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FTC Adopts New Rule For Sexually Explicit Spam

enforcer999 writes "As you know, the CAN SPAM ACT preempted many state laws that were tougher on spammers. For instance, many of the laws that were enacted by states included a requirement that sexually explicit SPAM be labeled as such. The FTC, in charge of adopting rules, came up with a new rule that will require sexually explicit SPAM to be labeled as such. Hmm? I think the states were already trying to do this before the Federal government preempted them. Anyway, I wonder if it will work?"

15 of 243 comments (clear)

  1. It needs to be a standard label for filters by Jason+Straight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    without being a standard label of some kind it'll be useless, I need to be able to keep my kids from seeing it, like being labeled SEXUALLY EXPLICIT is going to keep my 14 yr old from clicking it.

    1. Re:It needs to be a standard label for filters by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      without being a standard label of some kind it'll be useless

      Well that would've been a better idea. Just force spammers via the law to label all their spam in the subject line with a common word like "[UBE]" or "[ADULT]". Then let the READER decide whether they want to filter that stuff easily or not. The problem is, of course, that spammers don't obey the laws anyway and couldn't care less whether you really want to receive their crap so they'd ignore such requirements. If spammers played fair and clearly labeled their crap I would stop complaining because then I could just filter advertisements that I'm not interested in. It'll never happen though.

    2. Re:It needs to be a standard label for filters by Zocalo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You jest, but I'm fully expecting to see a variety of creative spellings of "sexually explicit" as spammers pretend to comply with the law while still trying to slip by filters. There's five candidates in there for simple !/1/i/I/l/| substitutions alone... Unless the spammer is also responsible for checking the spelling, and liable if it's in error, then this is not going to be as effective as it might, and even if they are liable, I'm betting adoption isn't going to be stellar.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    3. Re:It needs to be a standard label for filters by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Insightful
      By the time the spam gets to the reader, it's already eaten bandwidth and storage along the way. If labelling their spam made it quasi-legal, the spam flood would be like a drink from the firehose compared to now (as bad as it is). Look at the figures large ISPs are publishing for the percentage of their total email that is spam, and growing amount of it.

      Filters are great for the end user, but eventually we're going to run out of carpets to sweep the spam under. Labelling is not "playing fair".

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    4. Re:It needs to be a standard label for filters by budgenator · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I doubt that most Viagra spams would fall into a sexualy expicit catagory, the sex is implied. Additional anyone sell prescription drugs without a prescription, isn't going to worry about this silly new law, because they were not worried about the old laws.

      If you want viagra, just ask your MD, unless it's contra-indicated for you, he'll be glad to get you into the office on a regular basis for script re-fills.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  2. What defines sexually explicit by millahtime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What defines sexually explicit?? There are some cases where it is obvious and some where it is iffy. Isn't it like sexual harrassment and in the eye of the beholder. Or would they use a rating system like movies??

  3. Re:Spam by DrKayBee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Besides look at how hard they try to spoof mail filters. I doubt if they are going to get scared by this law. Already we arre seeing spam with a mixture of words in it that doesn't trip the mail filters. I don't think the answer is in red-tape.

    --
    Humans have such a good sense of humor!
  4. SÉXÚALL 3XPL1C1T C0NTÊÑT by heironymouscoward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The rules say the subject must be in ASCII. They should have said "7-bit US-ASCII". Still, it's probably a non-starter. I can't see a single spammer complying with this.

    For one thing, simple Darwinian competition means that spammers who comply will be at a disadvantage to those who do not, and will thus be eliminated.

    Regulation does not prevent crime, it just moves it elsewhere. Crime - like spamming - must be prevented by making it uneconomical.

    It should be a federal crime to _advertise_ via spammers, via spyware, and via trojans under the basic regulation covering consumer rights. Hitting the advertisers rather than the spammers would have a much greater impact.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
  5. Short Answer... by shadowcabbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyway, I wonder if it will work?

    No.

    The spammers don't care about the laws of the U.S. when they can just spoof the headers into thinking they came from outside the U.S.; and the U.S., despite whatever delusions my duly elected officials may be believing right now, can't enforce something like this on spam originating outside the States.

    An issue like spam-- or any 'regulation' of the internet-- cannot be done piecemeal, on a country-by-country basis. Internet laws, in order to be effective, must be issued, interpreted, and enforced by an international body; otherwise the offender can simply research the laws of other countries and find somewhere where his action is either implicitly legal or not explicitly illegal. The U.N. does not count in this regard, as it was not created to be an international police agency. Either a new agency must be created, an existing group like Interpol must take responsibility, or the world needs to collectively shut up and take it.

    --
    "Why Subscribe?" Good question...
  6. Not good IMO by WanderingGhost · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't like that. Anything that says "It's OK to send SPAM, so long as..." sounds bad to me. It's some kind of positive reinforcement to spammers... But maybe I'm not flexible enough? I just think I shouldn't be forced to use my bandwidth and CPU time to get a message and check that it's SPAM, even if "it's always tagged as such".

  7. Another Waste of time by patrick24601 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As we so often see spammers have no morals, ethics or are even interested in paying the slightest attention to the law. To me this is another example of a law making body making a new law to make themselves and the techingnorant feel good. This is a complete waste of joe taxpayers (i.e. MY) money.

    Stolen sig below:
    Karma: Chameleon. Comes and goes.

    --
    "Action is the thing that escapes most people. Great ideas are a dime a dozen. Great actions are few and far in between.
  8. Hear that sound? by thewiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's the spammers laughing their a$$e$ off.

    Until one or more of them are caught and fined HEAVILY or get thrown in jail where they get to be someone's hot, tasty biotch, they will continue to spray their garbage all over the net.

    Legislating that someone has to do something is meaningless unless there is enforcement.

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
  9. Re:sexuall explicit content by anticypher · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can't see a single spammer complying with this.

    That is what we want. We want laws they can, and most likely will, break. Then throw them in front of the court facing 200 million counts of breaking this law. Watch the spammer plea bargain a short, 1 or 2 year prison sentence when faced with a possible 700 year sentence.

    The U-CAN-SPAM act may have been a watered down compromise, but there is already action being taken against the worst spammers. They might be able to hide their IP address by using trojan nets, but the authorities are finding them by following the money trail, not the electronic trail.

    With Asscroft in charge of the New Morality in the U.S., expect to see him going after all those Nasty Pornagraphers the day after this rule goes into effect. You can bet the DoJ already has files ready to go, just waiting for a new rule so they can establish heavier charges. The worst pr0n spammers will end up in jail, and that will be a warning to the others.

    the AC

    --
    Hemos is like...sci-fi fans;he thinks technology is cool, but he hasn't bothered to understand the science it's based on
  10. Doesn't matter what law by Himring · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder if it will work?

    They never did stop truckers from using profanity over CB radios regardless of FCC regulations....

    If a law is not enforceable, then it just don't matter....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  11. Analogous to a partial-birth abortion law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The religious right kooks are paving the way - just as their tool John Ashcroft has been promising and proclaiming for 4 years now - for an assault on pornography in general, and especially on the internet.

    Spam is an issue that made it to government because it's a tech issue that everyone can understand on the face of it. And on the face of it everyone opposes it. Much like "war on drugs" or "war on copying" it provides an Evil Target for everyone to rally against that can never fully or truly be banished, and as such can be used as a long-term vehicle for pork projects of even the slightest relevance.

    Mark my worthless anonymous words, seemingly-innocuous laws like this will be used as the framework for net anti-porn bills in the near future. Remember, the "innocuous" NET Act Clinton signed into law? Its "only purpose" was to "close a loophole". It yielded the DMCA in half a decade.