I meant nothing to you? NOTHING?

    21. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Larsing · · Score: 1

      common sense is the same in the States... at least among non-idiots


      That depends entirely on which is the most common... ;-)

      --
      Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
    22. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by jo2y · · Score: 1

      I'll trade you. I think my man breasts are large enough :)

    23. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by chota · · Score: 1

      *sigh*

      Sadly, I would have to agree. Common sense is not as common as it should be...

      Oh well, work with what you got.

      cheers.

    24. Re:Can anyone answer me this? by Ironica · · Score: 1
      Did they actually use the abbreviation "IP" specifically with respect to TCP/IP address bocks? I wonder if by "IP" they meant "Intellectual Property"?

      Here's the quote:
      39. Defendants, S. LINFORD, J. LINFORD, MURPHY, WILSON, GUNN, SOBOL, SHARP, TIETJENS, BROWER, JARED, SPAMHAUS and SPEWS converted said Internet Protocol addresses and servers to their own use and for their own financial gain.

      "Stupid" is an understatement.
      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  21. Lets get them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut them down, check out the following sites!:

    http://s4d.org

    http://spamtraffic.com

  22. The Spammers should be Sued by btakita · · Score: 1
    For:
    • Wasting Time
    • Wasting Money
    • Wasting Bandwidth
    • Stealing Bandwidth
    1. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by kupo+zero · · Score: 1

      Whose money are they exactly "wasting"? It doesn't cost the user any money to hit the delete button. If any money at all is being wasted, it is the spammers, not ours.

    2. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by ahodgson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A substantial portion of the fees you pay to your ISP are to cover mail server capacity and bandwidth devoted to receiving spam.

    3. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by kupo+zero · · Score: 1

      Regardless of what your fees are used for, you still have to pay them. Now, if the fees were to increase, that'd be a different story.

    4. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by DennyK · · Score: 1

      First, time is money. Lost productivity translates into lost money in any business. It may not be much on an individual basis, but taken collectively, on a company-wide, state-wide, country-wide scale, that's a lot of lost time spent deleting Viagra ads.

      Second, spam interferes with legitimate Internet traffic, especially email traffic. I work for a web hosting company. Not a month goes by without some idiot client deciding that sending out half a million emails with a script on his virtual hosting account is a brilliant marketing idea. This backs up mail delivery for hundreds of clients, which costs them business, which in turn costs us business when they cancel or move to a different company in a vain attempt to escape the effects of spammers.

      Third, spam wastes bandwidth, and that bandwidth costs money. Again, perhaps a relatively small amount next to other types of Internet traffic, but someone has to pay for that bandwidth on the receiving end eventually, and it adds up.

      So, yes, spam wastes money.

      DennyK

    5. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Your network connection cost money. The time it takes to download their crap is time you cannot be downloading pr0n and warez.

      Bandwidth "comsumed" in the same manner from your ISP (and every network between you and the spammer)... plus the server processing and storage space consumed holding that crap until you delete it.

      And the cost to the ISP(s) in admin time maintain mail servers.

      --

      Case in point, without a dedicated spam filtering system (running mail marshal), no one would be able to access their email because the exchange server would be on fire. There were many hours lost to spam overloading everything and people wading through deleting it (and a great many complaining to helpdesk staff about it.)

      The volume of traffic is more than most companies could support. Being the corp. office of a Telco/ISP, that's not really a problem. And in fact is more than most of our customers can support.

    6. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by BJH · · Score: 1

      Hello? Where were you when God handed out brains?

      Remember when you were on dialup? (Maybe you never were.) The longer you spent online, the more money it cost you. If you have to sit there downloading 50 spam emails for every legitimate one, that's costing you money.

      In some countries, you have to pay for data transfer by volume - so the more spam you have to download, the more you end up paying.

      Not to mention the cost to the ISP of employing people who spend large amounts of their time handling problems caused by spam.

      Oh, by the way, wasting my time is the *last* thing I want to happen - money I can make more of, but I can't get back the time I have to spend deleting spam.

    7. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by egburr · · Score: 1
      The fees are set to account for the need to survive the spammers' abuses. They are higher than they would be if the spammers were not abusing the ISPs. The ISPs do not charge a separate fee titled "due to spammers", it is charged under "operating costs" such as more and large hard drives to store the spam, more bandwidth to transmit/receive the spam, better CPUs to process the spam, administrative time to deal with the spam, etc.

      If it costs the ISP money, then it will end up costing the ISP's customers money.

      --

      Edward Burr
      Having a smoking section in a restaurant is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool.
    8. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      Well, according to AOL, it costs each subscriber about $2/mo. to make up for the added bandwidth, server and storage needs from spam.

      Other studies show spam makes up about 20% of all email, with projections to as much as 47% over the next 5 years.

      Oh, and if you're at work and have to hit delete on a spam that you got there, from your employer's point of view, you've just wasted the 1 second needed to click that button. Now multiply that 1 second by the number of employees in your office and multiply that by the number of spams you see each day, week, or year. A small company of 100 employees, each seeing a modest 5 spams a day * 365 days will waste over FIFTY HOURS A YEAR hitting delete.

    9. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by afidel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A substantial portion of the budget of my ISP both in time and capital is devoted these days to blocking and dealing with spam. I am personal friends with the owner of the ISP and he told me that the recent reduction in prices for dialup accounts would have been larger but he can't afford to do that due to the increased costs of dealing with spam, all of his other costs, from machinery to trunk lines, to BRI's have gone down, this is the only area of his business where costs are increasing.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    10. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Ah, but they do increase. My dialup account has increased twice in the last three years -- a total of 5$/month. (multiply by thousands of customers.)

    11. Re:The Spammers should be Sued by rifter · · Score: 1

      There are already ISPs claiming anywhere from 40-50% (AOL and MSN) to 80% of their current email traffic is spam.

  23. Your mission, should you choose to accept it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mark Felstein
    555 South Federal Highway, Suite 450
    Boca Raton, FL 33432

    561-367-7990

    mfels@aol.com

    You know what to do!

    1. Re:Your mission, should you choose to accept it: by GnuVince · · Score: 1
      You know what to do!

      Move all zigs?

    2. Re:Your mission, should you choose to accept it: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you mean mfels@aol.com

  24. Discovery! Yeah! by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Spamhaus should depose the plaintifs, and get the names of EVERY one of the greasy little bottom-feeders that's given them any money for this frivolous litigation.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  25. I'm not sure I understand this fully by zakezuke · · Score: 1

    Ok... so spamhaus.org publishes IP addresses of this spammer.... and is wrong for doing so?

    I'm sorta vague on the law aspect here, but near as I see it... EMarketersAmerica.org sends out mail. This goes without saying they are using some form of a sendmail server. Given this IP address of their mail server is typicaly given out everytime they send mail, how do they feel they can successfuly sue someone for publishing this information.

    I can see why they would be *annoyed* by the simple fact that it is now possible to block spam, but what can you do? If spamhaus.org was publishing the home addresses of people who send the spam, that would be wrong, but IP addresses of sendmail servers? I would think that any mail admin would have the right to organize lists of any *legit* mail server, let alone any mail server who clearly violates respective policies of respective ISPs.

    Private people are granted some rights to privacy, but that tends to go out the window for a business. There are presently no issues I'm aware regarding a list of UPS stations, USPS stations, or FedEX stations. Mailadmins atleast traditionaly looked at the headers of mail to help diagnose problems, and ususally this info available via whois records.

    So, at least in my minds eye, there shouldn't be a trully anonymous mailserver.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    1. Re:I'm not sure I understand this fully by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorta vague on the law aspect here, but near as I see it... EMarketersAmerica.org sends out mail. This goes without saying they are using some form of a sendmail server.

      On the contrary - they could be using postfix.
  26. Make your feelings known.... by TechnoGrl · · Score: 5, Informative

    Make sure you make your feelings known about spam to the originator of this lawsuit, lawyer Mark Felstein.

    FELSTEIN & ASSOCIATES, P.A.
    Attorneys for EMarketersAmerica.org, Inc.
    555 South Federal Highway, Suite 450
    Boca Raton, Florida 33432
    (561) 367-7990 Phone
    (561) 367-7980 Facsimile
    mark~ EMarketersAmerica.org

    BY :~ :~,_
    Mark E. Felstein, Esq.
    FBN: 192139

    --
    ----- In Your Cubicle No One Can Hear You Scream...
    1. Re:Make your feelings known.... by TechnoGrl · · Score: 4, Informative

      Oops... don't forget this one either ;)

      Mark Edward Felstein
      102 NE 2nd St # 200
      Boca Raton Florida 33432-3967
      Phone: 561/367-7980

      --
      ----- In Your Cubicle No One Can Hear You Scream...
    2. Re:Make your feelings known.... by TechnoGrl · · Score: 2, Informative

      And just in case *those* numbers don't work I just found

      http://www.flabar.org/tfbtemplates.nsf/newwebsit e? openframeset&frame=content&src=/Membership.nsf/MES earch?OpenForm

      Attorney Number: -- 192139
      Member in Good Standing
      .
      Mark Edward Felstein

      Felstein & Associates, P A
      555 S Federal Hwy Ste 450
      Boca Raton Florida 33432-5504
      .
      Phone: 561/367-7990
      Fax: 561/367-7980
      E-Mail: Felstein@bellsouth.net

      County: Palm Beach
      Circuit: 15
      Admitted: 02/25/2000
      Board Certification:
      Sections: Young Lawyers Division

      --
      ----- In Your Cubicle No One Can Hear You Scream...
    3. Re:Make your feelings known.... by aborchers · · Score: 2, Funny

      Thanks a lot! His office is between my house and job and now my commute time's going to double because of all the mail trucks converging on his office. :-)

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    4. Re:Make your feelings known.... by geekBass · · Score: 1

      Sweet. Someone should spam him. ;)

    5. Re:Make your feelings known.... by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      And in case *THOSE* don't work, here's some more:

      mark felstein
      P.O.Box 667933
      Pompano Beach, Florida 33066
      United States

      Registered through: Go Daddy Software (http://www.godaddy.com)
      Domain Name: EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG
      Created on: 16-Jan-03
      Expires on: 16-Jan-05
      Last Updated on: 16-Jan-03

      Administrative Contact:
      felstein, mark mefels@aol.com
      P.O.Box 667933
      Pompano Beach, Florida 33066
      United States
      9542887575 Fax --
      Technical Contact:
      felstein, mark mefels@aol.com
      P.O.Box 667933
      Pompano Beach, Florida 33066
      United States
      9542887575 Fax --

      Domain servers in listed order:
      PARK3.SECURESERVER.NET
      PARK4.SECURESERVER.NET

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    6. Re:Make your feelings known.... by quantaman · · Score: 1

      The others look like office contacts but this looks like the address for a residence. The office contact should be sufficient for leting them know about your feelings on the issue. Yes I know that we all hate spammers and lawyers who represent spammers seem like too good a target to be true but we should be careful that we don't cross the line. Yes they may deserve it, both spammers and lawyers, but should we really stoop to their level with harrassment and even death threats?

      I have to say that I don't fully mind the "spamming" of the spammers themselves. They knew what they were getting into and know that what they're doing is wrong (even if they don't admit it), they're not quite tobbaco exec brand of evil but they're still pretty bad. The lawyers however are just doing a job and like it or not everybody deserves to be represented. Now if they are doing this dishonestly than I'm sure there are steps that can be taken but be careful what we do in the meanwhile. If won't help our cause if we come across as a bunch of juvinile trolls lashing out indiscriminatly at anyone who happens to be associated with those we don't like. We can leave that to the Ashcofts and the mob, lets maintain perspective and not become the bad guys.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    7. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind they're prosecuting, not defending! They are going out of their way to try and destroy our liberties using frivilous lawsuits and costing legitimate business money. The lawyers that represent them are scumbags just as much as the spammers themselves.

    8. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1
      While I agree with you about the need to not be overly vindictive or spiteful, I can in all honesty say that I feel utterly no remorse for the dozen catalogs I 'accidentally' signed Felstein & Associates up for. These schmucks are adults. Mark knows exactly what he's doing and, after what happened to Ralsky, what the potential consequences are from his taking on such hypocritical slime for a client.

      My thinking is, if these fucktards like spam so much, they can rot in it for all I care. Every single of the twenty or so non-techies I told the Ralsky story to thought he got exactly what he deserved.

      What really worries me was one posting of Mr. Felstein's home address further on up. There was no source for the address and phone given, so I tried to find it myself. No luck; all I could find was a mention on a pay-people-search that gave a different city (N Miami Beach instead of Boca Raton). Also, a reverse lookup on the phone number yielded someone else entirely. So please, double-check the identity of your victim before you bomb them. As Quantaman says, our own government dispenses more than its fair share of indiscriminant punishment, no need for us to add to the mix.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    9. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spamming the following addresses:
      mark@EMarketersAmerica.org
      Felstein@bellsouth.net
      mefels@aol.com
      would be really naughty. Don't do it. Just in case, I'll spam-proof them:
      mark@EMarketersAmerica.NOSPAM.org
      Felstein@bellsouth.NOSPAM.net
      mefels@aol.NOSPAM.com
      Now people know you shouldn't spam them...

    10. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean

      mark@EMarketersAmerica.org?

      This clickable link will be much easier to use, making it easier to send Mark valuable offers he may be interested in. If he doesn't like it, he can just press delete.

    11. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget Felstein@bellsouth.net which was listed as his email address on the Florida Bar Association web site.

    12. Re:Make your feelings known.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only the good deserve mercy.

  27. Unfounded and silly by mao+che+minh · · Score: 1
    Spamhaus does not have the power nor the required resources to block or ban traffic either going to or coming from the spammers or their "products". All of this ultimately occurs at the user end, or at the ISPs on a voluntary basis (and it is entirely their and our right to do so).

    Therefore, their (the spammers) lawsuit is defeated by the reality of the mail delivery system(s).

    On a side note, those fucking spammers can eat a dick.

    1. Re:Unfounded and silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      On a side note, those fucking spammers can eat a dick.

      Indeed. In fact if i consult my caughtspam mailbox I notice the following subjects:

      Bitches taking it in every hole...

      Ferocious face f*cking...

      Which would suggest to me that they can, and do, eat dick. But be careful, afterall:

      They will make your balls explode!

  28. Mass mail ? by KoolDude · · Score: 1


    Spamhaus Responds To Spammer's Lawsuit

    Did they send a mass mail to members of e-marketeers to inform them of the response ? Oh no, that would be like spamming them.

    --
    getSexySig(); /* returns sexy signature */
    1. Re:Mass mail ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually not, since the "plaintiff" demanded a response.

  29. respectively interpret differently by Ptahian · · Score: 5, Informative
    With all due respect, I disagree with the portion of Mr. Linford's reply:
    The SBL is published free of charge and does not block the transmission of email, it specifically blocks the receipt of junk email by computers belonging to SBL users.
    In fact the list, does not block receipt. It can be used by the actual postmaster to facilitate that process, but they could do something else like filter the email into a "spam" mailbox for each user, or just gather statistics, etc. It's information nothing more nothing less. -Ptah
  30. /. effect by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be better to give links to the spammers than the people trying to clear up the c**p that they send to my mailbox?

    Then the famed 'effect' will be doing some good for a change...

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
  31. Answer to spam? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Maybe the answer to spam is for the president of the U.S. (a real one, not George Bush) to make a speech to the nation and ask everyone never to respond to unsolicited email. If no one ever responded, spam would not pay.

    Groups interested in public welfare need to get the message out.

    1. Re:Answer to spam? by sik+puppy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      better yet. just state that anyone who kills any of the major spammers will be given a full pardon for their act of public service.

      You think cockroaches scatter fast when the lights are turned on? Think how fast the spammers will scatter when its open season.

      This may be borderline flamebait, but since nothing else has worked to solve the spam problem.

      --
      The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  32. Support the defendants! Donate money to legal fund by tsvk · · Score: 5, Informative

    The SpamCon Foundation has set up a legal fund to aid spamfighters that need legal assistance.

    The defendants of this particular EMarketersAmerica suit also benefit from and endorse this fund.

  33. Sue for anything by nuggz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can sue for anything, really you can.

    You should be allowed to sue for anything.
    Who should judge what is worthy? A judge of course, nobody else should be allowed to make the decision if the case should proceed.

    I don't see a better solution.

    1. Re:Sue for anything by Ironica · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can sue for anything, really you can.

      You should be allowed to sue for anything.
      Who should judge what is worthy? A judge of course, nobody else should be allowed to make the decision if the case should proceed.

      I don't see a better solution.


      An excellent point, really. The problem is, it depends on a certain threshold amount of personal ethics and judgement, which we seem to have slowly sloughed off here in the US. You should be *able* to sue for anything, but you should not automatically come up with a lawsuit every time the world inconveniences you or takes away your favorite toy. Unfortunately, our legal system runs on dollars, not sense. It's not corrupt, really; it's just big and complicated (like a Hummer?), and the people who can give it enough fuel to get mileage out of it are those with lots of cash (yeah, like a Hummer). Meanwhile, there's thousands of "reasonable" lawsuits every day that never get as far as a filing, because people don't have the time and/or money to deal with it.

      There's a lawyer in Downtown Los Angeles named Nancy Mintie, who has been practicing for 24 years. She has never lost a case. Seems amazing on the face of it... but on a closer look, she does nothing but pro bono legal services for homeless and poor people. There are so many people down there who are being horribly exploited and abused, so there's tons of very solid cases to work with. You walk into a court room and tell them that a landlord has to do something about kids getting chewed on by rats in their sleep, you don't have much trouble at all. It's the big bucks lawsuits that are touch-and-go, because they often don't have a solid foundation to rest on.

      I've been trying to come up with a better solution, but really, how could you feasibly socialize the legal system? Universal Health Care is a cinch in comparison. After all, if the guy across the street has a better doctor than me, it doesn't mean he can take years away from my life. But if he's got a better lawyer, he can sue me for all I'm worth, and it may not matter if he has a better case than I do... as long as he has better representation.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    2. Re:Sue for anything by arkanes · · Score: 1

      I find your .sig very amusing and I wonder if you have a source for the quote?

    3. Re:Sue for anything by alister · · Score: 1
      I've been trying to come up with a better solution, but really, how could you feasibly socialize the legal system? Universal Health Care is a cinch in comparison. After all, if the guy across the street has a better doctor than me, it doesn't mean he can take years away from my life. But if he's got a better lawyer, he can sue me for all I'm worth, and it may not matter if he has a better case than I do... as long as he has better representation.
      Surely this demonstrates why (some?) socialisation of the legal system needs to take place? In Australia, we used to have meaningful legal aid. The Commonwealth also used to fund test cases against its own laws from time to time. And yet even this isn't enough to stop a good lawyer - providing enough of a case can be made. Often cases may be dismissed with no order on costs, you see, so you're left out of pocket for defending what, to you, may be frivolous. Perhaps socialised legal care can work in the way that socialised health care works (for the next week [yes, I'm serious]) here. We pay a Medicare levy, and get/got access to doctors who buy into the system. Buying in is not compulsory for doctors, but you're either in or you're out. Buyin in is compulsory for citizens and permanent residents though - for obvious reasons. So if I get hit by a truck, I get hospital care without having the doctors check my wallet before they check my pulse, and that's the same for all. Private medical insurance is available (although our scumbag Federal Government gives the private insurers billions per year, propping up inefficient private enterprises [Medicare's heaps more efficient - much less overheads] while they claim to be free marketeers) but not required.

