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fax.com Finally Fined $5M For Fax Spam

originalhack writes "If you are tired of getting calls in the middle of the night with nothing but a fax calling tone, you will celebrate this. Fax.com, who is well known for wardialing in their search for fax machines and for sending junk faxes, has finally actually been fined. The long arm of the law often moves slowly, here is the order. If you don't want to wait for the feds to stop your favorite junk faxer, you can try your luck in small claims. Federal law passed in 1991 (known as the TCPA) makes it illegal to send any material transmitted via facsimile that advertises the commercial availability or quality of any property, goods, or services which is transmitted to any person without that person's prior express invitation or permission. If the fax was deliberately sent to you (as most junk faxes are), Federal law entitles you to recover a minimum of $500 and, depending the judge's discretion, up to $1,500 for each such fax that you receive. More info at junkfax.org."

4 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. "We will not rest" !? by Gary+Whittles · · Score: 4, Interesting
    FCC's chairman Michael K. Powell issued the following statement:
    "We will not rest until consumers find peace from unwanted and unlawful intrusions - whether from telemarketing calls or junk faxes."
    Uhm... wow, all hail Michael, here to save us from junk-faxes. Is this guy for real? Is he running for office, and/or trying to cover up the fact that they really can't do much about junk mail?
  2. Why do Fax machines still exist by ahecht · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This brings up the question of why Fax machines are still used anymore. Any slightly experienced computer user can easily send a color JPEG scan of a document via email in about the same time it would take to send a fax. For the technophobes, why isn't there some type of terminal that emulates faxing though email? It could either connect to an office ethernet or dial into an ISP at 56k, and send a scanned document as a color JPEG to any email address (which would probably be faster than traditional faxes, which send uncompressed TIFFs at 14.4kbps). If the recipient doesn't have a computer, the machine could function as a email to paper gateway, collecting and printing from a cheap POP3 email account. Am I missing something? Does old-fashoned faxing have a place in the modern society?

  3. Re:Maybe we need a email - FAX service ... by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Interesting
    actual faxes always have the senders number

    Really? Why faxes compared to any other phone call with caller id blocked? (The phone number on the fax itself is generated by software. Trivial to remove or change.)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  4. Re:Words couldn't be clearer by mr+i+want+to+go+home · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Eh, replying to my own post, sorry.

    Here's another little snippet from the FCC's Order:

    Section 227(b)(1)(C) of the Act prohibits any person from using "a telephone facsimile machine, computer, or other device to send an unsolicited advertisement to a telephone facsimile machine."

    It's interesting that the act doesn't allow you to send unsolicited ads from a computer to a fax machine, but doesn't go as far as prohibiting sending them from a computer to a computer (even if it was receiving faxes).

    It seems like this act could have been used to kill off email spam long ago, if only it was worded slightly differently. What a pity.