Australian Spammer Sues Back 416
Vilorman writes: "We've all heard the one about the spammers begin sued. Now, an Ausie spammer is suing back, for being blacklisted. Claiming damages and equipment replacement costs and so on. The whole article is over at Yahoo. So, I guess now, not only are we subjected to the spam, but we can't block it either?"
equipment replacement? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:equipment replacement? (Score:4, Informative)
T3 is seeking loss and damages of $7,907 (AU$14,000) for replacing blocked or compromised IP numbers, $2,683 (AU$4,750) for labor costs of technicians to establish an alternative e-mail system, $2,824 (AU$5,000) to purchase a new server computer and $11,296 (AU$20,000) for loss of income it claims to have incurred over a 20-day waiting period for a new Internet connection to be installed.
None of which was necessary. Change business models so as *not* to spam, which was the action requested (and quite probably spelled out in email to the spammer at one point), and none of that moeny would have had to be spent (unless "closing open relays and no longer spamming" counts as "establishing an alternative email system", but that's still brought upon self).
Jeremy Malcolm, an independent Perth-based solicitor who specializes in IT law and is representing McNichol [the defendant], said he wouldn't be putting in a defense straight away and would be applying for a summary judgment in the hopes of not having to go to trial.
Damn straight!
Malcolm described the statement of claim against his client as a ?fairly weak claim?brought about to intimidate a critic of T3 Direct.?
Isn't that the definition of a SLAPP suit in the States?
Re:equipment replacement? (Score:2)
Personally I think that kind of behavior merits physical violence, but that's just me.
Indemnity Damages (Score:2)
The article does not state the grounds on which the case is brought. Tort law is quite restrictive, the issue is not whether you have sufered a loss, the issue is whether the defendant had a legal liability for the loss. There being no contract between any of the parties in the case breach of contract or inducing breach of contract is not going to apply. The spam victim had no responsibility to the spammer to provide service.
The only grounds I can think of that the spammer could claim to have a case is in libel. To win the case the spammer would have to claim that the statement made was false, i.e. that he was not spamming. While Australia shares the corrupt libel laws of the UK it is unlikely that the issue of whether the ISP was spamming or not would be hard to determine.
It would be interesting to know the history of the law firm acting for the plaintif. If the court comes to the same conclusion concerning the case as many on slashdot it would not go well for them.
Re:Indemnity Damages (Score:2)
I don't see that sticking, the English common law tort is inducement to breach of contract. But where is the contract? There is not one between the spam blacklist service and the ISP. There is not one between the ISP and the ISPs that are using the spam blacklist.
No contract, no interference.
In other news... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is bullshit. Spam is theft. Spammers steal the use of bandwidth, machine use, and disk space from ISPs and users. Any court who even thinks twice about letting this go to trial will be so caught up in legal technicalities that it won't hear *any* trial fairly.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Citation, please. If you can't provide one, I'm going to have to agree with Snopes [snopes2.com] in that it's likely an urban legend.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
He lost on appeal though.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2, Interesting)
Yup. If you have to defend your home with force, you're better off killing an intruder than wounding him. And if he makes it outside onto the lawn before expiring, drag him back inside just to be sure his family can't sue you for killing an innocent passer-by. *sigh* Mighty sad commentary on our screwed-up legal system.
On the other hand, this guy is innocent until proven guilty, and deserves his day in court. Is there a clause in the law that says it's your own fault if you are injured (however injury is defined in the particular situation) during commission of a crime? There should be. It could be called the "Personal Responsibility Act".
Re:In other news... (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem is that injury compensation and the like are covered in tort law. That means that judges and not legislators define the law. It's 100% precident.
OTOH a spammer IS innocent until proven guilty and is entitled to his day in court. It's his legal right to confront his accusers (the blacklist people) and I don't blame him for trying.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
*ONLY* if he is charged with a crime.
It's his legal right to confront his accusers (the blacklist people)
*ONLY* if he is accused in court testimony.
and I don't blame him for trying.
I do blame him for trying. It's as bad as an actress trying to sue a magazine for listing her on their "10 worst dressed" list. It is a privately compiled list and the list has no legal weight - therefore you do NOT get to "confront your accuser" in court.
