Anti-Spam Bill Killed In California 291
Craig Newmark (craigslist) writes "In California, we had a pretty good antispam bill proposed by Sen. Debra Bowen, which was killed yesterday.
A pro-spammer bill, backed by the big media sites including Microsoft, passed through committee.
Here's a quick round up.
We're considering a big feedback campaign, based on conversation with staffers on what works for them, since they want to hear from constituents, as opposed to spam.
More to come ..."
Round up (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure Hormel wouldn't object; it'd be sweet revenge
Re:Round up (Score:4, Funny)
And an increase in the quality of their product.
Re:Round up (Score:5, Funny)
Whose Bill? (Score:4, Funny)
Poor chap - we need all the anti-spam campaigners we can get.
Another language Nazi emerges... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another language Nazi emerges... (Score:3, Funny)
No, he certainly meant "whois bill" which is a malformed query to see who has registered "bill.com"
And, FWIW, bill.com [bill.com] is for sale by a domain squatter.
--
Looks like a case of missing parentheses (Score:5, Interesting)
Should be parsed as
But it can also be parsed as
Disclaimer: IANAP.
Re:Looks like a case of missing parentheses (Score:2)
Re:Looks like a case of missing parentheses (Score:2)
Not so. The parenthesis belong to the "Whichever is less" function, which you may recognize as a verbose form of the "min" function.
Re:Looks like a case of missing parentheses (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Looks like a case of missing parentheses (Score:2)
Yes, that's what I meant.
Wouldn't have helped (Score:5, Insightful)
Technology is still the best hope for killing spam. Laws may provide a few amusing high profile instances for public display, but they can't stop a threat that so easily straddles jurisdictions.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:5, Insightful)
And then I block email from IP blocks in those countries. I don't know anyone there, I don't do business with anyone there: I personally have no reason to accept email from them. If every nation I have friends in enacts tough anti-span legislation, spam becomes a moot issue to me.
Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
You also have to have every machine in every nation you do business with have perfect security also.
How many stories have we all read on spammers using compromised machines to do their spamming form?
A US congressman friend of mine recently asked me what I thought about anti-spam legislation. I told him it is a waste of time. Legislation can't stop spam, deny lists wont stop spam, and firewalls wont stop spam.
The only way to stop spam is to scrap SMTP and build a new trust based system from the ground up. The protocol is broken and can't be fixed.
Re:Nope (Score:5, Interesting)
Good point, but my solution was designed for... me. I've given up on the spam war. Now, I only care about my personal inbox. I blacklist IP blocks willy-knilly (but not so many that it would make sense to move to a white-list. Yet.). I've NEVER received anything important via email from anyone I didn't already know.
Job offers? They phone me.
Emergency? They page me.
Going out for a beer? They IM me, or they knock on my damn door.
Business? They send it to me via our secure LotusNotes server (yea, yea... IBM is VERY different on the inside than it looks from the outside. We use OS/2 Warp on critical servers too.) Or they email me normally (I know them: they're not blacklisted).
Pleasure? Any girl who propositions me over email (unsolicited, mind you) is probably not very high on my ladder [intellectualwhores.com] to begin with.
Email is not a way to receive messages from strangers anymore: the spammers have ruined that. Email will likely become a white-list based messaging system and nothing more. It's a pity, but we've already crossed the bridge, and there's nothing left to do but to burn it behind us.
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:4, Insightful)
Fortunately, I don't need mail from any servers in Romania or China. Now, if somebody spent the time to map networks to geographic locations, they could offer a filtering service. It might be a full-time job keeping a database of known routers, but lots of them have very nice DNS names if you get high enough up the hierarchy.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
blackholes.us has some country based ones, and there is another one that returns an IP based on the country code.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Until the spammers grow powerful enough to have the technology outlawed via DMCA or some other poorly written law. Just playing devil's advocate here but if we don't keep the law on our side now, they surely will keep the law on their side then.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:4, Interesting)
The location of the servers is (or should be) massively irrelevent. If I set up a kiddie porn website, I won't get very far with the excuse "I used a server in Romania" if I'm still located in the US.
Technology is still the best hope for killing spam.
I've been hearing that line for nearly two decades, and I've seen absolutely NO PROGRESS! I'm sorry, you had your chance, it's time to try some other approaches. A state law is, indeed, not much of a deterrent for a lot of people, but it can help set a precedent that will lead to a national law, which in turn can help set a precedent that will lead to international law.
Furthermore, spam depends on really thin margins. If you have to factor in the expense of moving (physically, see above) to Romania, then you may not find spamming such an attractive idea after all.
