Utah's Anti-Spam Law In Action 20
phondew writes: "Everyone's favorite telco is getting a much deserved lawsuit for their evil ways. The twist is that Sprint had hired a third party to do their dirty work, which is in turn claiming that it only sent to people who opted-in. Of course. AdLaw has the story here, and more information on Utah's Unsolicited Commercial and Sexually Explicit Email Act can be found here ."
Re:I hate you (Score:1)
Nothin Will Change (Score:3, Interesting)
The lawsuit, filed as a class action under the name of plaintiff Terry Gillman of Murray, Utah, alleges that Sprint sent him and other Utah residents unsolicited commercial e-mail that did not include "ADV:" in the subject line.
This is not going to stop anyone from sending spam... they will just change the subject line untill it complies.... now if every stat had diffrent/uncompatible subject line requirments we could make it so complicated that they would never be able to satisfy the requirments from every state. Then they would either be constantly attacked by lawsuits or forced to stop sending emails, but I doubt I could get 50 states to agree to this big idea of mine just to stop spam
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:2)
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
If everyone just deletes their spam even with the extreme low costs of sending it it just wouldn't be profitable anymore.
Is the requirement actually that odd? I do know that american game mags have (Advertisement) above all the adds or is this voluntary?
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
Or route them through an open relay somewhere far far away? If they comply with *any* requirements/laws, they can probably be trusted to remove you from their lists if you ask niceley. Laws are no use; when spam is outlawed, only outlaws will spam.
If ISP's were required to set their mail servers to put a little ID tag [e.g. X-sent-to-hundreds-of-people] on outgoing mail, that would help stop the dumbasses. As for spamming by direct connection to mail relays in other countries, I can see little else except the ISP's monitoring communications for suspicious activity, and we all know how much the /. crowd would love that!
Ali
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually, that's why I want laws. Laws are useful, because most spammers believe what they do is both moral and legal. They are hard to stop because there aren't many clear laws. Personally, I think evading spam filters is equivalent to computer trespassing, but I doubt the courts will agree without a law stating that.
When I get spammed by a legit place, I can stop doing business with them (Walgreens, TigerDirect, HotWired, Apple, Microsoft).
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
That's exactly what I meant. Laws will stop the "moral" spammers [who would most likeley stop if asked], but there will still be the few that send shitloads, spoofing headers, evading filters, etc.
The spam that is sent regardless of laws, and with little or no way of being traced back to the sender is the "nasty" stuff that bothers people. Thats where laws would be useless. A technical solution is needed, and indeed already exists, although I have never recieved enough spam to warrant using such a program.
Ali
Re:Nothin Will Change (Score:1)
Re:"Everyone's favorite telco" (Score:1)
Really funny (Score:3, Informative)
Future headline (Score:1)
Whose Hard Drive? (Score:1)
j
opt in??? (Score:1)
Almost all spam claims that they're using an "optin list" yet most of it is for things I never would have signed up for (like farm porno). Apparently letting a spammer get hold of your email is all it takes to "opt in".
As to grouplotto, they have a clear problem with their "optin list". At one point in time, AFTER unsubscribing from grouplotto I was getting THREE copies. I hadn't resubscribed, how on earth had I managed to "opt in" not once but three times?!?
Why is it that we've figured out laws to block unwanted/unsolicited faxes but can't even begin to deal with spam or even faked "opting in"?