-
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Spammers and those amateur pornography guys behind the camera....I can't figure out which one is sleazier.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
At one time, when confronted, the insurance industry cited a Canadian (Ontario) lawsuit, which they said involved "burglars falling through a skylight." In fact, the case involved student atheletes who had been locked out of their gym, and who were asked by the coach to enter through the roof. Someone had painted over skylights with black paint, and one of the students stepped onto the black surface, not realizing it was glass (after all, the student knew from being in the gym that there were no skylights), the painted glass broke, and he fell through and was seriously injured. The case was settled (quite properly, since the school clearly was negligent both through the coach's direction to students to engage in a a dangerous activity (climbing on a roof) AND by painting a skylight black without posting warnings for persons who were properly on the roof.)
Re: Teacher on cocaine can't be fired? Right! (Score:2)
The contract probably said that if a teacher has a drug problem, there would be a series of steps which the teacher must go through (certainly the first step when a teacher is on campus under the influence, would be removal from school and suspension, perhaps requiring an immediate check-in to a treatment program, followed by compliance with the treatment regimen, and consent to drug testing).
The contract, if it follows the usual policies of large corporations and government agencies, might impose all kinds of special conditions, perhaps even a "two strikes and you're out" rule, but the contract says whatever it says. You can't change the terms of a contract by having the administration or school board unilaterally announce a "zero tolerance" school policy (any more than the school board could unilaterally announce that all teachers must teach one more hour per day without additional pay). And even if the state legislature passed a law requiring that the teacher who uses drugs must immediately be fired, that law cannot impair a previously-executed contract (read your U.S. Constitution).
Note also that the student who is expelled under the "zero tolerance" policy will still be able to enroll at another school -- the state does have an obligation to provide an education to children. The notion behind "zero tolerance" is good, but there are a lot more ridiculous stories about zero-tolerance.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
I just don't see the sense in having things that were designed with no purpose than to kill people sitting around.
And when I observe the rest of what the majority of people who are rabidly in favor of gun ownership thinks, I know I'm right.
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
I'm not saying that cops are to be obeyed at all times and snivelled to. But I maintain that shooting them resolves none of the issues.
What exactly is new here? (Score:2)
Didn't ORBS get sued?
Re:What exactly is new here? (Score:3, Informative)
Well... i would like to see a trial like this over here.. hell... i even volunteer in such a case to be the end user....
Spam stoppers are required (Score:3, Insightful)
The RBL and similar are volunteer organizations, there is no requirement for them to be used by anyone or any company. This is not even an issue because people are only securing their own networks from overloaded mail traffic. If this gentleman wants to solicit, it would be better to start a page for the company and then go looking for handshakes to put his banner on other pages, if he uses that, then people expect to get ads. Forcing his way into your personal mailbox is not a right in any country that I'm aware of.
DanH
Re:Spam stoppers are required (Score:2, Informative)
SPEWS, on the other hand, seems to be a volunteer organization. If anyone knew who operated it, I'd go ask them about it. But they don't ask for money, and they've been incredibly successful in getting spammers to whine a lot about their e-mail getting rejected.
Re:Spam stoppers are required (Score:3, Interesting)
I just checked my procmail logs. How many spam messages do you think I got today? 221 messages! In one fucking day! And they're all fucking multipart MIME or have crappy fucking attachments so each message is hundreds of K in size. In contrast, even counting high-traffic mailing lists, I got 41 real messages today -- and they're all plain text so they're a few K each. This is the price I pay for having been "on the Internet" since 1986. Yup, you read that right -- sixteen years ago.
Do I have to pay for physical junk mail to get delivered to me? No. And there is exactly one third-class bundle in my physical mailbox every day, easy to toss out. Do I have to pay -- in bandwidth, disk space, and time for setting up my procmail filters -- so some piece of shit marketing jackass can make a few bucks? You bet.
Spam is killing email. You kids today, you don't know what the golden age of email was like! Email was not like sending a physical piece of mail. I could publicise my email on the network (think Usenet), and anyone anywhere could send me email and I could send email to people I'd never met before. They always replied, just like I always replied. I made many friends, got a lot of help on various matters, and helped others on various matters. Today, to be able to send me email, you have to get on my "white list" -- I only accept email from people I know.
Re:Spam stoppers are required (Score:2)
Cite? Or are you talking non-US? The USPS only receives federal appropriations to provide free mail for the blind and for overseas voting. So unless you're getting a large quantity of junk mail from blind people, you're really not paying for it. (In fact, I'm going to guess that without the volume of junk mail, postage would go up.)
This guy is already losing points in my book. (Score:3, Insightful)
He needs a new server? Maybe so he can run more effective anti-spam filter programs.
Seems to me that he is relying on the judge not being too technologically savvy.
Oh, get a grip. (Score:4, Interesting)
So, I guess now, not only are we subjected to the spam, but we can't block it either?