      Anyway, a similar approach to the legal system, combined with no-fault payouts such as those put into practice in New Zealand, might be a way around lawsuits like these. Combine accessible legal defence with no-fault payouts (for personal injury) and judicious use of cost awards and you should be able to cut down on suits such as these, which will save quite a lot of money - both public and private.

      Alister

      Oh, and I like your alias...

    4. Re:Sue for anything by Prior+Restraint · · Score: 1

      I've been trying to come up with a better solution, but really, how could you feasibly socialize the legal system?

      And now for a touch of levity...

      I just finished reading The Dosadi Experiment. I really like the approach of the Gowachin legal system: two lawyers enter; one lawyer leaves.

    5. Re:Sue for anything by Robb · · Score: 1

      In cases that are particularly frivolous the plantif (or the lawyer if it is pro bono) should be made to pay the defendent's cost. My understanding is that in many cases this is allowed but is rarely done.

    6. Re:Sue for anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's just big and complicated (like a Hummer?)
      A Hummer isn't really complicated, neither this nor that

    7. Re:Sue for anything by thogard · · Score: 1

      If you look at how many tribunal cases (like US small clames court) there are, combined with all the other court cases you will find that Aussies sue more than Californians.

    8. Re:Sue for anything by rifter · · Score: 1

      After googling a bit, I found this interview which appears to be the source of the quote. The pertenant portion of the interview:

      When I asked Motion Picture Association of America president Jack Valenti whether the director of the highest-grossing movie of all time was the ideal spokesperson against petty theft, he tap-danced. 'I found the most convincing part to be the working stiffs,' said Valenti of the PSA, 'the guys who have a modest home and kids who go to public schools. They make $75,000 to $100,000 a year. That's not much to live on. I don't have to tell you that,' he said, vastly overestimating the U.S. poverty level and what I get paid for this column. I vowed right then not only to pirate a movie but also to find a way to use the Internet to steal directly from Jack Valenti's home....

    9. Re:Sue for anything by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Yes, that article is the source of the quote. It was written by Ben Shiller for the April 18, 2003 edition of Entertainment Weekly. Thanks for pulling a web reference for me ;-)

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    10. Re:Sue for anything by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Oops... by Joel Stein, entitled "Ben Shiller". Think, then type. That's the best solution.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  34. Nice Wording by elid · · Score: 1

    You gotta love how the spammers try to dress up their case: "The issuance of a temporary injunction will serve the public interest." Yeah, that would really be terrible not getting spam any more....I mean, I'd actually have to start reading and replying to some of the e-mail I get (or, at least, I _think_ I get).

  35. OT: Shai Hulud Rocks! by datawar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I miss their shows all of the time because I'm in college (it's like they try to play at the worst possible times!)

    1. Re:OT: Shai Hulud Rocks! by datawar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Errr.. I actually meant the band. The hardcore punk band. That rocks.

  36. Is Spamhaus sufficiently well funded? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need to make sure these guys have enough funds, and legal support to resist these nuisance attacks. If you use their service, make a contribution.

  37. Tactical mistake - Description of SBL by billstewart · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I'm not a lawyer, and I'm not sure whether Steve's "response" is just a public statement or is a document that's been submitted to the court, and I'm not going to speculate on whether he should or should not use any particular form of response since he's asserting that he's not under their jurisdiction. Having said that, howerver:

    Steve's response is very clear on the point that the SBL doesn't block the transmission of any messages, but he's fuzzy on whether it blocks the reception - in some places he says it does, while in other places he talks about the recipient blocking them. I thought that the SBL is implemented in a way that the user's email software does the blocking, after checking the site's status with the SBL. It's a potentially important difference - not so much for Steve or Spamhaus (because of the jurisdictional issues) but for the US plaintiffs. It shouldn't be - the recipient has every right to hire a blocking service to block spam for them, even if the one they've chosen to use charges no money - but it could make a difference to a jury or to a really clueless judge.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  38. Spam the spammer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Wasnt there some idea not so long ago to use the spammers representative email address/street address as 'opt-in' info for practically every known form of junk mail on the planet? I wonder what some of those same crazy people will do this time?

    1. Re:Spam the spammer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      How many subscriptions to Playboy, TV Guide, Reader's Digest, GQ, Time, Newsweek, US News and World Report, Business Week, etc. do you think he needs? :-)

    2. Re:Spam the spammer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?
      How many licks to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop?
      How many times can Microsoft get away with stealing ideas from their competitors and passing them off as their own?

      Who knows? Who cares?!? Just crush this spamming asshole-- I want the sidewalk around his mailbox to cave in from the weight!

  39. Missed One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plaintiff will suffer irreparable harm to its business reputation and loss of its good will

    Spammers still have good will and a reputation to lose? I think he should be forced to prove positive existence of this claim in court first, before being able to claim some injury. "No harm, no foul." As a "reasonable man", I seriously doubt the reputation and good will towards spammers that they've already trashed can be damaged further by any means whatsoever.

  40. It all smelz by Napoliandynamite · · Score: 1

    Deliver 300 bags of dog crap every day to their front doors, just to give em a taste of what it feels like.

    1. Re:It all smelz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm tempted to, but Boca Raton is a very nice place to visit, and I'd hate to see it ruined because of one jackass lawyer.

      I'm more tempted to box in his Boxster with it, though.

      I'm sure that there are any number of religious and charitable organizations who would like to solicit him for donations, though...

  41. This is Classic! by ToadSprocket · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This entire lawsuit is ridiculous, in fact, laughable at some points. Emarketers actually says that Spamhaus hijacked their IP addresses, and used them for their own gain. Huh? They also state repeatedly that Spamhaus blocks their IP addresses at the source, rendering their mail servers useless, in essence.

    These guys are technically clueless. If you are going to sue someone for technical reasons, at least know what the hell you are talking about. I mean, is it just file the suit and hope for a clueless judge or something?

    --


    If this article confuses you, don't worry. It was posted yesterday in a much clearer fashion.
    1. Re:This is Classic! by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      If Emarketers talk fast enough to convince a non-tech-savvy judge that their IP addresses and servers were hijacked, it's not a long step from there to getting Steve and the other named parties designated as terrorists... That would make it difficult for Steve and the other non-US based folks to travel, and could well end up in jail-time for the few named US folks.

  42. It doesn't matter... by Red+Meanie · · Score: 1

    It doesn't really matter if the case is groundless or not, spamhaus still has to pay to defend against it. Even if its the time it takes to write up the reply. Also, while the Flordia court doesn't have juristiction in the UK, Steve Linford would be if he ever visited the US. This tactic has been used in environmental law for quite some time. Throw lawsuits against whistle blowers to distract them. The corporations always have more money than the non-profit groups.

  43. mod parent up. it's the poster! by valmont · · Score: 2, Informative

    mod parent way up please :) that link of his contains interesting information on what lengths spammers went thru to manage people who were VAGUELY related to someone who ran spamhaus WITHOUT actually being involved in it.

  44. At least one bad point: by Kelmenson · · Score: 2, Insightful

    25. Defendants, S. LINFORD, J. LINFORD, MURPHY, WILSON, GUNN, SOBOL, SHARP, TIETJENS, BROWER, JARED, SPAMHAUS and SPEWS'S efforts are calculated to disrupt and destroy the businesses, and the business and personal reputations of the Plaintiff.

    Neither Spamhaus nor any of the Defendants named had ever heard of EMarketersAmerica prior to this SLAPP suit being filed. It follows therefore that they could not be harming the Plaintiff in any way.

    Thats a rather illogical argument. If Spamhaus was blindly blocking every IP address in the 100.x.x.x range, then even though they have never heard of the people in that range, they could still be harming them. It's quite easy to harm people you have never heard of.

    1. Re:At least one bad point: by ToadSprocket · · Score: 2, Informative

      Thats a rather illogical argument. If Spamhaus was blindly blocking every IP address in the 100.x.x.x range, then even though they have never heard of the people in that range, they could still be harming them. It's quite easy to harm people you have never heard of.

      Spamhaus does not block IP addresses. They publish a list of known spammers. It is then up to the subscriber to block those IP addresses, at the ingress point into their networks.

      If I lock my door because I don't want your filthy magazine, Kirby Vacuum, Security System, Candy, Pest Conrol selling ass in my house, who are you to sue me?

      --


      If this article confuses you, don't worry. It was posted yesterday in a much clearer fashion.
    2. Re:At least one bad point: by BJH · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What part of the word 'calculated' are you having trouble with?

      If Spamhaus had never heard of this outfit, it's a bit difficult for them to have deliberately attempted to disrupt their business, isn't it?

    3. Re:At least one bad point: by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not sure which way this goes. After all, emarketersamerica (spit twice) made it quite clear that they were supposed to be an organization representing anonymous clients who were harmed by the publication of the list. I'm wondering why it is even legal to bring suit anonymously, and I'm interested in seeing how the court handles that.

      But I think that Spamhaus should have accepted the gambit, and instead of pointing out that emarketersamerica (spit twice) didn't exist a month ago, they should have said that it would be impossible to answer the allegations without naming the entities the "trade organization" actually represented.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    4. Re:At least one bad point: by BJH · · Score: 1

      First rule of spam: Spammers lie.

      They'd never tell you who was really behind it.

    5. Re:At least one bad point: by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      However....Spamhaus and others can get it wrong.

      For example, one of my friends is IT at a place that's on a lot of blacklists, because the IP block is owned by some shiftless government organization with open relays.

      The IPs under his protection are clean and strictly watched, but it doesn't matter. Emails originating from his Class C are still blocked by many anti-spam filters.

      Getting your IP address unblocked from blacklists after it's been blocked is harder than fixing your credit rating after identity theft. Badly maintained blacklists are definitely worse than badly maintained SMTP access.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    6. Re:At least one bad point: by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      If I lock my door because I don't want your filthy magazine, Kirby Vacuum, Security System, Candy, Pest Conrol selling ass in my house, who are you to sue me?

      Or, even more absurd, who are you to be suing some third party who told me what you looked like and that you were a salesman?

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  45. Demand For Jury Trial by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The plaintiff demands a jury trial. Can I be on the jury? Huh, huh?

    Any other 11 of you peers want to join me?

    1. Re:Demand For Jury Trial by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      I've got Jury duty coming up. Too bad it is in a completely different state.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
  46. Spammers are suing the wrong people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I agree with the comments below that basically say "the spam lists are free speech." It's up to the ISPs whether they use them or not. I really don't think this lawsuit will succeed against the nebulous organizations like Spews and whatnot.

    However, to play devil's advocate, I think the spammers may have a cause of action against anyone who uses the SPEWS list or others, based on negligence. SPEWS unabashedly lists "innocents" who are guilty by association (i.e. they are webhosted by a webhoster that also has a spammer with a similar IP). For an sysadmin at an ISP or a business to the SPEWS list in total could easily be shown to be a negligent action resulting in a harm to legitimate business (not the spammers, but other users that have mail 'trapped' in the overbroad lists). If there were one or two lawsuits against sysadmins that resulted in these negligence claims, wham, spews is out of business because no one uses it.

    This is just an idea, and one that needs to be thought through a bit more. There is a lot of new caselaw being made here, so anyone who says they have the legal answer really doesn't understand the question. It's going to be interesting, and I really think legislative action is going to occur before case law is written all hodgepodge around the country.

    On a personal note, I'm not at 54 pieces of spam for every one piece of legitimate e-mail. One of the problems of having the same e-mail address since 1993. I fricking hate spam.

    1. Re:Spammers are suing the wrong people by aborchers · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ISPs are private businesses and are not required, unless their contracts stipulate so, to accept mail from every domain or IP address on the Internet, so where is the case against them?

      Then again, making such a defense might endanger the "common carrier" claim that a lot of ISPs make to avoid legal liability for what goes on on their network.

      At any rate, as long as spam-blocking is an optional service offered to users, then the receivers can be responsible for rejecting the mail, and I can't imagine even the current US courts ruling that consumers are required to accept unwanted commercial spew (unless of course its in the context of some otherwise offered service such as ad-supported free email accounts).

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
    2. Re:Spammers are suing the wrong people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ISPs are not common carries. Even the ones run by phone companies that are common carries. Nothing about the internet is covered under any common carrier statutes. That dog don't hunt, yet it's always brought up in /. forums.



      And as a reply to the reply, SPEWS doesn't list innocents. It lists ISPs that spam. Since ISPs that spam have historically attempted things like: dump all their spammers into a certain IP range, or move the spammers around to avoid blocklists.


      Spamming is a criminal act. Don't lose sight of that. Even without the relays and proxy raping, the fake headers, and the illegitimate products. The act of using someone else's property to transmit advertising is trespass to chattel This is established case law for nearly a decade now. After the case law, we have some 30 odd state laws to clarify the concept. ISPs that continue to KNOWINGLY give protection and a place for criminals to commit crimes cannot be trusted to send mail to me. SPEWS provides me that list of ISPs that cater to criminals.

    3. Re:Spammers are suing the wrong people by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Note the quote marks in my post. I am aware, in fact my introductory sentence makes clear, that ISPs are not common carriers. My claim was that they like to pretend to such status in order to dodge responsibility for what transits their network. I was originally going to go on about how the common carrier argument was belied by law and routine interference in user data space, but I figured I'd said enough. Guess not. Thanks for completing the picture for me...

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  47. mod parent up please. by valmont · · Score: 1

    mod parent up please. sounds like a great idea. however would this information be considered confidential? or since it's a public lawsuit, can those names remain public? or does it all have to remain under emarketersassholes.org blah? mmm.

  48. Are you thorough or what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...We're really glad you weren't the one going over our tax returns for the IRS, or we'd all be up shit creek!

    Good job on the info!

  49. A sue proof solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have a SPAMHAUS like org that will "blacklist" companies that they believe to support either spammers or ligitimate commercial email companies to people that don't want want to read it.

    anyone is free to use the black list... it's like only watching PBS on tv because you don't want to watch commercials.

  50. What are the IP's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we can just add block them ourselves...

  51. I am a SPAM survivor by Hao+Wu · · Score: 1

    Why is there no place for the victims? We suffer immensely from SPAM attacks. Writing back doesn't help, they only SPAM you more by sending you more SPAM.

    This message is to all spammers: HELL'S COMING TO YOU! You hear? You've SPAM'd the wrong Hao Wu!

    --
    I suggest you read Slashdot
  52. Spam vs. Commercial Email by dirk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I'm not up on exactly what type of "spam" the emailers are sending, but I think everyone needs to realize there are legitimate emailers and spammers.

    I hate spammers. They send out mass emailings to huge lists they buy (or they make up), usually through open relays and they refuse to take you off their lists. On the other hand there are some (I'm not usre how many) legitimate emailers who actually get their lists from things people sign up for. They send legitimate email through legitimate email servers and have legitimate ways to get yourself removed from their lists.

    The crusanders need to realize that mass emailing is like hacking, there are white, black, and grey hats. If I sign up for Yahoo and check the boxes saying I want to receive email about something, it is not spam, no matter how much I whine about it. If I can respond to the email and request to be taken off a list and actually be taken off of it, then it isn't spam. Not all commercial email is spam.

    As easy as it is to rail against spammers and paint all commercial email with the same brush, shouldn't we see if the people listed are following the appropriate rules, or if they are breaking them before we try and bury them?

    --

    "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    1. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by ToadSprocket · · Score: 1

      As easy as it is to rail against spammers and paint all commercial email with the same brush, shouldn't we see if the people listed are following the appropriate rules, or if they are breaking them before we try and bury them?

      I don't think this is a question of "Are these the bad guys?" The answer is clearly yes. Emarketers appears to be a front for one of the Kings of Spam, Eddy Marin, also based in Florida, as hard as it is to believe.

      You typically don't get added to Spamhaus if you aren't sending mass mailings by the tens/hundreds of thousands through open relays, using forged headers with no reverse DNS.

      Sure, there are always exceptions, but don't shed any tears for these guys.

      --


      If this article confuses you, don't worry. It was posted yesterday in a much clearer fashion.
    2. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If I sign up for Yahoo and check the boxes saying I want to receive email about something, it is not spam, no matter how much I whine about it. If I can respond to the email and request to be taken off a list and actually be taken off of it, then it isn't spam. Not all commercial email is spam.

      Let's be very clear on this. Your first statement is correct. Your second statement, however, seems to claim that it's not spam if the remove address works, which is 100% bullshit.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All I want to know is, how the hell am I supposed to tell the difference? I get e-mails from RedHat, because I signed up for their newsletters. I get them from Yahoo, because I signed up for their services.

      But how are you, the consumer, supposed to tell if one of your "white hats" is actually one of Yahoo's "marketing partners?" Seriously, every spam I get comes with a disclaimer that says I "opted in." I remember one especially infuriating one that listed about a dozen different ways to opt in, and at least half of them were so vague as to make it impossible to say, "no I didn't."

      My philosophy is, if I'm not absolutely sure I signed up for something, then kill them all. Let /dev/null sort them out. If an e-mail "marketer" is using some obscure loophole in some bogus website EULA, then they're not white hats. They're just not the deepest shade of black around.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    4. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      How do I tell the difference between spam and commericial email? To do so, I have to give them information showing that my email is active. I refuse to trust someone who has not given me any reason to trust them. I look forward to the development of a real system: for example, an actual trusted source which maintains an opt-in list for email. Then I might be willing to acknowledge the potential existence of non-spam commercial email.

      In regards to your last point, who are the members behind the lawsuit? I think the fact that they are anonymous says it all about whether or not they are legitimate business people.

      Also, I think that if RTFC (read the complaint) that it is pretty obvious that it is issued by someone who really does not know enough to be involved in a legitimate emailing business. Further, parts of it are clearly fraudulent and libelous. If these people had any real legal leg on which to stand, they would not have to make stuff up to file the lawsuit.

      I hope that the lawyer who filed the lawsuit is disbarred for abuse of his position as an officer of the court. I hope that he and his buddies are sued for libel, harassment, and other damages to the point that when they get out of jail from their perjury charges that they will be penniless.

      The sheer chutzpah of this lawsuit deserves an unequivocal response.

    5. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by salemnic · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right, there is a gap there. Maybe what we need is legislation that forces disclosure of where the address came from and who the sender really is. This could all be faked, of course, but at least it would give you a route to check.

      i.e.:

      Source: yahoo.com

      But I don't use a yahoo anything
      SPAM!!!!!!

      $.02

    6. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      I think everyone needs to realize there are legitimate emailers and spammers.

      Legitimate emailers do not send bulk mail unless they have a confirmed subscription from each recipient. Spammers send bulk mail without confirmed subscriptions. It's that simple.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    7. Re:Spam vs. Commercial Email by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      Let's be very clear on this. Your first statement is correct. Your second statement, however, seems to claim that it's not spam if the remove address works, which is 100% bullshit.