Anyway, questions of jurisdiction are not necessarily as simple as you'd like to think. See, for example, the cases of Sklyarov (sp?) and Elcomsoft. For something like this, the big question would be, is the controlling jurisdiction willing to cooperate with the jurisdiction where the offense took place?
But kiddie porn has strong intl treaties (Score:2)
Added to which, you once again come up against jurisdictional issues when gathering evidence from these nations.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Technology needs support from the law. For example, a typical locked door won't keep out someone who can throw as much time and muscle into it as he likes -- but it usually is effective against people who know that they have to do their breaking and entering discreetly and quickly, because it a crime is in and of itself.
The same principle should be applied here. If the law treated circumvention of an anti-spam filter the same way it treats circumventi
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Just look at how quickley copywrite laws spread world wide (although some contries have yet to really enforce it).
What will eventually happen is the spammers will find some un-inhabbited lawless island to do their spamming from, and all we have to do is bomb that island
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
See, I keep hearing this. Along with cries of "SMTP is old and outdated, we need something better". And really, that's just passing the buck.
Sure, SMTP is old. And it may very well be outdated. But you can't claim that replacing SMTP is the only way to solve the spam problem. SMTP is not the problem - Poorly implemented SMTP installations are the problem. Open relays are the problem. Poke through your inbox and see how much of your spam goes thr
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
The REAL key: prosecute the ADVERTISER as well as the spammer. When advertisers find that spamming can COST them big bucks, they'll drop it. . .
Hey, that's a great idea. We'll just set up a spam operation and advertise our competitor's product. Pretty soon, they're out of business and we have the market to ourselves.
Re:Wouldn't have helped (Score:2)
No, not Micro$oft! (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, I get it - they are against *everybody elses* spam.
hahahaha
-----------
Left hand doesn't know right hand? (Score:4, Interesting)
Didn't Microsoft just recently step up it's Anti-spam efforts as pointed out in this previous story [slashdot.org]
Maybe they're "selling weapons to both sides" by backing a pro-spamming bill so they can have stronger reasons to step up their anti-spam behaviour?
Re:Left hand doesn't know right hand? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Left hand doesn't know right hand? (Score:2, Funny)
Oh... THOSE evil geniuses!
Re:Left hand doesn't know right hand? (Score:3, Informative)
According to Microsoft, they're not backing the new bill because they want indemnity from spamming. Rather, it's because Bowen's bill apparently places greater responsibility
Executions? (Score:3, Funny)
Inadvertent my ass (Score:5, Funny)
The only good thing is it basically gives each spammer one "freebie" - surely a court won't believe they KEEP "inadvertently" sending spam. Will they?
Made me think of Strongbad (Score:2)
Bubs: Oops, I dropped a quarter for each one.
Re:Inadvertent my ass (Score:3, Funny)
Hello, again, Your Honor. No, Sir, that wasn't me. I'm Joel_0x00000A71@spamhost.com but the spam in question came from Joel_0x00000A70@spamhost.com so clearly I can't be held responsible. Yes, Your Honor, It won't happen again. Um, Your Honor, if it pleases the Court, may we take a recess before we reconvene for the next case, we've been at this all morning and I've got to get something to eat before I appear here again for Public vs. Joel_0x00000A72@sp
Anti-spam? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Anti-spam? (Score:3, Insightful)
Two bills were proposed. One, which failed in committee was backed by many consumer advocates, including the article poster. The other, which passed, was favored by Microsoft, America Online, etc.
The bill which passed is regarded as less anti-spam than the one which was rejected. Is it? Dunno, I'd have to read the actual bills. Both appear to at least be a first step, and it should come as no surprise that the one backed by bu$ine$$ passed.
Re:Anti-spam? (Score:2)
Sort of a Dewey vs. Truman in internet time.
Funniest thing though, is that the very first google link is to THIS slashdot story!
Jurisdiction (Score:2, Insightful)
Spam Lobby? (Score:2)
I mean who the hell wants to deal with spam, beside the spammers of course... and from prior /. stories I was under the assumption that they were slowly, slowly having issues making money due to better spam blocking techniques and people fixing their open relays.
Re:Spam Lobby? (Score:2)
Vikings... (Score:2, Funny)
spam would be cool under this law (Score:3, Insightful)
Spam would go from annoying menance to lawyer-feeding-frenzy.
Example: Most people get like 10 spams a day. That's $10,000. Wait 10 days and that's $100,000. Wait 100 days and that's a cool million.