People sue for things all the time. It doesn't mean that the case has any merit whatsoever.
Re:Oh, get a grip. (Score:2)
The merit, or otherwise, of this case is irrelevant. In the US -- and presumably Australia as well -- defending against litigation is ruinously costly. Any sociopathic jackass can file suit against you for any reason whatsoever. You cannot ignore the suit or fail to appear, or the court will summarily rule for the sociopathic jackass. If the case has even the remotest hint of a legal question unanswered by law, the court will hear the case.
At that point, your wallet is emptied. Even if you are completely exonerated, you're still out tens of thousands of dollars in court costs, fees, and lawyer's time. Furthermore, you can't recover those costs from the sociopathic jackass, because proving the suit was filed maliciously is nearly impossible.
All that money you had saved for a new server, an Internet connection upgrade, or even a new house? Gone. You can't afford to run your spammer blacklist anymore. Meanwhile, the socipathic jackass continues to rake in money from idiots buying his spamming services. The term Pyrrhic Victory [everything2.org] would apply here, except that the sociopathic jackass wasn't defeated, merely beaten off, free to harass some other hapless sucker.
If we can't get our corrupt legislators to pass anti-spem legislation, then perhaps we can at least get them to pass legislation stating that an accusation of spamming does not confer upon the accused a right of action against the accuser. That will at least free the blacklists to operate with minimal harassment.
Schwab
Re:Cost of Litigation in Oz (Score:2, Informative)
What you're saying isn't completely true. What the defendent has to do in the case of being hit with a "frivolous lawsuit" is to
What it boils down to is that being sued by some "vexatious litigant" will just cost you time (ie some money), a lot of worry, but will cost the other party dearly. And if someone immensely rich uses lots of frivolous lawsuits to harrass you, they will get done for the crime of Barratry IIRC. And pretty soon they won't be rich any more. Neither will you, though you might get enough compensation so you're not hurtin. But the lawyers will wax fat. That bit doesn't change between the US and Oz.
should have known about the blacklists (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:should have known about the blacklists (Score:4, Funny)
Not everyone hate spam... (Score:2, Funny)
Why I love spam [com.com]
Damn, I think I'd punch that guy in the face.
Re:Not everyone hate spam... (Score:2, Redundant)
Hit delete.
I hit delete, and I'm free. As for the rest of my spam: Keep it coming!
he forgot a few steps though
Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete... Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete, Hit delete
Either way this guy is missing the point entirely, we hate spam because we didn't ask for it if he likes spam he can ask for himself to be put on mailing lists. Not only then will the not get the porno and 2 credit card offers a day he doesn't like but he would get more things that suit him because he requested things material like that. New laws like the one the EU is proposing would work only to his benefit. This is just one uninformed opinion contrasted against mine and the vast majority of other
Re:Not everyone hate spam... (Score:2)
Re:Not everyone hate spam... (Score:2)
I would expect the president of Hormel's PR department to wax nostalgic and gush about how tastey pink processed meat products are too.
Re:Not everyone hate spam... (Score:2)
If he likes spam, it must be because he has a small dick, wants porn, has small boobs, wants porn, craves herbal viagra, wants porn, wants some more porn, needs a second mortgage, wants porn, free airline tickets, and porn. Oh, and some more of that porn, with the hairy barely 18 models with big boobs getting raped by animals in an orgy.
Fuckers.
Incidentally, this "netweb" shit is the one with the Geocities page and the AOL email address, right? Obviously a class act.
Free speech (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm usually an extreme free speech advocate. I've even been known to argue for the right to yell fire in a crowded theater. That said, free speech gives you the right to speak, not the right to force someone to hear you, and certainly not the right to force someone else to bear the cost of publication. The newspaper editor doesn't have to pay to publish your letter, Rob Malda and andover.net don't have to pay to let you post your comment, and I don't have to pay to download your spam. And free speech also means the other guy has a right to say, "Don't listen to this guy; he's a knucklehead." (or "don't accept IP traffic from this host, it's a spammer")
Re:Free speech (Score:5, Informative)
Spam isn't a "free speech" issue. It's a "theft of resources" issue according to CompuServe vs. Cyber Promotions, wherein the judge decided that spamming was indeed "actionable trespass of chattel."
Re:Free speech (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Free speech (Score:2)
Re:Free speech (Score:2)
Holmes' dissenting opinion on another case forms the foundation of our current thinking on the first ammendment. He wasn't dissenting on the fire in the theater opinion.