      Jaguar just send me an invite to go and drive their new XJ8 at Lime Rock Park. I don't think that is an exactly unwellcome intrusion. Nor is it exactly unreasonable to think that someone who bought an XK8 three years ago might be interested in an invitation to drive the new model.

      The invite came by mail but it would have been OK by email.

      I don't think it is unreasonable for a company I do business with to send me occasional mail. At some time perhaps we can get round to deciding exactly what the boundaries are. However first lets get rid of the vast bulk of outright criminal spam sent with fraudulent intent.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  53. Re:Not a bastard by milktoastman · · Score: 1

    Don't read any politics into my post above (to which this is a reply). The "20th hijacker" is probably one of the few people who I am actually glad has been caught in the constitutionally questionable net Ashcroft has thrown.

  54. Read closer... by tsvk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, but read the claim: ...efforts are calculated to disrupt and destroy...

    This suggests intentional, directed harm. And since Linford claims that he did not know EMarketersAmerica before the suit, it was impossible for him to have directed his actions intentionally against the plaintiffs.

    Sure, he could have harmed them unintentionally before since he did not know them. But the spammers claim otherwise.

    1. Re:Read closer... by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but his response does not make that clear. It should say something along the lines of:

      Neither Spamhaus nor any of the Defendants named had ever heard of EMarketersAmerica prior to this SLAPP suit being filed. Thus, we could not have intended harm against the Plaintiff EMarketersAmerica. Further, we have seen no proof that the plaintiff has suffered any harm.

      I suspect that EMarketersAmerica was hoping that no one would respond in the court so that they would win by default. Then, using that court decision, they could go after ISPs that use the SBL.

  55. Ahhh Boca Raton by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember that name many times. What another domain registered in Boca Raton that is sending my spam traps email? Oh great I banned them too I guess I'm in trouble.

  56. Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Spamhaus.org really should have learned from the LAST time a /.'ing smacked them off the internet.

    Believe it or not, they don't exist (or buy bandwidth) to serve Slashdot referrals. Those who follow news.admin.net-abuse.email read the Spamhaus response a week ago when a pointer was posted there.

  57. Bad Form by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You gotta love how the spammers try to dress up their case: "The issuance of a temporary injunction will serve the public interest."

    Not so much as I love the judge's response. As he rejected that request for a temporary injunction, he pointed out that the spammer attorney failed to include the "memorandum of law" required by the court rules when requesting such an injunction.

    This is not an indication of competent lawyering.

  58. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by danoatvulaw · · Score: 1

    you dont even need to depose them, interrogatories are cheaper and can be more effective under the circumstances... bury them in paperwork like they bury you in spam.

  59. Writing BACK ??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Writing back doesn't help, they only spam you more by sending you more spam.

    Spamhaus explains that with this page

  60. Sheesh... by vladb · · Score: 1

    Sheesh... the EMarketersAmerica.org's message is pathetic and short sighted at best. I don't know how any form of unsolicited email marketing could be defined as 'legal' or within norm.

    I've already lost count of how many times I had to change my email address thanks to the "tireless" effort of EMarketersAmerica.org types. For all I care, they are nothing but a bunch of selfish bastards tending to their own overpowering desire to get rich fast. It matters none to them that numerous hard working individuals on the receiving end have to waste every precious second of their lives on sifting through "oh-so-welcome" email spam promoting great deals/opportunities starting from Viagra and ranging all the way to outworldishly rich individuals of african descent in destress and of a dire need to give out sizeable portions of their fortune in exchange for piece of mind etc etc.

    If there were any local laws prohibiting onsolicited spam, I'd be glad to pursue those sub-humans in courts. Unfortunately, there are no such laws and even if there were I doubt I could make any good use of them ;/.

  61. NO Joke! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Actually, what you talk about isn't so funny. Well maybe to some people.

    **violence is bad, these are just thoughts, don't enact them**

    I am thinking to myself, when is some average joe going to snap, and go on a rampage and kill a bunch of people at one of these spamming companies? Or, will a new Ted Kazynski (sp?) emerge and start mail bombing (err, real mail) the offices of these spammers? I think if it does happen, that there would be much sympathy for the defendent, eventhough it is a horrible thing to do.

    But I do predict that it will happen. Just like no sports team has entirely died on an airplane accident, at some point it will happen. So to will there be a time when some average joe goes nuts and mail bombs the email spammers, the RI/MPAA, or even Microsoft.

    Don't these entities realize that their actions might piss people off so much that such a catastrophy might happen? If I was head of these organizations, I'd be concerned.

    **violence is bad, these are just thoughts, don't enact them**

    1. Re:NO Joke! by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      I've been waiting on that too. I wouldn't have much sympathy. Wow, someone killed a spammer. It's a dark world out there sometimes. It probably wouldn't stop another spammer tho'.

      How much money have they cost businesses? Newspaper articles always say 10 billion a year. You'd think Ford, who can rationalize how it's cheaper to let people die in a Pinto accident, would figure, "Hey, if we kill a couple spammers maybe people will stop" and we'll save some IT money.

    2. Re:NO Joke! by Cramer · · Score: 1

      News of a serial spam killer would be a ray of sunshine in that dark world. As the saying goes, nobody would shed a tear.

      Costs are hard to quantify...

      How does one put a dollar sign on latency? Yes, spam consumes bandwidth requiring ISPs to have substaintially larger connections than otherwise necessary -- bandwidth is cheap, but it isn't free. However, the connections are wide enough that spam isn't taking available bits away from other users -- assuming a fair queue, the more users of the bandwidth, the more spread out a users packets become (instead of 3 packets between each of mine, there are 9 or 50.)

      How much is one's time worth? And just how much time is spent downloading, qualifying as spam, and deleting email? Even using a 28.8 dialup connection, it takes just a few (annoying) minutes to fetch 30 or 40 messages. It takes a few more minutes to sift through them to weed out all the spam. I've heard of people spending hours per day in this process, but I just don't buy it; unless they are studying every message and bitching to everyone within 100miles, there's no way it can take that long from eyeball to trash.

      The only things that are easy to calculate are the administrative costs: software, support for said software, server(s) to run said software, store and service email, and monetary compensation for administrators of said software and systems. And of course, there's the cost(s) of repairs when the spammer's spew disrupts services. Admin overhead amounts to very little of $10billion -- even if we blur the line between "email service" and "spam fighting."

  62. For what is worth... by NomadPgmr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder if ValueWeb knows that they are hosting a run by multiple spammers with the intent of promoting spam. This is in violation of #9 in their AUP. I wonder if they are aware of this??

    PING emarketersamerica.org (64.70.171.85)

    whois 64.70.171.85@whois.arin.net
    [whois.arin.net]

    OrgName: CyberGate, Inc.
    OrgID: CYBG
    Address: 3250 W. Commercial Blvd. Suite 200
    City: Ft. Lauderdale
    StateProv: FL
    PostalCode: 33309
    Country: US

    NetRange: 64.70.128.0 - 64.70.255.255
    CIDR: 64.70.128.0/17
    NetName: CYBERGATE-1
    NetHandle: NET-64-70-128-0-1
    Parent: NET-64-0-0-0-0
    NetType: Direct Allocation
    NameServer: NS.VALUEWEB.NET
    NameServer: NS2.VALUEWEB.NET
    Comment: ADDRESSES WITHIN THIS BLOCK ARE NON-PORTABLE
    RegDate: 2000-04-03
    Updated: 2000-11-28

    TechHandle: CN313-ARIN
    TechName: Network Administrator, CyberGate Network
    TechPhone: +1-954-334-8080
    TechEmail: netadm@valueweb.net

    1. Re:For what is worth... by harrkev · · Score: 1

      I would just like to point out that at least *SOME* of the spammer's complaints are legis. SPAMHAUS.ORG does NOT list any valid contact info. The following info came from www.whoisd.com ...

      Domain ID:D10906601-LROR
      Domain Name:SPAMHAUS.ORG
      Created On:01-Oct-1999 11:03:57 UTC
      Last Updated On:23-Apr-2003 19:43:38 UTC
      Expiration Date:01-Oct-2004 11:03:57 UTC
      Sponsoring Registrar:R25-LROR
      Status:OK
      Registrant ID:25-C
      Registrant Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
      Registrant Street1:Whois Server:whois.joker.com
      Registrant Street2:Referral URL:www.joker.com
      Registrant City:N/A
      Registrant Postal Code:N/A
      Registrant Country:CA
      Registrant Email:not@available.org
      Admin ID:25-C
      Admin Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
      Admin Street1:Whois Server:whois.joker.com
      Admin Street2:Referral URL:www.joker.com
      Admin City:N/A
      Admin Postal Code:N/A
      Admin Country:CA
      Admin Email:not@available.org
      Billing ID:25-C
      Billing Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
      Billing Street1:Whois Server:whois.joker.com
      Billing Street2:Referral URL:www.joker.com
      Billing City:N/A
      Billing Postal Code:N/A
      Billing Country:CA
      Billing Email:not@available.org
      Tech ID:25-C
      Tech Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
      Tech Street1:Whois Server:whois.joker.com
      Tech Street2:Referral URL:www.joker.com
      Tech City:N/A
      Tech Postal Code:N/A
      Tech Country:CA
      Tech Email:not@available.org
      Name Server:DNS2.ULTRADESIGN.NET
      Name Server:AMETHYST.NSTC.COM
      Name Server:NS1.HAVENCO.NET
      Name Server:NS1.SIMKIN.CA
      Name Server:BOS.NAMESERVER.NET

      It could be that joker.com as a matter of course does not provide this information, and spamhaus.org IS innocent. But spamhaus should at least check their own WHOIS before saying that they are in the clear.

      --
      "-1 Troll" is the apparently the same as "-1 I disagree with you."
    2. Re:For what is worth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had Cybergate access back in the day ('96 I think). I thought they were bought out by ...... Earthlink

    3. Re:For what is worth... by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      I would like to point out that if you don't know how to use WhoIs, you shouldn't claim nonsense like "SPAMHAUS.ORG does NOT list any valid contact info."

      See http://www.betterwhois.com/bwhois.cgi?domain=SPAMH AUS.ORG&x=40&y=15

      Where you will find the following.

      domain: spamhaus.org status: production origin-c: abuse@spamhaus.org#3 organization: The Spamhaus Project owner: Steve Linford email: abuse@spamhaus.org#3 title: Director address: The Spamhaus Project address: The Phoenix city: Taggs Island state: Private Island postal-code: TW12 2HA country: GB admin-c: security@europe.spamhaus.org#0 tech-c: security@europe.spamhaus.org#0 billing-c: security@europe.spamhaus.org#0 nserver: dns2.ultradesign.net 193.115.218.2 nserver: amethyst.nstc.com nserver: ns1.havenco.net nserver: ns1.simkin.ca nserver: bos.nameserver.net registrar: JORE-1 created: 1999-10-01 07:03:57 UTC NSI modified: 2003-04-23 21:43:51 UTC JORE-1 expires: 2004-10-01 07:03:57 UTC source: joker.com

  63. No need for certificates by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

    There is no need for certificates. Just use DNS. Make a new DNS record that holds the address of an email server that is valid to send email for that domain. Refuse email sent from IPs that do not have authorization in DNS. Then, if a domain sends spam, you can block it (currently, there is no point, since the domain may not be owned by the spammer) as well as the sending IP. If this is done quickly enough, the spammer will not be able to send enough email to cover domain registration costs.

  64. REDUNDANT or OFFTOPIC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude,

    You gotta learn to read the posts before you post stupid shit. If you weren't so eager to get modded interesting or insightful for raising the question, you would have read that there are already TWO LINKS to Google caches above yours.

    When will dumbasses learn to read stories, and POSTS before they post their own retarded and wasteful drivel.

    -Informed /.er

    1. Re:REDUNDANT or OFFTOPIC by EvilStein · · Score: 1

      when will other idiots learn that sometimes when they post, "2 other mirrors" were NOT listed.

      Asshole.

  65. But how did I get on the list? by bluGill · · Score: 1

    I signed up for a contest at the local Menards, and since my prefered mythod of contact is email I gave them my email address. Now I get weekly emails from them. Sure I'm a customer, but I didn't give them permission to SPAM me. (and their remove doesn't work) I've signed up before giving a telephone number and they never called that, but as soon as they get an email address they think it is okay to send me whatever they want.

    Fortunatly Home Depot is in the same town (and soon coming to mine). Menards just lost a customer.

  66. Re:here's a mirror by hillct · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Be a good citizen and remove the popup ad from your mirror of the SpamHaus letter. If you must, slap a banner ad or a few sponsored links on the page, but yank the damn popup as it's diametrically opposed to the spirit of offering a mirror.

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
  67. spam the spammers (?) by chargen · · Score: 1

    Really looks like mark@emarketersamerica.org is the e-mail address at the end of the document that got mangled somewhere along the line. Anyone up for a spamfest? ;-)

    -Pete

    1. Re:spam the spammers (?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their contact email on their web site is:

      admin@emarketersamerica.org

      Let's spread that about about. In fact, there needs to a a web site where you can register any email address for lots of spam. The problem is my friends would probably put me on it!

      How long will it be before they see the irony of their contact email address becoming useless?

  68. Karma Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, eventhough your AC, your still a...

    KARMA WHORE!!!

    We know you only posted that to see yourself get modded up. Well buddy, if you read the message boards before you wasted time to post that you would have see that there are

    TWO LINKS TO GOOGLE CACHES

    above your post. Come on, get with the fucking program.

    -Informed /.er

  69. Speaking of lawsuits... by djeaux · · Score: 1

    Might I propose a suit against Mr Felstein for bandwidth theft, loss of productivity & embarrassing stains in the in-box?

    --
    "Obviously, I'm not an IBM computer any more than I'm an ashtray" (Bob Dylan)
  70. Let's give em by phorm · · Score: 1

    a 20% take on the "profit" of spamhaus as damages. What's that, no profit... but they're a business right, and competing with the spammers?

    Seriously... I think these spammers believe they're the RIAA... and that simple intimidation tactics will work against anyone.

  71. Excuse me... but mine is bigger than yours... by oaf357 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This will be a very interesting lawsuit. First of all, it's true that the state of FL has no jurisdiction over an individual in the UK. Second, the UK looks more dimly on spam than the US does (hard to believe, eh?). Third, this lawsuit looks like it will be VERY public. The defendant should be able to call this a slam dunk. No FL judge will probably be high enough to touch this either.

    1. Re:Excuse me... but mine is bigger than yours... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno, those FL judges get pretty dang high from time to time.

  72. get it right... by di0s · · Score: 1

    Freedom of speech does not equal freedom to harass.

  73. Eddy's Company by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

    Eddy Marin uses a company known as PG&C Leasing as a front for his spam operations. Here's the Google cache of what appears to be evidence of his company filing for Chapter 11. I don't think this is good news-I think he's restructuring.

  74. Spamhaus might lose by cyranoVR · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The spamhaus guy certainly dissects emarketer's absurd lawsuit, but unfortunately that is a technique better suited for Usenet flamewars. (At risk of overstating the obvious...) It isn't gonna cut it in Federal Court. Spamhaus will ultimately have to file a coherent legal briefing - which I hope Slashdot links to when it becomes available.

    Unfortunately, many court cases are more about who has deeper pockets than who is right...so if Spamhaus doesn't get this court case dismissed immediately, they could be in big trouble.

    If they DO go to court, they run the risk of ending up with one of those old, crusty judges - the kind that has never actually used a computer, having his(or her) secretary print out his email every day instead. In which case the proceedings could drag on and on...and Spamahaus would probably be SCREWED.

  75. The Attorney is a kid by anagama · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to the information the FL. Bar Ass. has on Mark Edward Felstein, he was only admitted to the bar in 3 yrs. ago. If you are currious, click the Find a Lawyer" and see for yourself.

    Too bad he's going down such a low path so soon in his carear.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    1. Re:The Attorney is a kid by thirdrock · · Score: 1

      Too bad he's going down such a low path so soon in his carear.

      There's a high path for lawyers?????

      --
      >>
      I am the director, and this is my movie ...
    2. Re:The Attorney is a kid by hendridm · · Score: 1

      > Too bad he's going down such a low path so soon in his carear.

      He's an attourney offering his services to a client who thinks it has been damaged. I think his client is a scumbag, and perhaps he is too, but I would probably do the same thing if I thought it would help my career, since I don't think it's unethical to offer a fair trial. Let the courts decide the laws. Unfortunately for him, I think he is going to fall flat on his face with this one.

      There are forms of peaceful protesting you can do to encourage those who would support the spam "industry", like signing affilated individuals up for as much spam as you can find. It might not change anything, but at least you can be assured they have to deal with the garbage they are defending.

      You could always write your senators or representatives.

      [Quoted from a former Slashdot post:]

      Do yourself a favor. When writing your congressperson or representative:

      1. Don't troll
      2. Don't flame
      3. Don't start with "I didn't vote..", or, especially, "I didn't vote for you, but..."
      4. Above all, write intelligently.
    3. Re:The Attorney is a kid by hankaholic · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... is there a hidden message here? ...the FL. Bar Ass.... ...in his carear.

      I'm reminded of something said a few years ago about Bill Gates -- that he must be homosexual, since Windows is full of loose back doors.

      --
      Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
  76. No, they can't even afford a full name. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funding is so low that instead of being able to afford the full proper name, namely Spam House, they have had to scimp on a letter and truncate both words into one (SpamHaus), ommiting the typically costly space character.

    If these guys can't even afford a proper name, what makes you think they can prevail against the spamming juggernaut?

    1. Re:No, they can't even afford a full name. by RipCurl808 · · Score: 1

      Uh-duh. German dolt. Spamhaus = Spamhouse

  77. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Since the only point of contact is the lawyer himself, you raise an interesting question: Does attorney/client privilege extend all the way to protecting the identity of the client?

    I would assume no. To say otherwise would mean that anyone could file an anonymous suit, and be protected from punishment if the suit turns out to be frivolous. But I'm totally speculating.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  78. The most irritating email ever by Mgdm · · Score: 1

    I remember just after 9/11 receiving an email from someone advertising some useless rubbish like a non-accredited degree or similar, which had been edited to say something along the lines of "Anti Spammers Support Bin Laden", before launching into several paragraphs of crap claiming that by adding their email address to your filters/using RBLs/etc you were supporting terrorism and "going against the American Way". How that applies to me living in the UK is beyond me, but that's another story entirely...

    I hope whoever sent that one gets kicked off the net forever.

    1. Re:The most irritating email ever by Erik+Fish · · Score: 1

      That sounds like this spam sent by Empire Towers which is run by this guy who is pictured appearing as a panelist at the FTC Spam Forum. Note that he's a convicted felon.

      I try very hard to ignore spam content because the fact is that the real problem is lack of consent. Unfortunately sometimes the depths spammers sink to are just sickening. Between this and the (pre-looting) spams from Artmarket/Artprice about how terrible the war in Iraq would be for the art market and how you could reduce your risk as an investor in this market by buying their blah blah blah...

