First Lawsuit Against Cell-Phone Spammers 122
BMcWilliams writes "The PR machine at Verizon Wireless hasn't made any noise about this yet, but the carrier last month filed a lawsuit against some Rhode Island spammers who targeted its cell phone customers with over four million text-message ads for ephedra, penis pills, mortgages, etc. The timing of the lawsuit is interesting, given that the FCC is in the process of hammering out rules governing cell-phone spam. I am told the Verizon litigation is the first of its kind in the USA. My story about the lawsuit, and a copy of Verizon Wireless' complaint, are available here."
Reluctant kudos (Score:5, Interesting)
In addition to their anti-spam [clickz.com] efforts Verizon has opposed the cell-phone directory [slashdot.org]--and in the broadband-whore department, are at the forefront of deploying FTTP [slashdot.org]--which I personally want today.
I'm not a huge fan of VZW--although they do have great coverage, at least IMBY.
Re:Reluctant kudos (Score:2)
Re:Reluctant kudos (Score:2)
It's not so much that. It's because text messaging would become so useless with spam that no one would bother paying for it period. VZW charges a few dollars extra for text messaging, and it's still not as popular in the US as in other parts of the world. It's in their best interest as well as the customers' to keep text messaging useful and spam free.
Re:Reluctant kudos (Score:2)
Re:Reluctant kudos (Score:2)
Re:Reluctant kudos (Score:2)
Hold The Presses (Score:2)
Guess who they dealt with in the past?
Ralsky. Want proof? [detnews.com]
This is not some UL/FOAF story - Google "Ralsky Verizon" and you'll get tons of hits...
Luckily for us... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:txt msg spam (Score:2, Funny)
It's v1a.gra, idiot.
Re:txt msg spam (Score:2)
You can already do this, if you have a bluetooth-enabled [bluejackq.com] phone.
Re:txt msg spam (Score:1, Funny)
-- visit www.enlargeyourpenis.com --
Targetted Ads (Score:5, Funny)
Big Brother, where art thou?
Re:Targetted Ads (Score:1)
Sightly offtopic, but people that can't grasp currency notation irritate me.
Rules (Score:1, Funny)
Why is this taking so long? There should be two rules:
1) don't spam
2) reread rule #1
Failure to obey rule 1 results in summary execution by lethal injection.
Failure to obey rule 2 results in execution by being forced to go to a Britney Spears concert.
Re:Rules (Score:3, Funny)
If you allow Britney Spears concerts to continue, then the terrorists have won.
Re:Rules (Score:2)
Credit on your bill? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Credit on your bill? (Score:2)
Re:Credit on your bill? (Score:2)
I don't understand why the carrier should be held liable for information transmitted over their network that originates from a spammer. The spammer ought to be held responsible, not the carrier.
Verizon's lawsuit is in their best interest. Complaints from customers, which will increase unless the problem is addressed, will adversely affect the carrier more than any other party. Though the fault lays with the spamm
Here's Why (Score:2)
Because the fact of the matter is that cell phone providers clean up. The cost of providing the service is tiny and quite on par with (if not less than) supporting copper. They don't charge me my regular phone bill by how many people call me, why should they with cell phones? The relative low-cost of supporting ce
Re:Here's Why (Score:2)
The profit of any given carrier is of no importance. In a free-market system, one has the option to switch providers if one proves to be unsatisfactory; if no provider is acceptable, then one shouldn't have a cell-phone.
In the business world, there is no correlation between profits and obligations (outside those mandated by law).
Re:Here's Why (Score:2)
Your numbers are off. There are roughly two hundred spammers (not thousands). Most are located in the US (although they use relays from outside the US). Those who are not collect money in the US (at least those who send spam in the US do). Thus, they are reachable in the US...or at least their money is. Even if the spammer walks free, they aren't going to continue to spam if they can't get paid.
Re:Here's Why (Score:2)
Re:