Re:Free speech (Score:3, Insightful)
The absolute free speech principle I usually subscribe to would make these responses:
Free speech ends when what you are saying is untrue and hurtful to someone else's business.
Why? Does this constitute an abridgment under the first amendment of the U.S. Constitution? (Yes, I know this is not a U.S. case.)
Let's imagine that say buy.com was put on an anti-spammer list... How much revenue would they lose?
If it's my list, I can do whatever I want with it. It's not a government sponsored list. The people providing me the resources to produce the list can choose to quit providing me those resources, if they want. The people using my list can choose to quit using the list, too, if they want.
Whose fault would it be?
The fault of the people using the list. But they don't have a contract with buy.com to provide connectivity, so I don't see that anyone should be allowed to make them.
I know you may disagree with these principles for various reasons, but this is how I would address them. (At least, most of the time. I waver and change my mind sometimes.)
Re:Free speech (Score:2)
Yes, absolutely.
If a shop sells goods, where 90% are legitimate and 10% are stolen, they're in trouble - and this is just the same thing.
Even if someone sends only one piece of spam, he should be kicked off the net until he realizes he was in error.
Propoesed (but unfortunately irrealistic/utopian) spam legislation:
Anyone sending spam is not allowed to touch a computer until he sent a note to some central authority that he realized the error in his ways and won't do it again.
Anyone doing it again is permanently banned from touching a computer, and is sent to prison for 10 years if he violates the rule.
This may sound harsh, but it's really not that harsh - if you keep crossing red lights, you're banned from using a car, after all. This is much the same thing, with the exception that spam hurts people, and crossing a red light (it it's safe) doesn't.
Ben Hur ? (Score:2)
Yeah, if you can get sued just for claiming that a well-known spammer is spammer, this will be a blockbuster in courthouses over the world...
I can already see the next generation of spam... "Make $$$$$$$$ free!!!! Sue anti-spammers!!!! "
Re:Ben Hur ? (Score:2)
Or, if this case gets tossed out and anti-spam laws go into effect...
"Make $$$$$$$$ free!!!! Sue spammers!!!! (But not us, please.)"
That's quite a bit of income. (Score:2, Insightful)
Not if you can recur the cost for a good SPAM server w/in the first week of operations.
However, those numbers are probably bloated, and this is all speculation. But still, the fact that they can *still* make money off of SPAM indicates a greater problem than just the inconvenience of unwanted mail in your mailbox. It means lots of people are paying attention, and spending money, and supporting the whole system.
Re:That's quite a bit of income. (Score:2)
Obviously there are plenty of morons out there who buy some of this junk or it would just go away.
Case Record Web Site (Score:5, Informative)
Personally, I don't think the spammer will win (Score:2)
Now, this is a case that happened in the US instead of Austrailia, so it may not be able to be cited in this particular law suit, but it shows that courts do not feel that spammer have a God-given right to send their mail to anyone and everyone they want to.
- Sam
Killer sues government for lost income (Score:2)
Penalized programmer seeks compensation for $4 800 000 lost income (programmer has so vague understanding of money, that he forgets that this does not represent the correct value after 50 years
So, how actually does this differ from this spammer's case?
This is such a joke (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it all you American
Or we could send the bill to the guy being sued to use in his defense...we'd bury T3 Direct's legal fund in a day
Or...I could buy a soda. Mmmm...caffeine...
Re:This is such a joke (Score:2)
Precident (Score:3, Interesting)
IP's not hard coded! FRAUD! (Score:2, Insightful)
"T3 is seeking loss and damages of $7,907 (AU$14,000) for replacing blocked or compromised IP numbers, $2,683 (AU$4,750) for labor costs of technicians to establish an alternative e-mail system, $2,824 (AU$5,000) to purchase a new server computer
So because his IP was being blocked he HAD to get a new $2800 server? IP's are NOT hardcoded into the box (MAC addresses in the NIC's are) Does he relly think that little addition is going to go unnoticed?
and $11,296 (AU$20,000) for loss of income it claims to have incurred over a 20-day waiting period for a new Internet connection to be installed"
So this guy makes $564 a day with this shit?!
Maybe you really can get rich quick (in court, of course)...
Re:IP's not hard coded! FRAUD! (Score:2)
Making Mistakes. (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course it all hinges on the fact that the first mechanic -did- make a mistake. If not, then you're out the cost of the lawyer too.