      At least with child pornography there are laws that sometimes are actually enforced. There are people in prisons waiting to cut the offender's balls off and flush them down the toilet. Cowles and those art fuckers will never really be held accountable for their sick exploitation. They'll just keep slipping through the cracks.

  79. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by billstewart · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Isn't it fun when they go out of their way to toss a nice slow pitch right over the plate? (Hmmm. American Baseball may not be totally familiar to Steve at Spamhaus, since he lives in the UK, but actually that plays into the real point...)

    Spamhaus isn't a US entity, and Steve Linford isn't a US resident, and it's highly likely that the court has no jurisdiction over his actions, so it may be much cleaner for him to say "no thanks" and not be part of the suit. That means he may not get to play the Discovery game (or at least he'd need a real lawyer rather than me advising him.) But any of the US-based defendants certainly can go file discovery motions as part of their response, even if the result of them is to demonstrate that they're not part of the suit or that they didn't do the actions they're accused of or that those actions aren't a tort.

    You can have *so* much fun with discovery in this - not only should they be able to get the names and real addresses and phone numbers of all the spammers that the plaintiff alleges are part of his organization, but also

    • all the IP addresses and domain names the spammers own or use and
    • copies of all the ISP contracts the plaintiff alleges to have, or that the plaintiff's spammer buddies allege to have, and
    • any other ISP contracts that they have which the plaintiff is *not* alleging were blocked, because that obviously indicates something relevant, and
    • exactly what hardware and software and which ISP connections were used to deliver the spam that was allegedly blocked, and what recordkeeping capabilities it has, and
    • any records they have about the dates and times and recipients that they attempted to deliver messages to which were blocked, and
    • how they determined that the recipients use SBL as instead of or in addition to other blocking lists, and
    • why they assert that SBL was actually used to block their spam as opposed to some other list, and
    • the contents of those messages, and
    • who if anyone had hired them to deliver the messages, and all their names and addresses,
    • or if the spammers were trying to sell the products themselves, exactly what those products were (Ajax Model 28 Penis Expander), or if they were medical products, whether they met all legal requirements for selling them, e.g. Viagra,
    • or if the spammers were promoting web pages with their spam, exactly which web pages and who paid them to promote them, and
    • where they obtained the addresses of the recipients they were spamming, and
    • whether the information was delivered directly by the spammers, or by using open relays and/or open proxies, and their IP addresses, and whom they obtained permission from to use each of those, and how they located them, and
    • precise cost accounting data used to calculate the alleged damages, especially because the spammer alleges, probably correctly, that they're high enough to trigger some jurisdictional or procedural effects under Florida law,

    and any other information you can think of that the spammers would probably rather NOT have exposed to public view. And be sure to get all of them in electronic form, and delivered to all the defendants, because even if Steve Linford and Spamhaus aren't under US or Florida jurisdiction, they're certainly parties to the case, and it'd be a real shame if there were no particular way to impose confidentiality rules on the non-US defendants for use of that data.

    Yeah, it seems like a lot of data. But the plaintiff's suit doesn't just claim something fuzzy like libel (where he might have had a chance suing in the UK, though probably less likely here) or restraint of trade, it claims that the defendants engaged in activities that caused damages to the plaintiff by interfering with the plaintiff's legitimate activities, and that means that the actual activities that the plaintiff claims to have engaged in and the defendant's actions which allegedly i

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  80. Why bother with the small fish? by csguy314 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Go straight to the source! Eddy Marin 621 NW 53rd Street Suite 135 Boca Raton, Florida 33487 T: 561-999-9850 F: 561-995-8791 Toll Free: 877-317-1568 E-mail eddy@oneroute.net

    --
    This is left as an exercise for the reader.
    1. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by csguy314 · · Score: 1, Informative

      Or try him at home...

      Phone: 561.997.9008
      3500 NW Boca Raton Blvd. #806-807
      Boca Raton, FL
      33431

      --
      This is left as an exercise for the reader.
    2. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1
      Might I ask where you got this info? The only Mark E. Felstein listing I could find was in North Miami Beach (no address; was via a pay service).

      Also, this phone number of yours appears to belong to a "Kemeny, Yvonne K". Friend of yours?

      Please /.ers, take care that you don't nail the wrong schmuck with spam-bombs.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    3. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Haha, I like how this always happen at Slashdot. :-) I bet we'll soon have a satellite view of his house with a red arrow pointing at it. ;-)

      Then, some week after when the news are catching up, it says how he's become flooded with spam and wish to sue them. Aah, the irony.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    4. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please don't spam this address: eddy@oneroute.net

    5. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      let me repeat the toll free one for ya... 877-317-1568 let him foot the phone bill since you have to foot the bandwidth bill :P

    6. Re:Why bother with the small fish? by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      Now that would be just wrong. I would never get a satellite image of Boca Raton, find the address on MapQuest, then indicate Ground Zero and a suggested blast radius. Goodness me, no... (This is far enough downthread that I'm not going to get the admin pissed off, right? Right?)

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  81. My favorite line... by AEton · · Score: 2, Funny
    One of Spamhaus's responses, actually:
    Leaving aside the fabricated "matter in controversy", the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, USA, does not have jurisdiction over the United Kingdom.
    --
    We recently had heard in the office over one of the Yellow Machine that's made by Anthology Solutions.
  82. Encrypted messages in SPAM by refactored · · Score: 1
    Suppose you needed to keep a terrorist organization together. If you contact anybody, then if you are compromised, so is your contact.

    So if you spam the world, but included encrypted crap in the spam, then your contacts can read the messages and there is never a dotted line from you to him for anyone to join!

    So. How many of you have received spam with encrypted gobblegook of late? Most of the stuff in my mail box is. Can the ./ megamind decrypt this stuff?

    1. Re:Encrypted messages in SPAM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So lax laws allowing spam supports terrorists. Banning all spam is the patriotic thing to do (if you live in a country targetted by terrorists). I like this angle. Sell it to your leaders.

    2. Re:Encrypted messages in SPAM by shadowjk · · Score: 1

      Some anti-spam solutions try to detect whether several duplicates of the same email has been sent, or whether the email is identical to one reported as spam previously. They might be doing this by comparing the hash of the email body, or just plain comparison. Spammers combat this by simply adding random junk, to make every email seem unique. The random junk might also be an identification code, so that they can determine from the abuse reports an upstreams ISP might relay to them, who sent the abuse report in the first place, even if the person reporting them removed his email address. Some of the random junk is just your email address ROT-13'd, which is easy to spot (junk@junk.junk), I've seen some spammers base-64 encoding the recipient email address (which also looks like random crap). There are undoubtedly countless of variations on this theme. What they do with that information is anyone's guess, call their buddy spammers (Heaven forbid spammers would use e-mail for actual communication themselves) and say "Hey Bubba, I got another confirmed opt-in address for ya!", most likely, while at the same time, maybe, removing the address from their own lists. But only after ensuring every other spammer on earth has the address, naturally.

  83. google search: "catalog request form" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe =UTF-8&safe=off&q=%22catalog+request+form% 22

  84. Same phone, different address, hmmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    google search of the phone number

    Future Technology Today Inc 561-367-7990 2424 N Federal Hwy Boca Raton FL 33431

  85. I love it... by rigmort · · Score: 1

    ...when a NerdTM can reason circles around a lawer...

  86. What blacklist are you using? by soccerfreak · · Score: 0

    What blacklist do you currently use on your email servers? relays.osirusoft.com, spahmaus.org, spews.org or something else? Is any one better than another? Which do you recommend?

  87. I wanted to get the block list by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

    and GOD DAMMIT, you just have to slashdot it.

  88. oh good.... by miketang16 · · Score: 1

    they're all congregating in one place now... easier to eradicate. =P

    --
    -------
    "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
    -- George Orwell
  89. Start by disbarring the lawyer by mdfst13 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Start by disbarring the lawyer for abuse of his position as an officer of the court. Follow with criminal case for perjury. Top off with civil suits for libel and harassment.

    It is pretty clear that some of the information in the lawsuit is made up. Completely, from whole cloth. For example, the claim that Spamhous's DNS registration information is incorrect seems to be an utter falsehood. The claim that the defendants converted IP addresses and servers to their own use is ridiculous.

    Some Florida lawyer could make a lot of money by going after this guy with a class action suit where all of us who receive spam claim damages from his harassing our legitimate efforts to stop spam. Not to mention what Spamhaus should be able to collect for defending itself against this frivolous lawsuit.

    I am also very curious what ramifications can be made from the fact that the group behind this apparently chose to incorporate entirely to issue this lawsuit. If so, it would seem to me that their corporate registration is fraudulent. If so, they should be prosecuted for that. Further, they should also lose the normal liability protection of the corporation and be eligible to be listed as co-defendants in the civil suits mentioned above. IMO. IANAL.

    1. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by coolgeek · · Score: 2, Informative
      yeah good luck...only a band of lawyers (your local Bar Assoc.) can impose disbarment upon another. likely? i think not... as my friend puts it, one can be a filthy lying coke fiend lawyer with a $1000/day habit, and get disbarred only by misappropriating a client's trust account.

      alleging incorrect statements in a motion is not perjury; if so, all lawyers would be in prison. the burden in a civil case is different than that which you are used to watching on The Practice. besides isn't that the very definition of allegation? to assert without proof or before proving. anyway the point of a motion like this is to bury the other side by getting them to answer each and every point in an effort to quash the motion.

      and YES it is an abuse of the legal system and there are Anti-SLAPP laws on the books in many states although for some reason I sort of believe Florida, being one of the most backward states in the union, probably doesn't have them. i may be wrong about that, and i really hope i am because a prevailing defendent in an anti-SLAPP action gets costs plus bonuses and possible punitives.

      the thing for spamhaus to be careful of is somewhere in one of those allegations is probably a snooker tactic to get them go on record taking a position that will later prove indefensible. is there a legal fund getting established? dude better not try to fight this on his own, he'll get diced and sliced and cut into hundreds of julienne fries.

      anyway IANAL, what i write is based on swapping war stories with my best friend who IAL. he has successfully won some anti-SLAPP actions in California.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
    2. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....one can be a filthy lying coke fiend lawyer with a $1000/day habit....

      Crap!! How the hell did you know about this lawyer?! You either live in FL, or are psychic. Check out Spamhaus.org under Eddy Marin for his spammer "client's" *cough*partner*cough* coke traffiking record.

      Oh, by the way, Spamhaus.org is located in London, and I've yet see a US court claim jurisdiction over the pond to England.

      But we can all stay tuned for another episode of how the legal crack pipe smokes!

    3. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its easy to get people busted if they have bad coke habbit. Most cokeheads will be friends with anyone who wants to give them some.

    4. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by FFFish · · Score: 1

      Start by disbarring the lawyer for abuse of his position as an officer of the court.

      Fuck that. Start by hunting down that assmunch and busting his kneecaps.

      The commercial spammers have no morals. They will never listen to reason. They will always lie and cheat.

      The only way we're ever going to eliminate the big-time spammers is to physically hurt them.

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    5. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by coolgeek · · Score: 1
      You sir (or mam, pardon me), are definitely taking my comment out of context. I did not suggest nor did I intend to infer that any lawyer who may be an object of this discussion has any kind of a drug habit. I meant only to say as an example that a Bar Association would not summarily disbar an evidently felonious lawyer, and further I stated that making untrue claims in a law suit was not even felonious. This was all in my attempt to suggest the naivete' of the poster to whom I originally replied, who suggested disbarment proceedings were a logical approach.

      As to your comment about jurisdiction, this is precisely why they chose to sue European-based antispam outfits. It is harder for them to defend themselves. American Law can do a lot to foreigners too. For example, Spamhaus will likely have to post a bond to cover the alleged damages or risk summary judgment. Rendering a judgment against foreign nationals is within the power of US Courts; enforcment is a different matter, although a win for the spammers will enable them to fly across the pond and start a case over there. Whether UK jurists will summarily accept the judgment of an US Court is another question whose answer remains to be seen, although IANAL I have heard that it helps to win in one country before going to the defendants homeland.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
    6. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by tanner_andrews · · Score: 1
      Florida, being one of the most backward states in the union, probably doesn't have [anti-SLAPP statutes]

      Written as though you had not checked the statutes, and particularly had omitted consideration of 769.295, F.S.

      You might better say that this is not a SLAPP suit, because it is not aimed at public participation in a public process. Thus, it is unlikely that it would be covered by the anti-SLAPP statute.

      The Florida anti-SLAPP statute does, unfortunately, prohibit only government entities from filing SLAPP suits. The corporate lobbyists are very strong here.

      --
      Tilt at windmills. Occasionally one will fall over out of sheer surprise.
    7. Re:Start by disbarring the lawyer by JuggleGeek · · Score: 1
      is there a legal fund getting established?

      Yes, a legal fund has been set up at http://www.spamcon.org/legalfund/

  90. Re:Support the defendants! Donate money to legal f by pla · · Score: 1

    The defendants of this particular EMarketersAmerica suit also benefit from and endorse this fund.

    Just out of curiousity, considering the blatantly frivolous nature of this particular suit...

    ...If we donate, do we get dividends from the countersuit? ;-)

  91. What am I missing? by aberkvam · · Score: 1
    Many of the points in the response have a common theme. Here's an example response for illustration:
    Neither Spamhaus nor any of the Defendants named had ever heard of EMarketersAmerica prior to this SLAPP suit being filed. It follows therefore that they could not be harming the Plaintiff in any way.
    This makes no sense to me. Just because you haven't heard of someone doesn't mean that it's impossible that you have harmed them. A hit-and-run in the dark, poison in Tylenol bottles, letting the air out of an ambulance's tires, etc. All of these actions can clearly result in harm to people that the instigator has never heard of.

    Don't get me wrong, I am not arguing against the defendants here nor am I equating their actions to the ones I list above. I am just suggesting that a lot of their defense hinges on a pretty weak argument.

    1. Re:What am I missing? by cranos · · Score: 1

      What the Spammers are alleging is that SpamHaus specifically targeted eMarketers and caused deliberate damage. What spamhaus is saying is that eMarketers has only been around for four weeks and until they got the suit they had no idea who the hell they were.

  92. Ummm, Canada is no different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Canada, you can file lawsuits against anybody for
    any reason also. If you need proof, search google
    for lawsuits from a guy named "GeorgeK" (yes, I could do
    it myself, but I'm a lazy American).

    1. Re:Ummm, Canada is no different by thomn8r · · Score: 1

      In Russia...

  93. The Reach of the Internet by Bilbo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    One of the countless side-effects of the spread of the Internet is the way that legal issues are spilling over national boundaries. Witness the spread of IP law and international support for patent and copyright enforcement. Witness the World Court and the UN. This spread is being pushed to a large extent by the US, and by US corporations (e.g., Microsoft trying to twist the arm of the Chinese government to make them crack down on software piracy), but the US is by no means the ONLY source.

    True, it's hard to enforce laws outside of your borders, but where economic and military power come into play, there are ways to get your point across....

    --
    Your Servant, B. Baggins
  94. One Loophole... by Bilbo · · Score: 1
    The one loophole I can think of in this argument though is, if an ISP blocks email from an address in the block list, a customer of that ISP might them complain that he or she is not receiving legitimate mail from that address.

    One thing to remember: As much as we all detest SPAM, it is entirely possible for the block list publishers to go overboard. For example, blocking all "open relays" as if they were the same as spam originators. I know of a site that allows outside systems to transfer mail through them. Even though the site carefully filters email for legitimate from or to addresses, it is included on some block lists as an "open relay" because anyone can connect to them. There are legitimate business reasons for what they are doing (they do NOT send commercial solicitations of any kind, solicited or otherwise), so they put up with the black-listing.

    Point is - Look before you shoot. Not everything in the world can be as easily classified and pigeonholed as we'd like to think.

    --
    Your Servant, B. Baggins
    1. Re:One Loophole... by nmx · · Score: 1

      The one loophole I can think of in this argument though is, if an ISP blocks email from an address in the block list, a customer of that ISP might them complain that he or she is not receiving legitimate mail from that address.

      Then the ISP can manually add the good address to a whitelist. Not really a problem. I use SpamCop and have it set to use some aggressive blacklists. Occasionally it blocks a legitimate message (usually from the Simpsons mailing list I'm on). All I have to do is whitelist the sender, and the problem is solved.

      --
      "Well kids, you tried your best, and you failed. The lesson is, never try."
    2. Re:One Loophole... by LIGAFF · · Score: 1

      OK, I give up. What are the "legitimate business reasons" for operating an open relay?

    3. Re:One Loophole... by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      ISPs are perfectly free to do that if they wish. ISPs are private companies offering services and as such may restrict their services how they wish. Your ISP is perfectly free to block sites they don't like, for example porn or sites that speak poorly about them. It is their service and you have no requirement to use it. You then, may stop using it, and go to a competitor who does not so restrict you.

      Example of the process at work: Cox, the cable company here, does cable modem service of course. Well one of the provisions they stuck in the terms of service for their residential cable was that you weren't allowed to use VPNs. This was quite a problem for a number of people at the university, since we make extensive use of VPNs. So they contacted Cox and explained that there would be a large number of new DSL customers, as well as warnings to other to switch as well, if that clause stayed in. Cox took it out.

      All still legal. The spammers have no legal leg to stand on because people or ISPs choose to block them. As is popularly said, your right to freedom of speech does not require me to listen. You can stand on the street corner and shout all you like, but I can keep you out of my house if I want.

    4. Re:One Loophole... by Bilbo · · Score: 1
      > What are the "legitimate business reasons" for operating an open relay?

      Even though any system can connect, the relay isn't really "open" in the sense that it only accepts email from the outside to addresses in a particular domain, or from users in the domain to addresses on the outside. It has to be open though to support a widely dispersed service and support group for the business, since they don't always know where they are going to be able to connect to the Internet.

      The details are a little more complicated than that, but those are the basics.

      --
      Your Servant, B. Baggins
    5. Re:One Loophole... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is why pop-before-smtp and smtpauth exist. There is no technical reason to run an open or semi-open smtp relay, period.

    6. Re:One Loophole... by Bilbo · · Score: 1

      I don't actually administer the mail server, but I'll pass along the ideas. I don't know if it's just a matter of resources to fix it (i.e., too many other pans in the fire), or other problems (we've got clients still using Win95 on old laptops in some situations), but it's worth looking into.

      --
      Your Servant, B. Baggins
  95. Yet another reason we need RMX records... by z84976 · · Score: 1

    Brilliant solution that could REALLY cut down on illegal spam: http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rmx_records/

    1. Re:Yet another reason we need RMX records... by DarkBlack · · Score: 1

      That's awesome! I would love to see this happen.

  96. what is the big PROBLEM??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look, I make a decent living out of bulk emailing, and I really can't see what the problem is. If you don't want to read the email, then for God's sake just delete it!! You all make out it is some major problem, when deleting unwanted email takes all of thirty seconds. We DON'T crawl the web for your email addresses, we get it from legitimate sources. You can post your email address on ANY page without fearing a deluge of your so-called 'spam'. My address is dmiller@iinet.net.au , and I certainly am not afraid of a couple of you whining little geeks dropping me a line. Now STFU.