Yeah, the spammers are outside of california's jurisdiction, but database errors and the like could make quite a few people millionaires. Scary stuff, IMHO
Re:spam would be cool under this law (Score:2)
It's a hypocritical stance in this forum to take that tack with spammers unless you also harbor some level of approval of the RIAA/MPAA efforts vs. P2P users. Same thing -- perceived endemic problem that can only be solved
Re:spam would be cool under this law (Score:2)
Re:spam would be cool under this law (Score:2)
From my viewpoint, it's better to make adjustments gradually while observing the results than to overcompensate particularly where legislation is concerned. The laws made today are likely to sit on the books for a long time -- probably longer than the technology they're intended to be applied to -- whether they end up being used well or abused.
Making spam an uneconomically sound way of advertising should be the goal, and that's achievable without excessive punitive action (which, as you poi
From the Google News summary (Score:5, Funny)
Man, this spam war is getting serious.
Voted down because... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Voted down because... (Score:2)
Microsoft did an about-face? (Score:2, Interesting)
Pro-spammer != Pro-spam (Score:5, Informative)
Furthermore, I don't know that I'd go so far as to call it "pro-spammer"; it still calls for fines to be levied. It just appears more "pro-spammer" than the consumer-backed bill.
It does here (Score:5, Insightful)
It was definitely pro-spammer, and ultimately pro-spam, in the sense that this is the best-case scenario for them. There is no way that the legislature could have completely nuked the bill, they would have been burned at the stake. So what did they do?
Reduce the penalties significantly
Provide loopholes for "inadvertent" sending.
So how do I prove that something wasn't inadvertent? Legally, I believe the burden is on the prosecution, and the bill allows for cases to potentially be tossed if the sending was inadvertent, or the penalties at least greatly reduced.
So bottom line is, if this thing gets passed, I want to see if it has any real effect upon spam or spammers. We shall see.
Judges are retarded, though (Score:3, Insightful)
I would love to agree with you, and maybe I'm just too damned cynical, but I see some kind of crappy defense where they say that they actually had an opt-in list they meant to send that to, or that they didn't know their list wasn't opt-in, or some tripe like that.
And s
Spam Prevention (Score:5, Interesting)
It's odd that this would come up right now, but I've got a friend in the California state senate (he's a page), and apparently there's rumor that this bill may have been killed because some topless photos of Senator Debra Bowen [ca.gov] have been floating around on the internet. It's ironic that the spam bill would be killed because of free porn spam.
Re:Spam Prevention (Score:2)
Perhaps... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Perhaps... (Score:5, Insightful)
I use server side blocking, I use procmail blocking with my own blacklist, and I have recently been playing with Squirrelmail which offers a SHITLOAD of options for fending off spam.
It's their right to send it to you, it's your right to block it.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2)
I'm happy that you have the money to pay for the bandwidth and temporary storage of spam coming in to your residential feed. Ask AOL how they feel about having to process over one billion (!!!) spams per day. How much do you reckon that costs?
It's their right to send it to you, it's your right to block it.
Could you poin
Re:Perhaps... (Score:3, Insightful)
I shouldn't have to go out of my way to prevent all this shit into my inbox. Either way, they are still taking resources out of my livelyhood to make a buck. Not kosher.
States have good spam filtering in place (Score:2)
The problem is half of our reps and senators don't even use a computer. Their assistants do but they don't. In Missouri at least, some of the ones that do use a computer see "just hit delete" as the perfect solution.
Re:Perhaps... (Score:2, Interesting)
I think I could have done about as well as that with a few procmail rules.
Am I missing something? Bash me with a cluestick.
Yup (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yup (Score:2)
Defining "genius" . . . (Score:5, Funny)
Step 2: Advertise that since spam is out of control, you're going to do everything in your power to help stop it, both in preventing spam from hitting your users and telling the government it needs to be stopped.
Step 3: Profit
I got nothing.
oh well... (Score:2)
Give it up. It takes money to take money and you don't have what it takes.
Quick Round-Up Wormhole (Score:3, Interesting)
What do I see? The post I just made at /.
That's pretty good considering the story only had 20 comments when I followed the link... Google News is really up-to-date.
May I suggest this alternate Google News link with a "-slashdot" [google.com].
Sys admins of the US need to .... (Score:2, Interesting)
Show that to a couple of senators with the tagline "... of taxpayers money"
--LordKaT
Microsoft (Score:3, Informative)
Regulate what?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, say CA passed a law and allowed ppl to sue a spammer for say a million dollars, ok, so are you going to Korea, China,
"Wait wait" will be the protests, you can go after the big spammers like aaa,bbbb & cccc!!
yeah sure, dont you think they'd just use servers outside CA and perhaps the US to do what they've been doing ???