Re:Making Mistakes. (Score:2, Insightful)
A more appropriate analogy would be
A mechanic opens a shop down the street. Every day you come out and find stupid fliers on the winshield of your (and everyone else in the apt. complex's) car. You complain about it and someone who works for the complex hears about it. The apt. complex tells the mechanic to stop soliciting on their private property and annoying their customers. The mechanic sues you for interfering with his advertising.
It isnt a simple mistake. He knows what he's doing is, at the least, not appreciated by the majority of the people he affects. At the most, he knows that many countries are passing laws restricting that kind of behaviour.
He's gambling that he'll get away with it, and now he's gambling that some guy who has a vague connection to his being blocked will cave, settle out of court and help him cover the cost of setting up a new spam system so he can get back to business as usual.
Countersue (Score:2, Funny)
This DDoS was created as a direct result of the lawsuit being filed.
Mailserver are private (Score:3, Insightful)
Mailservers are private. Nobody can force me to receive anybody's mail. I can block whoever I want using whatever method I like. If I want to block connections using some blacklist, that's MY choice. The blacklist only offers me advice on what connection to accept or not. I can freely choose to follow that advice or not.
In short: sue whoever you like. You'll loose.
Re:Mailserver are private (Score:2)
In essence, it's basically just a libel case. Party X says party Y is bad, and no one should have anything to do with them. Party Y suffers because of this. Party Y wants to be compensated for their losses.
There are more and more of these cases on the net these days... companies are suing people who post on various forums, usually with respect to the company's performance and stock evaluation. Oftentimes just the lawsuit is enough to get people to back down... post retractions, and whatnot.
In these cases, the ultimate defense is the truth. Here, it looks entirely probable that what the defendent said ("these guys are spammers") is true. In which case, the company really has no case. It would just be a question of proving the company sent spam. Spamming doesn't even have to be against the law in order for the defendant to win. As long as what he said was well-founded, he'll win.
Of course, what does suck is that he's hauled into court, and made to defend himself. One can only hope the judge will not only find for the defendant, but also award court costs.
Another thng that sucks is... these suits will not go away, even if spam is outlawed. The only way to make these suits go away is legislation against and vigorous prosecution of "anti-SLAPP" lawsuits, which are aimed at stifling the free speech of individuals via lawsuits. If you make it too risky for a company to launch an unfounded lawsuit against an individual or organization, the lawsuits will stop.
#include "Obligatory IANAL"
Re:Mailserver are private (Score:2)
In essence, it's basically just a libel case. Party X says party Y is bad, and no one should have anything to do with them. Party Y suffers because of this. Party Y wants to be compensated for their losses.
Defamation is only one of the possible actions suggested by the pleadings. There are two other causes of action they have attempted to plead - a statutory one for restraint of trade, and a common law one for tortious interference with contractual relations.
Scum: The Real Thing! (Score:2)
$ales $cript Book [t3direct.com.au]
a collection of the most powerful and useful phrases (scripts) a sales professional can use to counter any objection and close the sale
Web Marketing - beyond the basics [t3direct.com.au]
covering everything from Search Engine Optimisation, Permission Marketing Techniques, Viral Marketing, Multi Domain Registration, Opt-In Mail Lists, Competition Sites and much more
Yes, just what my business was looking for... forcing your customers to say yes, and such time honored promotional practices such as viral marketing! How did I manage to run a website without this vital knowledge?!?
Well, at any rate, there's another domain for my blocklist...
t3direct.com.au ERROR:"553 Delivery blocked; cannot accept mail from pro-spam domains."
Total scum (Score:2)
So these scum have over 30 million 'opt in' email addresses to spam. Yeah, right. Someone shoot the bastards. No, that's too humane. There's some mediaeval tortures that seem more appropriate.
HH
SpamAssassin (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:SpamAssassin (Score:2)
Maybe I'm missing something (Score:3, Informative)
First off: Is there any proof whatsoever that being listed in SPEWS is in any way incorrect or libelous? Certainly it is not illegal, even in AU to add an IP block to that address as being friendly to either a known spammer or a known spamvertized site. After all, SPEWS bills itself as being opinion that nobody has to follow.
Unless being added to SPEWS has some form of illegality, what basis is there for suing Mr McNichol for expressing an opinion?
Secondly, if SPEWS is operated secretly, then how can anybody prove that this Joseph McNichol was responsible for them being blocked?
Is there some provable connection between him and SPEWS somehow?
It would certainly seem likely that sufficient people on the receiving end of the spam would have complained sooner or later such that SPEWS would put them onto the blacklist.
And even so - don't SPEWS say in their FAQ that they don't block sites based on complaints? That they depend on the knowledge of the *unknown* people that set up the lists directly? That it requires repeated offenses before a company is considered a 'Known Spammer'?