  97. Python? by inherent · · Score: 2, Funny

    Steve Linford is the director of Spamhaus. Steve Linford has absolutely nothing to do with SPEWS, nor would it be feasible for him to run two separate anti-spam organizations. Aside from the madness of doing so, Steve Linford does not agree with the methods and policies of SPEWS. He does however support SPEWS' right to exist.

    Does that sound mysteriously like Monty Python to anyone else?

    Judith: I've got an idea. Suppose you agree that he can't actually have babies, not having a womb, which is nobody's fault, not even the Roman's, but that he can have the _right_ to have babies.
    Francis: Good idea Judith. We shall fight the oppressors for your _right_ to have babies, brother....err....Sister, sorry.
    ....
    Reg: It's symbolic of his fight against reality.

  98. YOU read closer... (and you mods who uprated it) by Kelmenson · · Score: 2, Insightful
    What part of my message made it sound like I think the Spammers are in any way correct? I am just saying that the Spamhaus rebuttal is useless. Its as good as saying "I couldn't have hit his car, since I've never met him!" Plus, carrying this further, you can even have intentional, directed harm without knowing the victim. If I walk down the street and smash in people's windshields with a baseball bat, then my efforts have been calculated to disrupt and destroy, (intentionally), the cars of people I don't know.

    You are reading comments into the rebuttal that aren't there. If you can't see the difference between "directed his actions intentionally against the plaintiffs" (your words) and "could not be harming the Plaintiff in any way" (the rebuttal's words), then clearly you shouldn't be debating law...

    All I'm saying is that the "could not be harming the Plaintiff in any way" phrase that is repeated over and over again in the document is just plain wrong, and if that is the text the are using in their official legal response to the lawsuit, it isn't going to go in their favor. Because, to repeat myself, you can harm people you don't know. Their rebuttal needs to take this into account if they want a judge to side with them.

  99. Is he filing one? by mdfst13 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You mention that Linford "has an excellent countersuit." I would agree, but I am unsure if you are claiming that he has already filed one or that he could file one.

    I think that not only the defendants of the case should countersue but that those who use the SBL and those who are protected by the SBL should join the suit (as a class action) against the negative effects that could be caused by hindering Spamhaus's work. I also think that anyone who owns part of this corporation should be named as a defendant in the suit. Clearly the corporation is an attempt to hide the actual principals and protect the from liability. I'm not sure of the legal basis, but I think that that protection should be voided by their active participation.

    Hopefully the discovery phase will dig up some of their actual illegal behavior (forging headers, hacking boxes to send email from them), so that the courts can prosecute them. It would be great if it could be proved that some of the product distributors who benefit from this advertising could be shown to have actively participated as well. Cut off the funding for spam.

    Seriously, if some lawyer wanted to take this task on, I (and many others, I'm sure) would be happy to help with the preparation of requests for useful data and interpretation of the data once it is received. Just post a response here and I will be happy to post one of my spamcatcher accounts. Just give me an idea of what the email will look like so that I don't accidentally delete it with my spam...

    1. Re:Is he filing one? by legojenn · · Score: 1

      Rather than suing, why don't the spammers and anti-spammers get together. The spammers could take their spam lists and parse them through the blocked site lists of the anti-spammers. It may thin a mailing list of 3 million names down to under 10, but spammers could sleep easier knowing that all their bulk mail made it through.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    2. Re:Is he filing one? by Isca · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My first thought of this lawsuit is:

      "maybe we can get them to abandon their project if we sue?"

      If this were to somehow get sent to trial, it would cost $$$ to defend, even if it's just paying for a plane ticket to the US and a lawyer for a few hours to say "ha ha, this is all voluntary on the ISP's side!". So maybe these jerks are trying to take a page from all the large patent lawsuits out there and sue someone small just to intimidate them?

    3. Re:Is he filing one? by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      If this were to somehow get sent to trial, it would cost $$$ to defend, even if it's just paying for a plane ticket to the US and a lawyer for a few hours to say "ha ha, this is all voluntary on the ISP's side!". So maybe these jerks are trying to take a page from all the large patent lawsuits out there and sue someone small just to intimidate them?

      It won't work. Even though AOL and MSN don't use the blacklists they are not going to let the spam senders win this one by default. Both of them are loosing millions through spam and they want to do anything they can to keep the spam senders down.

      Expect a motion soon to force Felstein to reveal the names of his members. Also expect AOL to file suit against a certain spam sender in the Boca Raton area.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    4. Re:Is he filing one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The spammers don't care if poeple don't want spam. That's the whole problem. I can't tell if your comment is a joke, but it sounds like one. There are already official no-spam lists. If the spammers used them, there would be no need to block them.

    5. Re:Is he filing one? by Ironica · · Score: 1

      It would be great if it could be proved that some of the product distributors who benefit from this advertising could be shown to have actively participated as well. Cut off the funding for spam.

      Ah, yes... there is legal precedent for this. A lawyer named Julie Su successfully sued major clothing retailers for using sweatshop labor, when it was actually their subcontractors who were guilty. This case established a precedent of responsibility on the part of companies for the illegal actions of their contractors. (Sorry I don't have a proper citation; our professor just told us the lawyer's name... he was very impressed because Ms. Su was only a year out of law school when she did this.)

      Of course, it's not quite as compelling a case, since the breast and penis enlargement companies and those folks with a million boxes of Norton Antivirus to sell are not as high-profile as The Gap and Jessica McClintock. Still, I wouldn't mind seeing them put out of business.

      And yes, by saying that Linford "has an excellent countersuit" I did mean that if he chose to countersue, there is plenty of law to back him up. And I do kind of hope he does, though it may be more trouble than it's worth to him.

      Almost makes me want to apply to law school... (IANAL, but they make us take a law class in the Urban Planning Master's program.)

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  100. Two questions by stygar · · Score: 3, Funny

    1. Now that his address has been posted to Slashdot, how much snail mail do you think Mr. Feldstein is going to get next week?

    2. Does anyone else think it's a coincidence that the site that comes up first when you google for "free catalog" (cabelas.com) is running rather slowly right now?:)

    1. Re:Two questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh GROW UP you stupid jerk!! As if any of us could care less if we get mailed a couple of catalogs. As bulk emailers, we are doing you a FAVOR, so get over it. Here, I'll have a catalog to (as if you would bother). Now STFU

      David William Miller
      81 Attfield Street
      Fremantle
      Western Australia 6160
      dmiller@iinet.net.au

    2. Re:Two questions by stygar · · Score: 1

      As bulk emailers, we are doing you a FAVOR, so get over it.

      How so? I didn't ask for any of your garbage, and I definately don't want it. Go smoke some more of your herbal viagra.

      Nice troll, BTW. I doubt anyone will fall for the fake addy. Besides, I never said *I* was going to send someone a catalog they didn't want.

  101. Next time I'm in Florida... by Sabalon · · Score: 1

    This Sept, I'll have to swing by the morons house. I'll ring his doorbell at 3am, and when he refuses to let me come in and talk to him, I'll hit him with a lawsuit.

    1. Re:Next time I'm in Florida... by wheany · · Score: 1

      No you won't.

    2. Re:Next time I'm in Florida... by Sabalon · · Score: 1

      you're right. I hate florida

  102. Not Pro-Spam, but.... by JWSmythe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am anything but pro-spam, but I'm happy to see the blackhole lists get kicked around a little bit. Some of my accounts get hit more than the average person, because they are well placed on many web pages, or have been in use for years and are now forwarded to my account when people leave the company. I average about 200 spam messages per day coming into my account.

    $RANT_MODE="ON";

    I also handle many networks, with many many machines. Some of our networks have other people's equipment on it, but I'm 100% positive that they don't spam from their machines. Since they frequently ask me to help with their configurations, or help with problems, I'm intimately aware of what they do.

    If there are spam complaints, they filter through to me very quickly. Level3's abuse account gets most of them. They filter out most of the bogus complaints, and are quick to get with us about legitimate complaints. We did have one machine hosted on one network that was spamming, which we ejected from the network shortly afterwards.

    On a monthly basis, someone will come to me saying that they've been blacklisted by one of the many lists for ambiguous reasons. Any incident that is legitimate is cleared up between us and our bandwidth provider, under the threat of having the IP or IP block blocked from all Internet access. Level3 Communications is very anti-spam. They'll cut you off for being a spammer. If we don't explain or handle an incident, we could very easily loose our lines. I have no problem with this.

    The last case with Level3 was a single spam complaint, sent through SpamCop. The message wasn't a spam at all. Someone had made a purchase online with an invalid credit card number. The Email simply stated that they had attempted a purchase (with IP and invoice number), and said if they still intended to make the purchase, they should contact the sales department at the store. I know the owner of the store personally, so I called him. He freaked out when I told him there was a spam complaint. This is a business man who is the most honest person I know. (If in Ft. Lauderdale, tell Glenn I say "hi"). I read the Email to him, and he confirmed that it was a legitimate message, and the card had been bad.. He immediately cancelled the order, and blacklisted the customer. The next day I got a forwarded Email which was an apology from the customer. She sends every Email off to SpamCop, and lets them sort them out. Nice, huh?

    Now on to the abuses of the spews system. SpamHaus is /.'d right now, or I'd complain about them, but lets check who we can.

    65.59.224.0/25 is one of our networks. A small backwater of our network. A few older machines live there, and not much happens. SPEWS has 65.59.224.0/24 blacklisted, as well as 66.166.136.128/24 which is no relationship to us (the wrong network size is theirs, not ours). Because I have machines on the first half of 65.59.224.0/25, I'm blacklisted. 65.59.224.128/25 could be blacklisted, but I happen to know that they have quite a few hosting customers, most of who know nothing about the other customers.. Legitimately blacklisted??

    ORDB has my ex-girlfriend's mail server listed. She develops and hosts sites. No spamming at all.

    65.59.224.11 is listed as herbalo.com. Funny thing is, it doesn't exist on our network.. I'll personally escort anyone from spews into the colo to prove it to them.. Oh wait, I forgot, these are anonymous people who don't exist in the real world and don't feel themselves accountable for blacklisting innocent networks.

    AOL has blocked one of my own servers, as well as those of two different friends (on their own networks) for "potential spam".. One of them had a *WEB* proxy server, and aparently because it existed (on port 8000), he was blacklisted from sending

    --
    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    1. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by kaip · · Score: 2, Interesting

      65.59.224.128/25 could be blacklisted [by SPEWS], but I happen to know that they have quite a few hosting customers, most of who know nothing about the other customers.. Legitimately blacklisted?? - -

      ORDB has my ex-girlfriend's mail server listed. She develops and hosts sites. No spamming at all.

      Servers are added to ORDB (FAQ) after they have been tested to be open mail relays.

      So most probably your girlfriend's server was an open mail relay. Since open relays are exactly what ORDB claims to list, the listing was most probably correct.

      An open relay is incorrectly configured mail server. Rather than to complain about the ORDB listing you should be grateful that they pointed out the flaw in your configuration before it was exploited by a spammer (or was it?).

      It is also important to understand that ORDB only provides information of open relays. The owners of the recipients' mail servers decide whether they want to filter out mail originating from open relays.

      The same applies to other blocking lists, such as SPEWS. The listing criteria are clearly stated on the SPEWS web page. They explicitly state that they escalate listings, i.e. they may also list non-spamming client's of the spammers spammers ISP (see Q16 of the SPEWS FAQ). Given this information, it is up to the owner of the recipients' mail server to decide whether to filter mail using SPEWS.

    2. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are a moron.
      65.59.224.0/25 [spews.org] is one of our networks. A small backwater of our network. A few older machines live there, and not much happens.


      And from SPEWS,

      2, 65.59.224.0/24, memberscontent.com (level3.com)


      The 2 at the beginning of the listing means it is no longer listed. You are not blocked. But you were blocked while the spammer was present, seems like the blocklist worked.

    3. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, hey...guess what? All these problems?

      They aren't my problems.

      They're *your* problems.

      I suggest you stop acting like an infant and deal with them. Chances are all those IP blocks you claim to "own" are actually owned by another entity. One that either spams or harbors spammers in one fashion or another. That is how "innocent victims" end up in blacklists like SPEWS. They pay their bills to spamming/spam supporting ISPs.

      It is my experience that the people who whine the loudest about blacklists turn out to either be spammers themselves or spam supporters. So while I don't doubt that Joe Bob down at the fetish factory isn't the most honest boyscout you've ever met, I'm not going to believe that the bridge you want to sell me was only driven by a little old lady once a week to church and back.

      To sum it up: Some of your complaints might be legitimate. Many of them probably aren't. I will continue to use six or so DNSBLs to bounce all messages from listed IP addresses. My 6000 or so users (and my boss) will continue to enjoy their comparatively spam-free inboxes and request that a total of two or three addresses be whitelisted per year.

      My network, my rules.

    4. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yup, you're exactly the admin that we get complaints about every day.. And when you continue to treat your customers like that, either you'll white list us, or they'll change to another provider.

      We use MailScanner, with damned well over a 95% success rate for catching spam.. It does use blackhole lists minimally, and even if it is marked as spam, it's *MARKED*. The subject line is changed, so we can filter automagically. That way, I don't have a single complaint from any users that I blocked a message so they couldn't receive it.. After we went with MailScanner, most of my users started filtering all their spam marked mail to trash. But some (like me) filter them off to a spam box to be checked later. A few real messages show up in there occasionally (maybe 10 of 10k, but those were still important).

      But hey, like you said, it's your network. Of course since you're blocking Email without really knowing who you're blocking, it may be important.. The next message may be from a lawyer about illegal content on your network (and the last communication before a lawsuit), or a note from someone like me saying "Hey, we spotted this odd traffic coming from your network.", which may have been the first indicator to you that someone broke into one of your servers.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    5. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about when I'm sleeping at home when some Newbie in the business brings a co-lo to my rackroom the day before and all the sudden it starts getting relay'd off of and I don't get their till the next morning and my block is blacklisted? I think it shouldn't be such a pain to get unblacklisted from these people. It's a pain. Half the time they blacklist you and never give you a chance to get off.

    6. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the fact that you're getting complaints every day should be a hint. Besides, you aren't getting complaints about "admins like me". You're getting complaints about your own failure to stay out of blacklists.

      My goal is to stop spam -- not hide it. Filters that automatically "just hit delete" for you are doing nothing but hiding the problem. It's like allowing someone to dump a load of shit in your living room then hanging up a bunch of air fresheners and looking the other way so you don't have to smell or see it.

      I don't want to hear from any lawyer incompetent enough to think that he can serve me with anything legally binding via e-mail. If your notice to me about some odd traffic on my network is important enough you'll call the phone number that is provided on my web site.

      E-mail shouldn't be used for important communications anyway. Even without blocklists it is not reliable enough.

    7. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time to revise your policies. Start charging cleanup fees to people who knowingly or unknowingly run open relays. Have machines examined by someone competent before they are allowed on the network. Whatever you gotta do, do it.

      The year is 2003. There is no excuse for running an open relay.

    8. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by ekilfeather · · Score: 1

      > So, spammers, you're a pain in the ass.
      > Blackhole list people, you're just as bad.
      > People who use blackhole lists to *BLOCK* (not tag) spam, you're the worst.
      > MailScanner users, and other people who only tag suspicious messages as "SPAM", you're the only ones acting responsibly.

      Right Spammers are a pain in the ass. However to uncritically lump blackhole maintainers into similar categories is frankly ridiculous. Crucially many of these people are volunteers giving their skills and services to the community. After all the Spamhaus project issues an "advisory" and leaves it to mail admins to act as you put it "responsibly" guided by that advice. In the case of open relay lists I think it is entirely appropriate to block mail (albeit on a host by host and not network basis) as it is one of the few ways to tighten up lax relay protection.

    9. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      Fine you are not spamming and no one on your network would willing spam.

      Now prove that:

      Your networks are secure so that spammers have never hacked them to aid in their spamming.

      None of the companies your network hosts have ever paid any one to increase their hits.

      The truth is you can not do that. Most probably someone traced back either a spammer that had temporarily hacked your IP address or one of the corporate accounts onyour network paid someone to increase their hits and that person used their own servers to generate spam that linked to a site on your network.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    10. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, phone calls *aren't* a good way to communicate with me.. I work odd hours.. Like yesterday, I worked from about 11am until 11pm at the office, and then until 6am at home..

      If you called my office, you'd be listening to yourself talk to the answering machine. But if you dropped me an Email it would be answered quickly. Just like the guy who decided one of our primary domains was unused and he wanted to buy it off us.. I got back with him within a couple hours.

      Likewise, if I needed to contact you, I know most offices won't answer between 6pm and 8am, unless it happens to be a spiffy-keen NOC. :) After sitting on hold for over an hour with both AOL and Time Warner/RoadRunner on individual cases, just to be told, "Sorry, we don't know anything about that" on abuse issues, I know it doesn't do much good to call the listed numbers. It also doesn't do much good for me to call Moscow at 4am their time. If I'm lucky, they'll see an English email come in, and run it through babelfish to read it.

      We receive legal notes by Email all the time. Usually it's nothing significant, but answering them quickly is enough to keep us from getting sued.

      Most of the blackhole problems we've encountered weren't directly with our networks.. Like I said, other networks very frequently get larger blocks blacklisted. What do I do? Go to my providers switch and start yanking out wires until I find the one that Mr. Relay is using? That'd go over really well, assuming I could even do it. Maybe I should call my provider, and ask for the physical address of the demarc for another block? ha.

      If you don't like the fact that SPAM exists, I suggest you bring up a bigger issue with the USPS. I have a *SERIOUS* problem with junk mail. Consider the resources that are burnt up by that.. Besides the wasted fuel used by the mail trucks, and the time used to sort it, it wastes space in my box, and causes litter. After I moved recently, the post office never stopped delivering the junk mail to my house. An old neighbor called to ask if it was ok for him to throw it all away, because it was spilling into the street.

      If we're to take the blackhole thing as a valid method for filtering, the USPS should adopt the same thing. If someone sends more than X pieces of unsolicited mail, just throw away all the mail from that zip code. If that isn't sufficent, the surrounding 3 zip codes too.. So what if your mail doesn't go out, at least you've stopped the junk mail.

      I'm definately going to suggest it to the US Legal system. To make a point that you shouldn't commit crimes, every time there is a death penalty conviction, they should kill the next two defendants too. Who cares if they did anything relating to the matter, right?

      Ok, that was a stretch, but I hope you see where I was going with it.. You're blocking innocent networks with poorly designed arbitrary rules. Well, the blacklist mantainers cover their asses by saying "we only make the liste, we don't tell you how to use it." But Joe ISP admin doesn't think about that. He takes your stance of "This is cool, I can stop a bunch of mail."

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    11. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by cabbey · · Score: 1

      Amen.

    12. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      Actually, you asking for proof is more of what *THEY* should be doing.

      A *RESPONSIBLE* organization would be investigating all of the incidents, rather than just saying "1.2.3.4 is spamming, lets block 1.2.3.0/22 to make sure they're stopped."