Trying to explain a email message header to a court of law may be one thing but getting the actual spammer may be a whole different game to play.
Ofcourse "my server was hacked and was being used for spam" will always be an option.
So whats the answer?
technology, even Windows machines have pretty good free Bayesian filter softwares available,(atleast for OE, & Outlook) and they are pretty effective, Popfile , SpamBayes are a couple which come to mind.
They will stop most of your spam, and a couple of weeks of "training" will catch most of 'em.
These softwares are not complicated to use, and are available through click and point interface no messy config files.
Ofcourse in the brighter side of this planet where free software reigns , there are too many spam filters available, server side, and client side. Pick one and forget the rest of the laws.
whew....
Wait, filtering is not an answer.. (Score:2)
Bayesian filtering gets a lot of attention and I'm guessing mainly because its such a technical solution, but really its just another hack.
So far I've had the best luck with an old fashioned challenge-response type system (ala bluebottle.com [bluebottle.com]) and while its not as sexy sounding as Bayesian filtering, its saving me the sheer frustration of having to weed through other peopl
It doesn't solve the resource abuse... (Score:2)
By putting legislation into effect most spammers would move their operations offshore. The simple solution is to block those companies. To most of us it's not a big deal as we don't do business with companies outside the US. But it does hurt international business for those who do and it shifts our problem onto someone else.
I can only imagine the Good Guy sys admins overseas pissed off because their
Re:Regulate what?? (Score:2)
You'd think from some of the responses here that the majority of people disliked receiving spam, and wanted to do something about it.
Doing something for the MAJORITY of people, that is, not just a small technical elite who know how to use complex tools to avoid the problem themselves, while everyone else suffers.
Why doesn't everyone get together, as a "society", and choose a set of people to listen to our
Make a site, identify legislators (Score:5, Insightful)
Make a site like the Boycott RIAA site and related [netfirms.com] but identify each legislator, where they stand on the position, and where they voted.
If they used a tactic such as leaving the room when voting time came, to prevent a quorum, or to avoid going on record for the vote, identify that if it is known. Or if not known, list "present" or "absent" votes/non-votes.
You need to get a record of where the legislator stands. Do they support spammers like aol, microsoft, and the other dregs of spamming? Or do they support a spam free in box? Do they support opt in? Or industry's favored opt out? Do they support the federal do not call list? Or can they be quoted as saying that there are better ways of accomplishing the same goal, adopting the marketing companies tactics by avoiding being in opposition of a law that the vast majority of the public favors?
Find out what their voting record is. Find out what their positions are. Then find out what they actually do, do they back up their positions with votes in favor of their positions, or are they looking for cover?
Find out the info. Then out them. Make a site that can be used by voters to make an informed choice on where their legislator stands on the issues.
Then let us know where the site is.
Daylight is the best antiseptic for this infestation.
FCC's do not call registry (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:FCC's do not call registry (Score:4, Funny)
Why legislate? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is everyone seriously so impatient to solve the spam problem that they are willing to enact badly worded, overbroad legislation? Give the congress the power to regulate some aspects of the Internet, and that power will quickly expand into other areas. Do we actually want to go down that nightmare path?
Q: "Mr. Senator, how do you plan to pay for the execution of these new spam laws?"
A: "I plan to tax the Internet."
Believe it or not, (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, his reports leave out a lot of things, like young children having adds for bodypart enlargements, or graphic emails of beastialty in their inbox... certainly don't see that too often with Directmail.
But this guy is just one example of those who do lobby for spam mail... misguided though they may be.
A link to the audio stream is here [marketplace.org]
Doesn't adderss the problem... (Score:2, Insightful)
I have more problem getting rid of spam from companies that I've *never* done business with. Businesses that I've bought from occasionally send out offers, but they're always very good about removing me if I ask.
It's not the legitimate businesses that are the problem, it's the spam kings sending out offers of huge manhood and low rate loans with "remove me" links that point to overflowing Yahoo accou
Re:Doesn't adderss the problem... (Score:2)
For some reason I haven't been able to do that with the Hong Kong porn spammers.
BTW, all the Hong Kong spam comes to the email address I used here on slashbot. So that must make slashbot culpable for spam as well, right?
How do they fine the spammer? Where? (Score:2, Insightful)
If we can track them down to bill them, why not just beat the living s out of them then?