So where is the evidence - not apparent anywhere in anything I have seen of this matter - that there is any actual connection between Mr. McNichol and SPEWS?
If either of these proofs is missing, then this should be dismissed by the first competent judge in any jurisdiction.
T3 Direct deserves congratulations (Score:2)
The fact that the article on slashdot should insure this, and I suspect that a number of somebodys will be keeping an eye on this company to insure that their IPs are blocked no matter how they get changed.
Why am I reminded of Bernie Shifman?
Re:T3 Direct deserves congratulations (Score:2)
If they weren't already, their IP ranges will probably be in every other blacklist on earth in the next hour or two. They have put themselves out of business.
They don't actually send spam from those IP addresses. They get numerous dial-up accounts and send spam through those. They don't even refer back to those IP addresses in the spam.
This is a SLAPP. (Score:2)
The amounts seem to be bogus, as there is no need for any equiptment replacement. Not knowing where spews is located, I can't say the jurisdiction is wanting.
But, as a defense, I would want a list of emails and addresses that were sent out. Then the list of emails and addresses that were rejected because of spew's actions. Then submit the list to a couple of class action attorneys in states with anti-spam laws and go after the spammers for sending spam.
Then when the spammers use the defense of the email not being delivered as to get out of the penalties for sending spam, then spews can use the fact that they saved the spammers more money than the scum sued for as a partial defense, if they don't get the entire case thrown out and the spammer's attorney sanctioned for bring such a case.
Blacklisting doesn't damage (Score:2)
It does however allow others to deny serving him, which they have the right to do.
The people who caused the actual damage to him were the people who used the blacklist, not those that made it. There only act was to ignore him, AFAIK there is no precedent for damages due to ignoring people.
Once Again, Nothing New Under the Sun (Score:5, Interesting)
I think Wallace may have deliberately sent me spam in order to provoke me -- he knew I'd complain since he was breaching his earlier promise to block my email addresses after earlier complaints. By provoking me to complain, he could claim a "victim" role, by falsely stating that I had "asked" to receive the emails and then unfairly complained and caused his business to lose its only internet connection (every other ISP and backbone provider had blacklisted him years earlier).
Spanford Wallace filed his suit in Pennsylvania (despite lack of jurisdiction) because he knew I'd have to hire an attorney there and spend thousands of dollars in legal fees and court costs to dismiss the suit. He knew the suit would be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, and he chose not to sue me in California because he knew that California has a SLAPP statute that would have permitted me to collect attorneys' fees and damages (Pennsylvania didn't have a SLAPP statute).
The spammers' only goals in filing lawsuits are to gain "unfair advantage" -- adverse publicity for the opponent, and deliberate choice of an inconvenient and expensive forum.
It worked for Wallace: I stopped making spam complaints for many months because I was so distracted by the lawsuit. And he also deterred others from reporting spam complaints, by loudly and publicly announcing that he (and other spammers) would not hesitate to deliberately abuse the court system in order to punish honest people who make valid complaints.
Wallace's publicity campaign was transparent: he decided to file the lawsuit one day after I appeared on CNBC regarding another consumer advocacy issue; he wanted to "piggy-back" by suing a well-known consumer advocate. He posted a copy of the lawsuit on his web site and emailed dozens of reporters just minutes after the complaint was filed (of course, I learned of the suit only when the reporters called me, and since I couldn't respond to a suit I hadn't seen, Wallace's false and malicious claims were republished as if they were true -- with no follow-up when the suit was abandoned and dismissed several months later.
Although Wallace's suit was filed in Pennsylvania despite the absence of jurisdiction, I was forced to spend $5,000 to hire a Philadelphia attorney to prepare and file a motion to dismiss (I chose an attorney who had previously obtained a judgment against Wallace). As soon as we filed the motion to dismiss, Wallace simply abandoned the lawsuit (he submitted papers to the court claiming that a "settlement had been reached," though there was no settlement.
The only good news is that I haven't heard from him since then, but of course the bad news is that he drained $5,000 of my money and a lot of my time, and simultaneously scared off someone interested in buying a web site I owned (the offer to buy my business for $350,000 was withdrawn the day after the suit was filed, and five months later I sold the business to another buyer for $175,000).
Wallace also successfully deterred many spam complaints by proving his continued willingness to abuse court processes for personal gain.)
I assume that the spammer in the current case filed a suit in the hopes of driving up others' costs and extorting a settlement.