      ISP's investigate abuse claims. *THEN* they'll block accordingly. I've known Level3 to block individual IP's, and if the company hosting them lets them add/move to a new IP, they'll do more. There's a procedure they follow, not just arbitrarly blocking traffic because they feel like it.

      Sure, if a spammer finds a relay on my network, block it temporarly. But it'd better be something that can be undone quickly. It's useless to have a system where I can fix the problem, but wait months for some anonymous person to undo their blacklist.

      There was one machine hosted with us that was open for relaying, accidently. The owner spotted it when there were a bunch of messages (about 100) coming from China, going out to other accounts, but he shouldn't have been allowed to.. The funny part is, that was on a network that has never been blackholed, and there wasn't a single complaint generated from it.

      If there was a proper organization set up that handled the blackholes, rather than a few hundred groups of egomanics doing it, it would be better. Say if the NIC's and IANA were all in cooperation with the group, would be better.

      My idea of it would be something along the lines of:

      1) A complain goes to the anti-spam group..

      2) After a proper investigation (like, verifying the spam complaint was real), the anti-spam group asks the ISP to block the IP, and the NIC's are asked to remove the NS records for the domain.

      3) If that doesn't work (like, the ISP doesn't cooperate), that network gets a null-route with IANA.

      4) If the ISP fails to behave, or lets the spammers get new /24's, the ISP is null routed entirely, until they behave.

      In a matter of months, you'd see a significant drop in spam.

      Right now, the whole system is chaotic. A few hundred people making blackhole lists that no one is sure if they're on or not, or even why isn't productive.

      Maybe I should write up a good plan, and submit it as a RFC.. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    13. Re:Not Pro-Spam, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know most offices won't answer between 6pm and 8am

      Around here, unless you get lucky and write to one of the two people who check their business e-mail addresses after hours you won't get any response until the next business day.

      After sitting on hold for over an hour with both AOL and Time Warner/RoadRunner on individual cases, just to be told, "Sorry, we don't know anything about that" on abuse issues, I know it doesn't do much good to call the listed numbers.

      That's why ISPs don't (or at least shouldn't) block e-mail sent to their abuse address. Nothing more frustrating than submitting a spam complaint and having it bounced due to anti-spam measures. Where I work we actually do block e-mail sent to abuse (something I have been meaning to rectify), however we are easy enough to contact via phone and fax that it is not an issue. Besides, our upstream has a non-filtered abuse address and is small enough that they'll forward any issues to us.

      Most of the blackhole problems we've encountered weren't directly with our networks.. Like I said, other networks very frequently get larger blocks blacklisted. What do I do?

      You either move to, co-lo your mail server with, or route your mail server's traffic through an ISP that is not spam friendly and is willing to sign a contract that will impose strong penalties on them should they knowingly allow another customer to violate their terms of service (assuming spamming and hosting services for spammers is against their TOS of course).

      If you don't like the fact that SPAM exists, I suggest you bring up a bigger issue with the USPS.

      All mail sent through the USPS is paid for by the sender. All mail sent through e-mail is paid for by the recipient in bandwidth, storage space and CPU cycles. Before you say "oh that's not much" I suggest you review accounts of the recent FTC Spam Forum held in DC. There were representatives present from many large ISPs and none of them were shy about how much money spam costs their companies.

      Your analogies are extremely silly. Neither the USPS nor the legal system operate under the same rules as the internet. The internet is based on cooperation -- not government regulation. This means that unless I signed a contract with you requiring me to carry your traffic I don't owe you a goddamn thing.

  103. I find this ironic... by rainmanjag · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So part of the claim in the emarketersamerica suit is that the defendents are clearly disguising their identities through providing false information to their domain registrar (which the spamhaus people deny)...

    Yet do a little whois on emarketersamerica.org :

    Registrant ID:71-C
    Registrant Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
    Registrant Street1:Whois Server:whois.register.com
    Registrant Street2:Referral URL:www.register.com
    Registrant City:N/A
    Registrant Postal Code:N/A
    Registrant Country:CA
    Registrant Email:not@available.org
    Admin ID:71-C
    Admin Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
    Admin Street1:Whois Server:whois.register.com
    Admin Street2:Referral URL:www.register.com
    Admin City:N/A
    Admin Postal Code:N/A
    Admin Country:CA
    Admin Email:not@available.org
    Billing ID:71-C
    Billing Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
    Billing Street1:Whois Server:whois.register.com
    Billing Street2:Referral URL:www.register.com
    Billing City:N/A
    Billing Postal Code:N/A
    Billing Country:CA
    Billing Email:not@available.org
    Tech ID:71-C
    Tech Name:SEE SPONSORING REGISTRAR
    Tech Street1:Whois Server:whois.register.com
    Tech Street2:Referral URL:www.register.com
    Tech City:N/A
    Tech Postal Code:N/A
    Tech Country:CA
    Tech Email:not@available.org

    -jag

    --
    http://starboard.flowtheory.net/
    1. Re:I find this ironic... by GraZZ · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you were some crazy Yank lawyer who:

      A) Didn't know how the UK's postal addressing system worked and
      B) Didn't believe that Steve Linford lived on a private island

      then you might think that the whois lookup from joker.com was eronious or intentionally misleading:

      DOMAIN spamhaus.org
      Registrar: JOKER.COM (CSL-GmbH as ICANN registrar)
      Status: production
      Handle: 587318
      Owner Name: Steve Linford
      Organization: The Spamhaus Project
      Address: The Spamhaus Project
      The Phoenix
      Postalcode/City: TW12 2HA Taggs Island
      State: Private Island
      Country: GB

      (PS: Holy lameness filter Batman!)

    2. Re:I find this ironic... by Bartmoss · · Score: 1

      Yes, and had you spent fifteen seconds to actually ask the registrar they registered their domain with, you get decent information.

      $ whois -h whois.register.com emarketersamerica.org

      Organization:
      Emarketers America
      Mark Felstein
      555 South Federal Highway ste 450
      Boca Raton, FL 33432
      US
      Phone: 561-367-7990
      Email: mefels@aol.com

      and so on, and so on.

    3. Re:I find this ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet the guy who owns available.org is not happy to see all those "not@available.org" entries! Maybe he should sue Felstein for falsifying his identity!

      Registrant: Ram Mohan
      Office 125, 52 Broomhill Road Tallaght Dublin 24 Ireland
      Registered through: Go Daddy Software (http://www.godaddy.com)
      Domain Name: AVAILABLE.ORG
      Created on: 19-May-02
      Expires on: 19-May-04
      Last Updated on: 14-Mar-03
      Administrative Contact: Mohan, Ram
      domainadmin@afilias.info
      Afilias Limited
      Office 125, 52 Broomhill Road
      Tallaght Dublin 24 Ireland
      (215) 706-5700 Fax -- (215) 706-5700
      Technical Contact: Mohan, Ram
      domainadmin@afilias.info
      Afilias Limited
      Office 125, 52 Broomhill Road
      Tallaght Dublin 24
      Ireland (215) 706-5700 Fax -- (215) 706-5700
      Domain servers in listed order: NS01.AFILIAS.INFO NS02.AFILIAS.INFO

  104. Smart To/CC/BCC Limits? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    Would it be resonable for an ISP to restrict the number of recipients that can be associated with an given e-mail? For example if an e-mail has more than 50 recipients the server would bounce the e-mail asking the sender to reduce the number of recipients on the e-mail or for the sender to include a time variable ID (would be valid for 24 hours) in an extended field. This would require some mailing-list programs to be rewritten, but it would ensure that the address to which the e-mail was bounced actually exists. Spammers would not be able to get the bounced message because of forged from address, but mailing lists which use real address could be automated to deal with this.

    For this we will need to define two extended headers, one for providing the ID and expiry time to the 'bouncee' and another for the original sender to resend the e-mail. The content of the bounced message would be human readable to allow the same thing to be done by hand.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    1. Re:Smart To/CC/BCC Limits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bouncee? Bouncee?? I've never heard anything so ridiculous in my entire life! GET OVER IT YOU IDIOT. Bulk emailing is legitimate business, and if you don't like it just STFU. If you are on too many lists, for chrissakes just send me your email address and I'll do my best to have you removed from the vast majority of lists. (dmiller@iinet.net.au)
      Midnight Thunder?? OMFG do you know how much of an idiot you sound like???? More like Midnight Squeak. Dipshit

    2. Re:Smart To/CC/BCC Limits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The suggestion that ISPs should limit the number of destination addresses of each individual email is naive. Fewer addresses per message equals more messages. That makes the impact on the ISP bigger.

      On the other hand, in environments where the carrier can charge the sender for each message this is a common restriction. If we want email to be more like SMS/mobile phone text messaging this measure would be a step in that direction; but I think most people would prefer not to support a measure which would penalise all the great public service mailing lists, games and diversions which the "no-cost to sender" model has allowed.

      After all, neither the cost to send a message to a mobile phone nor the limit on the number of recipients has stopped spam from spreading to mobile phones so a limit on the number of destination addresses per email probably wouldn't stop spam email.

  105. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  106. Spot the troll: by Tokerat · · Score: 0

    Give up? It's obvious:
    and I'm a WOMAN
    Like there is a single female on /.
    (Score: -1 Redundant plus a big fat clown-hat curly-hair smiley-face "*<S:-)" )
    --
    CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
  107. No. Re:IANAL... by DDX_2002 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pleadings aren't made under oath, so nothing contained in them can be perjury. If you deliberately state facts you know to be false, however, you could run into civil liability for abuse of process.

    --
    MHO. YMMV. Any resemblance between this post and real persons, or reality in general, was accidental.
    1. Re:No. Re:IANAL... by Tetsujin28 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Pleadings aren't made under oath, so nothing contained in them can be perjury. If you deliberately state facts you know to be false, however, you could run into civil liability for abuse of process.

      Pleadings are signed by attorneys pursuant to Rule 11 under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and similar rules in all state courts I'm familiar with. Rule 11 can leave an attorney open to some pretty nasty sanctions if he submits a pleading that includes misrepresentations of fact.

      --
      - - - -
      The real Tetsujin 28 is a giant robot.
  108. New slashdot editors-in-training by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 1

    Looks like we have some fresh talent in the /. editorial pool:
    From the Spamhous Project page, we have:
    EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG, INC., A Florida Non Profic Corporation.
    Non Profic? What's so bad about Profics?

    And from the emarketersamerica page, we have:
    U.S. Economy Will Suffer if Anti-Spammers Get Their Way and Crippled the Billion Dollar e-Mail Marketing Business
    Certainly you mean The U.S. Economy, and perhaps even the present-tense Cripple instead of the past-tense Crippled.
    Sigh

    --

  109. Re:here's a mirror by Narcissus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Although I appreciate your argument, the guy doesn't have much choice. A quick look at the curvedspaces.com website shows that it's a free hosting company, that has an automatic popup. Admittedly, I didn't get one at all (I use Phoenix/Firebird/whatever), but I'd guess that that's where it's from.

    If that's the case, then at the end of the day, a) he doesn't have a choice and b) he's still done better than either you or I...

  110. Because... by Robber+Baron · · Score: 1

    ...he obviously needs a sharp lesson in being extra careful in who he chooses to take on as clients. A nice Slash-junkmail-bomb might drive that point home.

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

  111. Re:here's a mirror by phillyclaude · · Score: 1

    gee, I didn't see it. Thanks Safari!

    --
    A computer without a Microsoft operating system is like a dog without bricks tied to its head
  112. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to post as AC, but...

    Using the legal process EMarketers has started
    against them is an interesting idea. Heck, a good idea - if anyone has money that they want to spend on that rather than anything else.

    A word of caution though: if that legal process of discovery puts the defendants under a legal obligation to keep the information disclosed confidential then asking for IP addresses would be a mistake.

    Perhaps you're right in asserting that a Florida court couldn't punish non-Floridians for breaking that confidentiality, but it would certainly be an act of bad faith put on public record. Leaving aside the 'old saw' "don't descend to their level" there is also the practical argument that future nuisance lawsuits would be able to use such a public record to their advantage - turning the tactical gain of getting a big list of spam addresses into a strategic loss.

    If Mr Linford is reading this - I'd like to thank for his efforts.

    AC.

  113. Bernie Strikes Back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What it really sound like is that Bernie Shifman got a law degree. Or maybe the plaintiff was an old friend. Sounds about equally deficient in smarts.

    What a crock, eh?

    Have a nice war,
    Mal the Elder

  114. BAAAD response, a judge won't understand it! by SysKoll · · Score: 1

    That's a nice response. It entirely makes sense.

    And the judge's eyes will glaze over at the first attempt at distinguishing the blocking of ingress email vs. the blocking of email transmission.

    Here is what to write in the response, in the very first paragraph:

    Defendant keeps a list of known spammers. People who don't want spam look up this list. Or rather, they instruct their computers to lookup the list before downloading email.

    Any attempt at being technically rational is sure to meet utter failure in 99.5% of courts:
    "Hippy headdress? What hippy headdress?"
    "No, your Honor. IP address."
    "Whatever. It's a bunch of anarchist hippies sabotaging honest businesses."

    I wish I was joking, but freedom and privacy don't exactly seem to be on a roll these days in courts...

    -- SysKoll
    --

    --
    Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

  115. By all means.... by Jaysyn · · Score: 3, Funny

    Demand for Jury Trial

    Plaintiff, EMARKETERSAMERICA.ORG, INC. hereby makes a demand for a jury trial of all counts so triable.

    Sweet, these morons *want* a jury trial.

    Jury: "Your honor, we find the defendant SpamHaus et al. innocent on all charges, and furthermore recommend the public castration and/or execution of the plantiff & all it's members.

    Judge: "Sounds good to me."

    Jaysyn

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  116. this case is so much bullshit... by dh003i · · Score: 1

    The lawsuite filed by these spammers is so much bullshit that you don't even need lawyers to defend it off. Any judge who this is brought to will know it's bullshit, and all the defendants have to do is say, "nope, completely voluntary service", "nope, spammers have no business relationship with their victims", "nope, never sold a product". No judge in the US is going to award a judgement in favor of spammers; if anything, they'r exposing themselves for prosecution under anti-spam laws.

  117. I'm afraid to admit I live in Florida... BUT maybe I've been here longer then this idiot has (22 years this Saturday!)

    --
    There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
  118. my take by wannasleep · · Score: 1

    I can't figure out if the guy is clueless or simply one of the biggest liars I have ever heard of. Clearly, some of the allegations he makes are false and wrong. So, I guess that the frivolous lawsuit would take care of this, if Linford bothered to file it. Also, I wonder if the discovery process could actually provide information for a suit in the European Union, which is not so keen to corporate prevarication (http://www.spamlaws.com/eu.html for a list of laws in Europe). Also, an association whose purpose is to help crime (as spam is in some states) could also be criminally charged by a DA, anywhere in the world, as long as it negatively impacts LEGITIMATE business with deliberate actions.

    By the way, we all read with a lot of interest Spamhaus material and therefore they are of public concern!!

    Also, I wonder if I could sue some of the members for invasion, modification and appropriation of Private Property: in fact, they are changing the content of my hard drive with no authorization whatsoever (yes, frivolous, but less than their lawsuit).

    Last, some claims of the Truly Ours S. Linford, could have been little bit more effective in certain statements, e.g.
    - the fact that he had never heard of the plaintiff, does not necessarily imply that he can not harm it;
    - the retort to 51& 52 is wrong as they are about the members of emarketerswhatever, not the association itself

    I also hope that the lawyer did not use internic to get the domain name record info because he would have declared that his query would not

    (a) allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission by e-mail, telephone, or facsimile of mass unsolicited, commercial advertising or solicitations to entities other than
    the data recipient's own existing customers.......

    1. Re:my take by sameyeam · · Score: 1

      the fact that he had never heard of the plaintiff, does not necessarily imply that he can not harm it; I took it as they were implying he was intentionally harming the plaintiff, if he'd never heard of them he couldn't possibly be intentionally harming them. *shrug* Maybe it could have been worded better.

    2. Re:my take by wannasleep · · Score: 1

      yeah, that was my point. This is legal stuff, it ain't matter what he means,the meaning of what he wrote is the only thing that matters, and lawyers can be pretty anal if doing so benefits them....

  119. Re:Everyone hates spam... including spammers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What would the good folk at Hormel Foods (www.spam.com) say? They might direct eMarketersAmerica to the SPAM Fan Club (fanclub.spam.com), or perhaps they could come up with a lawsuit of their own...

  120. My Arguement by Bruha · · Score: 1

    Everyone has the right to free speech. And I have the right to plug my ears.

    They can send spam all they want but I'm damn sure going to block them with the software I "Choose" to install. In essence I'm plugging my ears to the crap the spammers are sending me.

    I dont think any judge is going to force people to listen. Especially when a bill is being pushed through congress to form a national no spam list.

  121. My favorite line... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1
    was down a bit:

    39. Defendants, S. LINFORD[et al] converted said Internet Protocol addresses and servers to their own use and for their own financial gain.

    The attorney who wrote that hasn't a clue what it means.

    --
    Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  122. Free speech. by silverhalide · · Score: 1

    One thing that spammers frequently misquote is our own constitution. The first admendment protects freedom of speech for *INDIVIDUALS*, NOT CORPORATIONS or other business entities. Corporations are not guaranteed any rights under the first admendment.

    1. Re:Free speech. by RipCurl808 · · Score: 1

      A little wrong on that part. The amendment actually states that CONGRESS shall make no law... Free Speech ends when you impeded on my right to tell you to STFU.

  123. One more time: by AftanGustur · · Score: 1


    The other key point in the document is that the Spamhaus Black List (SBL) blocks spam at the destination, not the source.

    "Black Lists" of this type don't block any mail. Not any more than the phonebook calls your number.

    The "Black List" is only a tool, and the end user can do with it as he chooses.

    The user of a Blacklist can "Whitelist" any network he wants. The Blacklist doesn't force the rejection of any email. It is 100% up to the user of the Blacklist what to do when a IP/Network is found in the Blacklist.

    --
    echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
  124. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by {8_8} · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I am a n00b second-year law student. I'm also summarizing on a specific issue.

    As I understand it, jurisdiction is possible in federal court under 28 USC section 1332 (a)(2). This is one of the subsets of diversity jurisdiction called alienage jurisdiction. 28 USC section 1332 (a)(2) allows a lawsuit to be filed in federal court if it involves both a $75,000+ and a suit by a US state citizen against a foreign national. That's why you see all the $75,000 figures in the suit. If the spammer's lawyer can't prove they meet the $75,000+ amount in controversy, there is no diversity jurisdiction and the case gets dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

    I'm not sure whether the judgment would be enforceable against Spamhaus, should they somehow manage to lose the case. I vaguely remember my civil procedure teacher saying that UK courts were generally willing to enforce US judgments, so long as they appeared legit. I'm not sure about that, though.

  125. Innocent and Guilty by ananoca · · Score: 1

    "But the Anti-Spammers have a mob mentality and want to get rid of both the innocent and guilty," Response... :: Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do ::

  126. some stuff to note by Reapermanuk · · Score: 1

    They seem to be trying to have the trial by jury probably hoping that the jury will not understand the technical details and award in favour of the damn spammers.