--D
p.s. Craigslist fricking rocks! I just wish more people in Sacramento knew about it (and knew how to use computers actually).
What we really need in a law (Score:5, Insightful)
That is what is needed, to put pressure on these clowns who are hiring the spammers in the first place.
Why Wait for the Law? (Score:4, Interesting)
Alternatively one can just set up a *nix box off a DSL line and run your own mailserver with whatever anti-spam tools you choose. It saves you the $10/mo and its a little more work, but you do have complete control of the box. Doing this, my spam has fallen to almost nothing.
Target the moneymen. (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is, the bill targets the spam-senders, who are acting pretty much anonymously and out of jurisdiction.
Why not simply target the spam-originators?
I mean, for every "Click here for crap" or something, there's a guy who expects to get *paid.*
Why target the middlemen, when you can go after the moneymen? Why target the supplier when you can target the demand?
Pro-spammer bill, my ass (Score:4, Informative)
from abc7news [go.com]: "According to an Assembly analysis, the spammer could be fined $1,000 per unwanted e-mail or $1 million per incident, whichever was less, plus actual damages to the recipient. An incident is defined in the bill as "a single transmission of substantially similar content." But Givens complained the bill would allow a judge to reduce the penalties to actual damages and $100 per e-mail or $100,000 per incident, whichever was less, if the advertiser had taken "due care" to prevent the transmission of unsolicited ads. ", under the bill that passed. Doesn't sound very pro-spammer to me even under the reduced penalty.
Why else... (Score:2, Funny)
If you needed any other proof (Score:2)
They ARE evil incarnate.
I hear Bill G. is building a dark tower in Redmond... I think the working code name is Barad-Dur......
their strategy: control spam, not eliminate it (Score:5, Interesting)
What's becoming clear is that Microsoft has a strategy to control spam, not eliminate it. You'll find that the legislation that Microsoft supports typically: 1) legalizes spam, 2) mandates opt-out, and 3) places power of enforcement in the hands of service providers rather than individuals.
One essential element of any good anti-spam law would be the right to private action: the spam victim gets to go to court and collect damages directly. This is one of the things that has made the junk fax law so effective. This is precisely what Microsoft does not want to happen.
Although the Microsoft supported laws aren't killing private action outright, they tend to make it useless. For instance, the trick they pulled in Texas was to allow ISPs to collect $25,000 or $10/spam, whichever is more, but individuals get $25,000 or $10/spam whichever is less. So, under the new (Microsoft-endorsed) Texas spam law, you could drag a spammer into small claims court and not even collect enough to cover your filing fees.
I believe Microsoft's intention is to chase away the rogue spammers, and then turn the corporate spammers into a revenue stream. So instead of 100 messages/day sellng us viagra or pr0n, we'll get 100 messages/day selling us insurance or aluminum siding. Oh yeah! That's so much better.
Go after the root cause (Score:2)
Can we create legislature that makes it illegal to hire someone to send spam for you? You know, the same way it's illegal to hire someone to beat up your good-for-nothing neighbor. While the spammers are hard to backtrace, the product offerings have to be traceable, otherwise they wouldn't be selling anything.
The downside of this suggestion is that it's easy t
Reading the articles... (Score:2)
It just won't be the one written by Senator Bowen.
From reading the articles it is unclear if this is a bad thing or not. Bowen sounds hysterical, and the Murray complaints against her bill are not very specific.
Need more info. Or am I just supposed to be outraged like a good little slashbot?
Googleloop (Score:5, Funny)
this reminds me of an ancient problem (Score:2)
Well the ruler thought this was wrong, but could not overule an existing tradition.
What nhe did was require thives to carry a 'registration card' of sorts.
The catch is, the registration card was a 500 pound piece of granet. The penelty for stealing without a license? death.
So allow spam in general, but forbid it being sent to politician, charities and children. Put the responsibilty to know who there sending it to on the spamme
Interesting Charlie Rose Interviews (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.charlierose.com/thisweek.shtm
Aren't Republicans supposed to be the biz whores? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Illegalize ...... (Score:2)
Re:This is how MS steps up its "war on spam?" (Score:2)
Re:Typical (Score:3, Insightful)
America is once again getting fucked in the ass by big business. "It's bad unless it's OUR spam." That's Microsoft's take on it. If you think abuot this logically, you will realize that this all goes back to the problem of corporations being given the same "rights" as individuals. Corporations need to be accountable to the consumer. NOT the shareholders, NOT the CEOs, NOT the suits. Every time I see this kind of thing, it m