Re:Once Again, Nothing New Under the Sun (Score:2)
I'm sure Wallace is judgment-proof (e.g. if I won a damage award, he'd have no assets to pursue to collect damages. I understand that's what happened to my attorney's earlier client who obtained a judgment against Wallace (and indeed, had I wanted to sue Wallace, my interests might have conflicted with those of my attorney's earlier client, which might have precluded him from successfully representing me).
Ask all the (many) other folks who've sued or been sued by Wallace, and who were awarded damages or costs -- I'm pretty sure none of them ever collected a penny.
T3 Direct's IP ranges here. Flush their network! (Score:2)
Way to go, spammers. Watch your connectivity go bye-bye.
T3Group
|--------------------
1, 202.154.73.131, t3direct.com.au
1, 202.154.79.66, mail.t3direct.com.au
1, 202.154.79.0/25, t3direct.com.au
1, 202.139.241.136, www.t3direct.com.au
1, 202.139.241.128/25, t3direct.com.au
1, 203.55.16.6, titan.t3direct.com.au
1, 203.55.16.0/25, t3direct.com.au
---------------------|
Re: (Score:2)
Spam is "effective and lawful" (Score:2)
Funny, I didn't read a law anywhere that publicizing a know scumbag's IP addresses is unlawful! (It certainly is effective!)
Let's say I spread the word that if you see elderly people dressed a certain way carrying sheafs of a magazine called The Light Tower, they're Jehovah's Witnesses, don't answer the door (like you didn't know that already.) Can the J.W.s sue me because they had to buy new clothes, and knocking on someone's door is "lawful and effective"?
The spammers should be tarred, feathered, run out of town on a rail, then drawn, quartered, and thrown into the Iron Maiden. Their corpses should then be incinerated, ground up, and shot into the sun.
And what pisses me off even more is that I'm a pacifist and believe that violence is never the solution to a problem. The fucking spammers make me think that perhaps my philosophy is not universally applicable.
Fucking bastards!
It's a weird world (Score:2)
Re:not so crazy? (Score:2, Insightful)
That makes you, what? A spammer? Or a marketer?
It doesn't make you a "professional," in my book.
Re:not so crazy? (Score:5, Insightful)
$7,907 (AU$14,000) for replacing blocked or compromised IP numbers, $2,683 (AU$4,750) for labor costs of technicians to establish an alternative e-mail system, $2,824 (AU$5,000) to purchase a new server computer and $11,296 (AU$20,000) for loss of income it claims to have incurred over a 20-day waiting period
hmm last I knew it didn't cost $8k to get a new ip?!?! technicians?!? for what changing an ip on a server, nevermind about buying a new server, and if their isp takes 20 days to issue a new ip, they should be sueing their isp! I've worked at a company that got blackballed for relaying mail way back when spammers just started bouncing mail around, once we discovered the problem it was literally, turn off relaying - 5 minutes(max), get new ip from isp - one phone call (about 10 minutes), reassign ip and reboot server - 10 minutes. This is a ton of horsecrap, nevermind the fact that they're stealling people's bandwidth for sending unsolicited unwanted e-mail, I pay for it and get your crap off of it!!
Re:not so crazy? (Score:2)
Never mind whatever his ISP charges for IP address.
Crazy TROLL! (Score:2)
Boy, did he get you guys!
Re:One perspective (Score:2, Flamebait)
Why don't we lock the convicted spammers in a padded room with a television set to display an endless stream of infomercials, commercials, and religious programming with no way to turn it off? Better yet, we can have a pay-per-view 24/7 webcam focused on the spammer shackled to the wall that is subjected to this treatment. The webcam page can have pushbutton forms to impliment things such as water-drip torchure, the pneumatic ram punching glove hit him in the stomach gag, release one starved and abused lab rat, and other inventive buttons...
I think spammers should be kept alive for humanitarian reasons such as these. They would benefit the world with stress research and the mentioned entertainment possibilities.
Re:One perspective (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Guilt (Score:2, Informative)
Re: US-centric viewpoint (Score:2)
I doubt that it's just the American judicial system, given that we "inherited" English common law and (probably to some extent) legal practices.
Further proof that it sucks to be French. :-) (Hey, you predicted this kind of response...)
How do you prove that you're not guilty? Isn't that an attempt at proving a negative? I could make some ridiculous accusation against you, based entirely on circumstantial evidence. How do you defend yourself against such an accusation in a situation that puts you behind the 8-ball from the beginning? A system that presumes guilt sounds to me like it'd give the authorities carte blanche to lock up anybody who pisses them off, since they don't first have to make the case that they should lock somebody up.