  127. How to go after spammers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about this for a novel idea. Setup a website dedicated to sending encouraging emails to elementary school children. Put the website online with a link to the email address, and link to the site from various others.

    Park a truck outside the school with one of those HUGE stadium-sized projection screens and display each email on the screen as it is received. Give it a little while and, you guessed it, spammers will start bombarding it with anal sex emails, viagra, teen pr0n, etc. Since that's likely a violation of many laws to send that stuff to minors, send the FBI after them. When their sorry ass is rotting in prison, I'll bet they sure won't want their prison mates to be ordering viagra from their spam.

  128. Felstein is a crook himself by RipCurl808 · · Score: 1

    Take a look at the "registration" data from Emarketers whois.

    http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=3EA8586F.38 FD E18C%40etherboy.com&oe=UTF-8&output=gplain

    mefels@aol.com

    Hosted an Instakiss AOL password phish site within his own acct. (now taken down by AOL or him after it was discovered).

    Another site that was associated with the instakiss crime:

    http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=b8sf1k%24nr m% 241%40baldur.whoi.edu&oe=UTF-8&output=gpla in

    So Felstein is a crook as well as a delusional lawyer.

  129. You Forgot The Most Important Thing To Obtain! by Steve+Cox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It would be most important to obtain the complete list of email addresses they send to.

    That way, the people who own the email addresses on the list can be asked if they had opted in (EMarkerters did state that they ran an opt-in scheme only...)

    Steve.

    1. Re:You Forgot The Most Important Thing To Obtain! by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > It would be most important to obtain the complete list of email addresses they send to.
      >
      >That way, the people who own the email addresses on the list can be asked if they had opted in (EMarkerters did state that they ran an opt-in scheme only...)

      Yeah, but it'd be like the world's longest, (and most boring) string of amicus curiae briefs ever filed.

      Worse, imagine if the defendants asked anyone who'd been spammed by Marin's gang to be called as witnesses. *shudder*

      Felchstein: "My clients don't spam, it's all opt-in!"
      Victim #1: "No, I didn't opt in to receive your clients' shite. In my eyes, that makes your clients spammers."
      Victim #2: "No, I didn't opt in either."
      Victim #3: "No, I didn't opt in either. And because of the South Florida spam gang, whenever I see the words 'Boca Raton' on any mailing address, I think 'fraudulent'. Must suck to be one of the few legitimate businesses in Boca, if indeed there are any."
      Victim #4: "No, I didn't opt in either. And as long as I'm under oath, I also think Felchstein looks like ten pounds of shit in a five-pound bag."
      ...
      Victim #5,443,195: "No, I didn't opt in either. And I believe Victim #4 has a gift for understatement."

    2. Re:You Forgot The Most Important Thing To Obtain! by Steve+Cox · · Score: 1
      > Worse, imagine if the defendants asked anyone who'd been spammed by Marin's gang to be called as witnesses. *shudder*
      >
      > Victim #5,443,195: ...

      ...but when Marins lot lose, the court costs & lawyers bills would be astronomical... :)

    3. Re:You Forgot The Most Important Thing To Obtain! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > > Victim #5,443,195: ...
      >
      >...but when Marins lot lose, the court costs & lawyers bills would be astronomical... :)

      That's evil. I like that kind of evil.

  130. PLEASE mod parent way up by valmont · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    please mod parent way up and send its contents to the spamhaus guys, as food for thought.

  131. Stupid... by xenobyte · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What would be much more interesting is a lawsuit from the ISPs that gets hit by the punitive overlisting (the 'escalated listing') that SPEWS and SpamHaus practices.

    These affect in most cases upwards of 99% completely innocent customers of the victimized ISPs, who in some cases don't even host the spam emailers or the spamvertised sites; they are simply providing 'other services' (payment services, bandwidth for steaming etc.) for companies that may be using spam elsewhere in other parts of their business, and yet they get branded 'Spamhaus!' and gets blacklisted.

    As there is absolute no additional spam-stopping effect of this overlisting, its only purpose seem to be to blackmail the ISPs to stop a non-spam-related business relationship with companies that SPEWS/SpamHaus disapproves of in order to exact revenge or similar stupid action.

    The 99% innocent victims are being pressured to switch ISP, which may result in multi-million dollar expenses (like when they need to move all their servers elsewhere) that nobody but themselves can possibly be expected to cover, and sometimes the ISP even demands damages for prematurely terminated contracts.

    As these blacklists are part of the de-facto standard blacklist published by osirusoft, a listing by SPEWS/SpamHaus practically guarantees severe email connectivity problems, which makes it effectively a sender block, not just a receiving block. This means that this type of listing actually prevents millions of innocent users from sending mail, despite the fact that they've never sent anything remotely like spam, and probably hates spam as much as everybody else.

    Last time I checked blackmail was very much illegal and it would be good to see how the legal system judges this practice, especially considering that most people have no idea that their ISP may be preventing them from receiving email from ordinary people who are unfortunate enough to have an ISP that's being victimized by a SPEWS/SpamHaus overlisting, despite clearly not being a source of spam.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    1. Re:Stupid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      xenobyte wrote:
      What would be much more interesting is a lawsuit from the ISPs that gets hit by the punitive overlisting (the 'escalated listing') that SPEWS and SpamHaus practices.

      What would be even more interesting than that would be if people actually went to the trouble of understanding the issues before firing away!

      SpamHaus does not engage in the practice of expanding listings around a spammer. What SpamHaus will do, in extreme cases, is add an ISPs own corporate mail servers to the SBL. Note I wrote their corporate mail servers, not the designated mail relays that customers use, if any.

      SPEWS does engage in listing expansion when an ISP proves reluctant to kick their spammers. And while I don't use SPEWS on any of my mail gateways: I agree with the practice 100%.

      Listen, folks: it is the ISPs that enable this network abuse. Don't believe for a second that they don't know when they have one of the more prolific spammers on-board that they don't know or that they don't know that their customer is flooding people with unwanted adverts and abusing the network resources of others.

      Going after the ISP, whether it's via SpamHaus' "list their corporate mail servers" method or SPEWS' "list their product (netblocks)" method, is precisely the right thing to do, IMO. Irresponsible, anti-social ISPs should be shunned.

      One of my ex-ISPs turned into a spam-supporting cesspool so I dumped them. You want to keep supporting people that enable network abuse? Fine. But don't expect me to accept traffic from your neighborhood. And don't come whining to me about your impaired connectivity when you find other network owners do the same.

    2. Re:Stupid... by xenobyte · · Score: 1
      What would be even more interesting than that would be if people actually went to the trouble of understanding the issues before firing away!

      That's a pretty stupid comment from someone who doesn't even want to be named... As to understanding the issues, I'm willing to bet that I know the issues at least as well as you do, especially the futile fight against the ignorant people of SPEWS. Nobody seems to be able (or willing) to understand these basic facts:
      • A contract cannot contain terms not relating to the services it covers. You cannot demand that the customer behaves in a certain way elsewhere on the net.
      • A customer not violating the terms of a contract cannot be terminated without incurring a heavily penalty that a small ISP never can be be expected to be able to afford.
      • You can and will be listed by SPEWS even if you only provide other services than spam-related stuff to alledged spammers, for instance bandwidth for non-spamvertised streaming or payment services. Any business deal will get you listed!
      This all means that you can end up listed by SPEWS and not being able to do anything about it, short of winning the lottery and use that money to pay off the inevetable lawsuit from the alledged spammers when you terminate them without due course.

      Oh, and terminating this alledged spammer will no in any way affect the amount of spam sent out, so the blackmailing from SPEWS is all for nothing.
      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  132. More likely they have nothing to worry about by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Spamhaus is based in the UK. US law does not apply there, and US courts do not have authority there. Now if someone has comitted a serious enough crime in the US, they can be extradited form the UK to stand trial here. However this is a civil, not a criminal matter. There really isn't anything US courts can do about it.

    Welcome to the international world.

    1. Re:More likely they have nothing to worry about by cyranoVR · · Score: 1

      You're confusing civil and criminal court cases. They don't have to extradite any officers from Spamhaus to the US to hold a trial.

      I ain't a lawyer, but...

      Basically, someone representing Spamhaus has to show up in court (or file a motion or whatever). Otherwise, they run the risk of aforementioned old, crusty judge (perhaps one with fond memories of his family's multi-million dollar mail-order business) issuing a summary judgement in favor of the Spammers.

      Reference all the civil cases by US citizens against foreign governments and individuals: the PAM-AM 103 bombers, Chinese Government, Osama Bin Laden, Saddam Hussein, etc. etc. They had assets in the US (and elsewhere) turned over to the plaintiffs because they failed to defend themselves in civil court (for obvious reasons). IIRC, the ambassador from China (or was it North Korea) was even subpoenaed at the UN.

      From there, they can do all sorts of things - most importantly, further legal action. Spamhaus will have a hard time setting up shop in the US if it wants to, as it will owe legal damages. eMarkerters may obtain further court rulings that order ISPs to stop using Spamhaus services. And don't forget that the US has all sorts of trade agreements and treaties with the UK (so they might have more power than you think).

      Yeah, it's unlikely, but a ruling in favor of the spammers is not impossible (courts have been known to rule against conventional wisdom now and again *cough*MICROSOFT MONOPOLY*cough*). So it is in everyone's best interest for Spamhaus to take this suit seriously and meet it head-on in US court (preferably with a motion to dismiss).

      What we need is a real legal expert to give us the low-down.

    2. Re:More likely they have nothing to worry about by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      No, you don't understand. A US court can rule that Spamhaus owes the spammer whatever they want, but being that Spamhaus is entirely located in the UK, they can't do anything about it. They can't force UK banks to turn over assets, or compel payment or anything like that, the man isn't in the US.

      From reading what he's been saying (this isn't the first time he's been sued) he's just going to ignore it and let it die.

  133. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by valmont · · Score: 0

    You, Sir, have just earned yet another fan. holy crap that was fascinating stuff. I wish this one post could be modded beyond 5. thank you. thank you. thank you.

  134. mod parent up pleeeez. by valmont · · Score: 1

    please mod parent up a few notches, this "n00b" has some pretty darn interesting info on that $75k figure.

  135. Re:here's a mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yank the damn popup as it's diametrically opposed to the spirit of offering a mirror.

    The spirit of offering a mirror is so that more people can view the information. Don't be an ass.

  136. He's having a good whine, too! by Tsuzuki · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised the emarketersamerica website hasn't been slashdotted yet. ^_^

    From the page:

    Since the suit was filed April 14th, Mark E. Felstein has received threatening phone calls, corruption of his e-mail addresses and when his organization simply registered and parked its domain with a well-known register, it was wrongly blacklisted and immediately terminated by Anti-spammers.

    (I really should be above this, but the fax number is listed on that page too. Have fun with the loop-of-black-pages trick!)

  137. war against drugs, against terrorism, ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if spam is network terrorrism, should americans and australians fear beeing bombed by george dubbja bush due to "war against spam" next ?

    or are they going to bomb the europeans because we "hide" spam haters ?

    this is no joke, its a serious question lately....

    g`ol european joe

  138. And it's not April 1? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good lord. It never ceases to amaze me what spammers will try to do to stay in business and piss everyone off with their unsolicited garbage. I run my company's mail server and between the 30 or so people that need access to email, from 1/1/2003 to today, there have been 29,469 pieces of spam that tried to get through. That's 221 a day for 30 users?
    That's bad enough, but I've gotten over 5,000 (blocked) pieces of spam - yet I have never used my email address for anything other than customer related business. Meaning that all my spam was done via dictionary attack or illegally using the WHOIS database in which my email address is listed.
    It is unethical. It is immoral. It is wrong. Don't claim I opted in when you illegally scoured the WHOIS database.
    If I ever saw a spammer face to face, I would beat his ass to a bloody pulp and not care about the repurcussions. Filing a bogus lawsuit because you are having a hard time annoying millions of people with stuff they don't want? Grow up. I have a pacifier and a box of Huggies for you.
    -mj

  139. Well good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm daily getting more frightened of the States than of any other country or organisation

    Do not be afraid.

    Be very, very afraid.

    Maybe we'll wipe North Korea off the face of the earth as an example of why it is better to be our friends than to seek to be our enemies.

    1. Re:Well good. by mark2003 · · Score: 1

      And the UK along with every one else will become enemies of the US - threats of force only work so far...

      Still the point though that a Florida court has absolutely no jurisdiction and I hope Spamhaus tell them to shove their lawsuit where the sun don't shine and don't waste any more time on it.

  140. The way these 'email marketers' think. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is one who will show up on talk radio to defend his POV.
    Johnathan Crawford

    The audio from Tuesday, May 13
    Youâ(TM)ve probably noticed an increase in marketing pitches among your email messages. Jonathan Crawford of Data Dog Marketing discusses this phenomena and how potential customers perceive this effective promotional tool. Should have a link later today

    And Mr. Crawford has this to say about 'email marketing':
    Data Dog Marketing is a Milwaukee-based provider of customized data capture and segmented email marketing services. Says president Johnathan Crawford, "LetterMark email is one of the few marketing innovations I've run across in my 30 years as a marketer that satisfies nearly every goal a marketer could have. It hits three universal goals of differentiation, branding and improved connectivity with customers. The idea is so subtle, so clever, and frankly so simple that we now recommend it for every client we engage."

    My guess is Mr. Johnathan Crawford thinks there is no such thing as bad publicity.

    Registrant:
    Johnathan Crawford
    9802 N. Lamplighter Lane
    Mequon, WI 53092
    US
    Telephone: 262.240.0664
    Fax: 262.240.0665

    Crawford, Johnathan & Wendy
    9802 N Lamplighter La 32W
    Mequon, WI 53092
    (262) 240-0663

    His rational for incurring expense to me should be interesting. Who knows, perhaps his 'pro e-mail marketing' speech will get /. front page treatment.

  141. Douglas Adams once described litigation... by yoz · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... somewhat like this:

    You put all of your money into a big pile. Your opponent puts all of his/her money into another big pile. Then the lawyers come along and start tearing up the money piles. Whichever lawyer finishes first loses.

    -- Yoz

  142. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Spamhaus isn't a US entity, and Steve Linford isn't a US resident, and it's highly likely that the court has no jurisdiction over his actions, so it may be much cleaner for him to say "no thanks" and not be part of the suit.


    The big problem I see with these kinds of suits is the game they seem to be playing of "Judge roulette". Sure it's a frivoulus suite, sure it doesn't have an merit, but, they're going to just keep filing these suites until they hit an Internet ignorant judge who'll give them the judgement they're looking for. Once they get that it will be a major uphill battle to get it reversed. (See the RIAA, et al).
  143. Welcome to REALITY by Grue_Food · · Score: 0

    It seems like it is time us /.ers gave Mr. Mark E. Felstein a taste of SPAM by sending a "presonal" email to him /. style.

  144. YES! (Re:are they stupid?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact, word is the spammer behind the suit, Eddy Marin, may sue the Florida police who have his cocaine trafficking and money laundering convictions in their records!

    From today's "Boca Raton Crack News" -

    "They have a list that calls me a criminal and felon", Marin oinked, "that interferes with my constitutional right to commit crime!"

    His lawyer, Mark Felchstain agreed and snorted, "We'll win, and after that we plan on suing every US citizen to force them to allow us to come into their homes and staple up our Herbal Viagra ads!"

    When this reporter asked about the white powder under each of their noses, both replied they'd been eating doughnuts earlier.

  145. Link removed--anybody have a mirror? by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 1

    Chickenboner.com doesn't have anything at the link posted in the parent post... Anybody get a mirror of it before it got pulled?

    --
    Who did what now?
  146. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by thogard · · Score: 1

    Someone should come up with a list of judges that are pro-spam and are in positions where they have get votes to stay in office. I would be willing to help pay to get them kicked out of office.

  147. Wrong by akmed · · Score: 1

    I'm glad you took the time to misinform people about American law. Had you read the link, you would've noticed 28 USC 1332 was referenced (also known as Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (FRCP) 1332). Here's a link to the code itself if you want it.

    Basically, what the law says is that if one party is a resident of the state and the other is a resident of a foreign nation AND the damages claimed will be at least $75,000 then the Federal District Court for that state (or part of the state for larger states) has jurisdiction over the case.

    Here they said they are residents of Boca Raton, FL, which is in the Southern District of Florida, SPAMHAUS et al are NOT in florida in any way, and they were going to claim damages of at least $75,000. They likely listed everyone and their cousins to make it perfectly clear that complete diversity of citizenship exists. If you don't have complete diversity of citizenship then the Federal Court will throw the case out because it's a State Court matter. It's a little more complex than that and IANAL. I am a law student but this IS NOT legal advice.

    And for anyone who doesn't bother checking the above link to the USC, if the damages later end up being less than $75,000 then the plaintiff may not get costs and indeed might have to pay the costs so making a blind allegation that you meet the $75,000 mark can turn out to be expensive if a jury later awards you $1 and the judge levies the costs on you.

    So next time you're going to make legal conjectures do at least attempt to do a little research.

    1. Re:Wrong by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      They likely listed everyone and their cousins to make it perfectly clear that complete diversity of citizenship exists. If you don't have complete diversity of citizenship then the Federal Court will throw the case out because it's a State Court matter.

      IANAL, but I would expect that amongst the first motions put in by the defense would be to have the case dismissed against many if not all of the foreign defendants on the grounds that they have no connection to the alleged events.

      I say amongst because the far bigger problem the suit has is that it is filed by a front organization and attempts to claim damages on behalf of a group of anonymous 'members'. You cannot do that under US law, or any other law I am aware of, even in the state of Florida. The defense has an absolute right to know who the real plaintif is.

      What slashdot members appear to be referring to is a separate jurisdictional issue however, spamhaus is based in London and conducts its business exclusively in the UK. In order to sue in the US courts the plaintifs have to show that there is a reason that the US courts should attempt to exercise jurisdiction there rather than telling the plaintif to go file the case in the UK courts. There are precedents and long arm statues etc. however the courts tend to put a pretty strict bar on using them.

      There are ways that a lawyer could probably persuade the Florida district court to exercise jurisdiction but Felstein does not appear likely to be able to make them.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    2. Re:Wrong by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

      I'm confused

      Are you saying that a nation can pass a law giving itself legal juristiction in another nation?

      OK. Supposing I buy an island somewhere and secede, with permission of course, from the nation it's part of at the time and declare myself absolute ruler (a 'one man, one vote' system, I am that man I have the vote). I then pass a law that annoying the absolute ruler it punishable by a fine not less than $1billion and public flogging. I further pass a law that in any crime where the punishment involves a fine greater than $1million MyNation legal system has jurisdiction.

      Does that mean I can fine Dubbya $1billion for being someone I personally find annoying?

      NB, I am quite aware that the US has overwhelming military might and would no doubt class any attempt to sue the President as 'Treason'. I'm questioning the legality of a nation giving itself legal jurisdiction over the citizens/subjects of another nation, other than where explicitly laid out by treaty or UN mandate.

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    3. Re:Wrong by studerby · · Score: 1
      Are you saying that a nation can pass a law giving itself legal juristiction in another nation?