Re: US-centric viewpoint (Score:2)
Americans didn't adopt this "feature" because they thought it might be a good idea. It's not some arbitrary preference. There are several reasons why innocence is presumed and guilt is proven. If you're presumed guilty, how can you expect to have a fair trial? If you really are innocent, you shouldn't have to prove your innocence just because some jackass decides to use the system to their advantage and throw a frivilous suit against you. God help you if someone in the government dosn't like you. What you say may work if the courts are fair, but saying that decisions made by the courts are always fair is fucking crazy. The courts should error in your favor.
Just because the french think differently dosn't mean this is not a universal principle. There is such a thing as "being wrong". For instance, our good buddies in Saudi Arabia think women should be required to completely cover their bodies in public. Is gender equality not a universal principle?
Re:Australian Spammer Sues Back (Score:2)
Ok, find the email address of the Judge and of his staff and get it on every spamlist you know of. Ditto once we know who the jurors are.
OK, even assuming the latter were possible, it is extremely rare in Australia for a civil trial to involve a jury - usually the parties are content to have it decided by a judge sitting alone
Re:Australian Spammer Sues Back (Score:2)
And, I admit, it would be pretty hard to find an email address if all you know is a name.
Re:Australian Spammer Sues Back (Score:2)
nd, I admit, it would be pretty hard to find an email address if all you know is a name.
It's also illegal to reveal the identity of a juror.
Re:Australian Spammer Sues Back (Score:2)
Oh yeah, it's not productive at all! (but it makes you feel a lot better sometimes, doesn't it?) :)))
Re:Don't support censorware! (Score:2, Insightful)
"We do not control the network traffic on anyone else's servers; therefore, we are not the ones rejecting your email, the mailserver you attempted to send email to generated the bounce. We simply provide a public list of ranges of Internet space (IP addresses) which we do not wish to exchange traffic with. Other networks may choose to filter traffic on their systems using our list. SPEWS never touches any email (or other data packets) between your network and someone else's network. Any email bouncing or packet blocking that takes place occurs at the receiving system."
That is like me saying "I don't like to talk to Bill Gates", and someone thinks my opinion on who I like to talk to matters a whole lot, so they decide not to talk to anyone I don't talk to. As a result, they don't talk to Bill Gates either. And how am I liable? Why don't you post your e-mail address with your post and then see how you feel about "censorware" after your mailbox is full of penis enlargement offers.
Re:Don't support censorware! (Score:2)
And to SPEWS: Fight the good fight!
This isn't individuals (Score:2)
Re:The spammers have the upper hand (Score:2)
Re:Real legal issue (Score:2)
I've tested it, opening new accounts on non-public email servers (read: NOT on Hotmail or Yahoo), signing up at a few places, and making sure to specify that I DON'T want to recieve any mailings at all. Sure enough, give it a week or two, and the spam starts rolling in.
So, the poster's company is most likely spamming "opt-in" lists that they didn't collect, but there's no gaurentee that all, or even most, of the people on the list actually did opt-in.
Re:Hope the spammer wins (Score:2)
Actually, yes it does. At least it does in the sense that what is happening here is that the net is self-partitioning through the actions of spammers and anti-spammers into two parts, one with spam, and one without. The latter is owned by the uber-geeks. The blocking of spammers doesn't take down the net; it just isolates the bad parts.
Getting off is generally easy. It's the part of fixing your servers that is not. From what I've seen, the cases where entries continue to be on SPEWS are cases where spam happened yet again. This happens even though "the server is fixed" because of what is known as "multi hop open relay". The ISP getting blacklisted is accepting mail from customer servers that:
It's the ISP that gets listed, because that is the server that's making the connection for which an IP address lookup is made. The first customer that is an open relay might get fixed. The spammers find another, which might well be a new customer. Then the ISP gets listed again. They need to fix their approach to serving customers to get delisted.
A lawsuit won't fix the problem. SPEWS isn't being affected by this and will continue to operate. What the lawsuit will do is ensure that SPEWS never comes out in the open in order to protect itself from such things.
If instead we had a law that shielded blacklist operators from liability, then they could operate entirely in the open. Then it would be a whole lot easier to communicate with the operators. That wouldn't get the stupid ISPs delisted, but they should remain listed anyway, IMHO.
Obviously such a lawsuit shield isn't likely, at least not on a total basis. If we fight hard enough for it, we might get one which limits lawsuits to clear cases of specific matters like fraud.
Re:same as a boycott (Score:2, Insightful)