      Yes, the original poster is saying that, and the original poster is correct; you haven't been paying attention have you?

      U.S. law has a number of "extra-territorial" provisions, particularly in respect to U.S. citizens or U.S. business overseas. For example 18 USC Sec. 2332a gives U.S. Courts jurisdiction over people who "without lawful authority, uses, threatens, or attempts or conspires to use, a weapon of mass destruction" against:

      • a U.S. citizen outside the U.S.
      • any person within the United States
      • any property that is owned, leased or used by the United States

      The U.S. is not unique in this regard. Israel prosecuted and executed Adolf Eichmann for crimes that occured in Europe during the Holocaust, before Israel even existed (the only death sentence ever carried out in Israel, btw). A Belgian prosecuter recently initiated "war crimes" proceedings against U.S. General Tommy Franks, for events that occured in the Iraq war.

      --

      .sig generation error:468(3)

    4. Re:Wrong by arafel · · Score: 1

      A Belgian prosecuter recently initiated "war crimes" proceedings against U.S. General Tommy Franks, for events that occured in the Iraq war.

      I haven't heard anything about that one - have you got a link to a newspaper report or something I can read? (Not that I'm doubting you, I'm just curious)

      Cheers!

    5. Re:Wrong by studerby · · Score: 1
      Turns out I was mistaken about "Belgian prosecuter", it's "Belgian attorney" - Belgium has a law allowing extraterritorial private war crimes lawsuits.

      You can find it all over the net if you google, here's a reputable link, an article from the BBC.

      --

      .sig generation error:468(3)

    6. Re:Wrong by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

      So, you are saying that a nation has the right to grant itself juristiction over another nation's people and territory with out the need for treaty agreement or UN resolution. Makes rather a mockery of the concept of soverign nation states, does it not?

      As for the two cases you cite. The Isreali prosecution of Adolf Eichmann was, according to a programme I saw on on the History Channel a few weeks back (handy that), a continuation of the general allied war crimes tribunal carried out in the wake of WWII and therefore drew it's authority from that regardless of the nation prosecuting the trial. As for the case brought against Tommy Franks, well, I am lead to believe (isn't the History Channel great) that Belgium was granted various extra territorial powers for the prosecution of war crimes explicitly by resolution of the UN and Allied war command after WWII.

      I'm not arguing against nations exertign extra territorial powers when they are granted by treaty or UN resolution. Inparticular when those powers are exerted to bring war criminals (a group in which I place Eichmann but not Franks or any of the coalition in recent conflict in Iraq) to justice. What worries me is when such powers are exerted, without treaty or UN resolution, for the commerical benefit of corporate or other fiscal entities to protect them doing something which is illegal in the greater part of the nation who's powers they are exerting.

      See what I'm getting at?

      Incidentally, when did the SBL get defined as a weapon of mass destruction?

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    7. Re:Wrong by akmed · · Score: 1

      In general, yes. But there's a difference between a court having jurisdiction over a matter and a court having the ability to hale someone into court. All jurisdiction means (usually) is that the court is satisfied that someone in the court's zone of influence has been affected by someone else's action or has affected someone else by their own actions.

      If the plaintiff and the defendant happen to reside in the same state (corporations reside both where their corporate papers are filed and where their principal place of business is) then generally absent a question of federal law ( 28 USC 1331 ) the federal court will kick it out to be dealt with in state courts. See the original post of mine for a more full explanation of the following: there's also jurisdiction in federal court when there's diversity of citizenship and the amount is above $75k.

      But absent treaties for extradition and even sometimes despite such treaties, the only way to have a lawsuit in the US affect you if you live abroad is to come visit the US. Individual states in the US usually grant extradition to one another and various nations have treaties for extradition depending on the nature of the offense (usually criminal offenders will be extradited but you can get into situations where non-death penalty places will refuse to extradite to a death penalty place etc.).

      All of this makes perfect sense to if you think about it. Bob lives in Brazil. He pisses off Jim in the US and costs Jim a lot of money. That person files a lawsuit and is able to serve Bob with notice of the lawsuit (persuant to FRCP 4(f); scroll down looking for f, the link is to FRCP 4). Bob refuses to answer therefore Bob loses (defaults). If Bob ever wants to visit the US it's going to be an expensive visit because he owes Jim whatever he lost and if Jim catches wind that Bob has come into the US then he can get law enforcement people to have a chat with Bob. I don't know exactly how it works from there, so you'll have to talk to a lawyer who deals in such things if you want the rest of the story, but if Bob never visits the US he's got nothing to worry about.

      If you piss someone off, refuse to apologize or work the problem out in some way, and then later go to a party at that person's apartment building that he's also attending, doesn't it make sense he'd give you the cold shoulder and maybe make some snide remarks? It's the same idea. Just more expensive than hurt feelings from bad remarks.

    8. Re:Wrong by studerby · · Score: 1
      I'm not making any statement about right or wrong, or political theory, or diplomatic convention, or international law; I'm merely pointing to facts I know - many nations *do* claim extra-territorial jurisdiction, under some circumstances (and a *lot* of people argue that they should be doing it more, or doing it less).

      Here are some links referring to extra-territorial jurisdiction (or universal jurisdiction - the idea that some crimes are so terrible that every court has jurisdiction for the crime):

      • Amnesty International statement on universal jurisdiction
      • a UN resolution "Adopting the resolution by a recorded vote of 133 in favour to two against (Israel, United States) and two abstentions (Australia, Latvia), the Assembly reiterated its call for the repeal of unilateral extraterritorial laws that imposed coercive measures contrary to international law on corporations and nationals of other States."
      • (html from google) Princeton PDF hosts an article titled "Multinational Pharmaceutical Corporations and U.S. Extraterritorial Jurisdiction". It has a nice description about some exceptions to absolute sovereignty, some of which are widely recognized, and some not.
      --

      .sig generation error:468(3)

    9. Re:Wrong by LarsG · · Score: 1

      So, you are saying that a nation has the right to grant itself juristiction over another nation's people and territory with out the need for treaty agreement or UN resolution. Makes rather a mockery of the concept of soverign nation states, does it not?

      Well. If I make a one man state I can make whatever laws and issue any judgements I like. I can find His Billness guilty of being a nasty man and order him to be thrown in jail until Microsoft is broken up. However, without any treaties existing between my state and the US, that judgement is worth nothing in the US and US courts are free to ignore it. If Bill steps on my soil, however...

      That is why sane international treaties are important. (And why more people should care about stuff like the Hague treaty on private international law).

      --
      If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
    10. Re:Wrong by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1
      One needn't go so far as to look up the FRCP to discover this. (Which, if you were paying attention as closely as you'd have to have been to justify your attitude, doesn't establish jurisdiction of the Federal courts in general, but only which Federal court has original jurisdiction for certain types of cases.) Try Article 3 Section 2 of the US Constitution, which specificly grants Federal courts jurisdiction in cases between "a state, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects." I was simplifying -- perhaps over-simplifying -- for the sake of dashing off a brief answer.

      The courts excercise their authority in part through law enforcement agencies, but just as much through the aura of power and prestige that surrounds them. The Supreme Court, for example, has no means at all to compel adherence to its decisions; it relies rather on public perception of its legitimacy and its prestige to cause decisions it issues to be obeyed without much question. This is one reason judges retain ceremonial robes and other symbols of authority that modern society generally deems obsolete in other contexts. Courts are therefore reluctant in general to make decisions or issue orders that can be ignored with impunity because it makes them appear powerless, as they in fact are in some cases. It detracts from their perceived authority and diminishes their prestige. This is just such a case, as would be obvious to the court if the facts were correctly stated in the suit. The defendant is an organization not located in the US, has no principals in the US, does no business (in the normal sense of the word; exchanging goods and services for payment or other consideration) in the US, has no US assets, and the sole service it provides for free is to make a list available for download that's hosted on a server outside the US under a domain name registered by a non-US company. Sure, a court could issue a restraining order and order a jury trial as the suit demands. It would accomplish precisely nothing. It would make the court look ridiculous. They wouldn't do it.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
  148. This is mindbogglingly funny... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
    And the misapprehensions are laughable. Sue Steve Linford, fine, he's the guy running Spamhaus. Sue his brother? Um... well done, spammer, good research there. But then they add Shiksaa, Steven Sobol, Clifto, Morely, Joe Jared... this really is a Who's Who of nanae. I bet Suresh is pissed off that they left him out.

    They probably believe that the Lumber Cartel (tinlc) is out to get them, too...

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  149. And spammers shouldn't accuse someone of this... by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1
    39. Defendants, S. LINFORD, J. LINFORD, MURPHY, WILSON, GUNN, SOBOL, SHARP, TIETJENS, BROWER, JARED, SPAMHAUS and SPEWS converted said Internet Protocol addresses and servers to their own use and for their own financial gain.
    According to MY mail logs, the only people trying to "convert" IP addresses and servers to their own use are the spammers. Where, oh where, are the BIG foam cluebats when you REALLY need them?
    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  150. ICANN own IP address by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1

    As a side note, Spamhaus would never state that Internet Protocol ("IP") addresses are "not the property of the Plaintiff" since all IP addresses are clearly the property of whomever they are assigned to. Likewise it would be inconceivable of Spamhaus to state that the "servers of members of the Plaintiff's are not their property" since any servers the Plaintiff owns are clearly the Plaintiff's property.

    ICANN 'owns' all IP addresss, when an IP is assigned to you, it is a annual lease not ownership.

  151. The Computer Misuse Act 1990 by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1

    since neither the Plaintiff nor its members have any right whatsoever to force unwanted junk email onto the private computer of an SBL user.

    Actually any attempt by the plaintif to 'force' its unwanted junk email on to a private computer within the UK is clear break of the Computer Misuse Act 1990, which makes it a criminal offense to "secure access to any computer [that is unauthorised]". The plaintif is therefore seeking to obtain Florida Court approval to breach UK Criminal Law.

    --- quote ---
    'The Computer Misuse Act 1990' Section 1;

    (1) A person is guilty of an offence if--
    (a) he causes a computer to perform any function with intent to secure access to any program or data held in any computer;
    (b) the access he intends to secure is unauthorised; and
    (c) he knows at the time when he causes the computer to perform the function that that is the case.
    (2) The intent a person has to have to commit an offence under this section need not be directed at--
    (a) any particular program or data;
    (b) a program or data of any particular kind; or
    (c) a program or data held in any particular computer.
    (3) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale or to both.

    http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts1990/Ukpga_19900 01 8_en_1.htm

  152. Media Contact by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 1


    www.emarketersamerica.org have also thoughfully provided a telephone number for contact by media.

    Media Contact: (561) 750-9800 ext. 16

  153. Wrong phone number by kiwimate · · Score: 4, Informative

    A reverse lookup at Google states:

    Yvonne K Kemeny, (561) 997-9008, 4601 NW Boca Raton Blvd, Boca Raton, FL 33431

    Either you've mistyped the number or you're playing some sort of game. Moderators -- stuff like this should be checked out first.

  154. No commercials? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PBS is LOADED with commercials. When you mention a company name in conjunction with a product or service, it is a COMMERCIAL. Brain dead from all the SPAM?

  155. Legitimate sources? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are NO legitimate sources. Never have been and never will be. You are hallucinating! Thanks for the email addy, now we can BLOCK crap coming from your ISP. Nigger!

  156. How much does it cost to file suit in Florida? by Dossy · · Score: 1

    How much does it cost to file suit in Florida? $100? Plus another couple of thousand dollars for Mark Feldstein's fees ...

    That's pretty cheap advertising for Eddy Marin and EMarketersAmerica.org. What more widespread and effective marketing and advertising than getting on /.?

    In under 4 weeks, Eddy's created a brand that's recognized by hundreds of thousands of people. I think that's impressive. ... and we fell for it. Duh.

    -- Dossy

  157. US filing lawsuits by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Did you just spill my Heineken?

  158. spamhaus isn't perfect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a slam dunk case of slimy spammers who'll get nowhere with their case and hopefully be countersued. One thing's been bothering me though - spamhaus is being a little disingenuous when they say the sbl only lists the sources of spam. Sometimes they put other blocks in for punitive reasons - e.g. blocking a non-spamming isp that didn't shut down a spamming customer soon enough, or blocking a larger range than necessary, causing email problems for unrelated organizations because of the proximity of their netblocks. I'd feel better about the already great work they're doing if they were a little more careful about those sorts of collateral damage.

  159. i just love the nationalistic spin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone noticed how they are trying to play on the current drift in relations between EU and US by underlining the fact that they are: "...filing a lawsuit against the Anti-Spammers, many of which hide in Europe"

    Next thing you know they're gonna bring in the heavy artillery by claiming that all these "Anti-Spammers" are relics of the now broken USSR, fundamentally opposed to the values of free market economics and progress.

    A true classic!

  160. Re:here's a mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Still Using IE are you? Or are you not familiar with your browser? Why is he even marked 4, insightful????? UUUUGGGGGGGGGHHHHHH!!!!!!!!! If you'd use a sane browser, you'd block it already.

  161. Re:And spammers shouldn't accuse someone of this.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm,
    Do the bats really have to be foam?

    I'd prefer to use the nice solid metal or wooden ones myself. I think metal would be better. Not those wimpy hollow ones either, nice solid metal.

  162. rofl another typo in the spammers case... by master0ne · · Score: 1

    taken from the mirror: http://www.yukon.curvedspaces.com/s.htm warning mirror has pop-ups! unpreventable, the host forces them.




    11. Defendant, RICHARD C. TIETJENS a/k/a MORLEY DOTES, (hereinafter referred to a "TlETJENS") is an individual and is believed to be a resident and domiciliary of the State of Oregon. TIETJENS is sui juris before this Court. Plaintiff is informed and believes that BROWER is an officer, director and principal of SPAMHAUS and SPEWS.


    Richard Tietjens is not an officer, director or principal of Spamhaus. Spamhaus categorically does not believe Richard Tietjens is or ever has been an officer, director or principal of SPEWS.


    12. Defendant, ADAM BROWER, (hereinafter referred to a "BROWER") is an individual and is believed to be a resident and domiciliary of the State of Illinois. BROWER is sui juris before this Court. Plaintiff is informed and believes that BROWER is an officer, director and principal of SPAMHAUS and SPEWS.

    --
    Noone writes jokes in base 13!
  163. New PR tactic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now we know what Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf has been up to these days.

    1. Re:New PR tactic by jorgen · · Score: 1
      There are no anti-spam infidels in Europe! Never! They are committing suicide in millions, as we speak.

      And..and...We will roast their stomachs in hell, over a burning pile of spam. But first we will hit them with old shoes. Allah be praised!

  164. Yet Another Solution to Spam by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Haven't you gotten spam from Verisign? I have.

    What makes you think that will get rid of spam. The most you can hope for with this approach is that only those willing to pay a fee will be able to send spam.

    I'd propose a different system. Everybody sign email with a public key. If it doesn't have a trusted key, and it's not on your whitemail list, then it's spam. Everyone gets to choose which keys they want to trust. And if they start getting signed spam, they can revoke either the whitelist entry, or the key signer (depending on which it is). I wouldn't trust Verisign, but I'd trust Red Hat and IBM.

    If you want to send e-mail to someone, and they don't know you, then you either need to get them to enter your e-mail address on their whitelist, or you need to get your e-mail signed by someone they trust. You can either get them to trust your, or get someone that they do trust to sign it. The easy way is to get them to trust you (click this link to enable us to send you e-mail)... but if you start sending junk, then they'll revoke the trust, and you'll need to start over.

    The drawback here, of course, is that when the user switches computers, their ring of trusted signers will be lost. So you need to create a way to enable the sending of this ring from machine to machine. (Well, e-mail should work... but you need to build this capability into the mail interface.)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  165. "This will cause...unemploy[ment]" by KrispyKringle · · Score: 1
    "32. Plaintiff will suffer irreparable harm to its business reputation and loss of its good will, unless the status quo is maintained. Should the Defendants, be allowed to continue their assault upon the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff's industry, the Plaintiff's industry will cease to exist. This will cause more Americans to become unemployed."

    If I remember right, the latest census reported that 45% of all Americans with a 6th grade education were employed in spam or spam-related industries (i.e. penis enlargement, porn production, and transporting millions of dollars out of South Africa). Imagine the cost to society if all of these people were deprived of their means to get by!

  166. Re:here's a mirror by hillct · · Score: 1

    In Moz 1.3 they broke some of the popup blocking. I'm not real impressed with their new site-by-site approach, myself...

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
  167. "Spammer of the Week" by coljac · · Score: 1
    Is there a web site out there that profiles a spammers/spamming organizations in a detailed, up-to-date manner? I'm thinking along the lines of "Spammers of the week", with their current network information, network history, names, physical addresses, working email addresses, etc.

    It'd be a great way for the /. community to "actively confront" the problem at its source.

    --
    Everyone knows that damage is done to the soul by bad motion pictures. -Pope Pius XI
  168. Re:Discovery! Yeah! by rifter · · Score: 1

    Since this is the US, the answer is no. A defendant has a constitutional right to face his/her accuser in court.

  169. Local paper talked to them today, ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... thanks to this AC who dropped an e-mail to their computer columnist, who passed it over to their PB County columnist:

    South Florida Sun-Sentinel

  170. Hmmm. Class Action Suit? by billstewart · · Score: 1

    The usual way to handle large numbers of plaintiffs in a lawsuit is to do a class action thing; this would be easy if you had all the names, but of course the obvious way to contact them would be .... spamming them :-)

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  171. Re: Hummers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hummers as an analogy don't fit very well in this context. They're not complicated, nor are the expensive. I got a Hummer. Got it behind the gas station over on Maple for $10. Wasn't complicated at all. I whipped it out, she Hummered it up, money changed hands, and we went our seperate ways.

    -1, Tasteless

  172. Spam figures by Cackmobile · · Score: 0

    I would really be interested to see if spam works. DO they compnaies advertising actually make sales through spam. Everyone deletes it as soon as it arrives. I suppose they must or they wouldn't do it. DOes that mean there is a whole class of idiot net users who actually buy stuff from spam.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  173. scum of the earth by resignator · · Score: 1

    Some people are truely evil, lack all morals, and have no conscience. Spammers are one of the lowest forms of life there is. Why we tolerate such bullshit is beyond me. Not one of these losers deserves life or liberty. I have more respect and compassion for a serial killer than a spammer.

    --
    "At first, we thought it was just another snake cult."
  174. Overrated by www.microsoft.com · · Score: 0

    No IPv6 huh? (Score:5, Funny) by hillct (230132) on Sunday May 18, @10:40AM (#5985332)
    (http://www.keepersoflists.org/ | Last Journal: Monday August 20, @09:52AM)
    Severla hundred years in the future and still, IPv6 hasn't been adopted. Personally, I'm not suprised. It'll take an act of god to get it deployed.

    70% Funny 20% Overrated 10% Troll Score:5, Interesting Score:5, Funny Score:3, Interesting Score:4, Insightful Score:4, Insightful Score:4, Insightful Score:4, Insightful Score:4, Funny Score:3, Funny Score:5, Insightful Score:4, Informative Score:5, Interesting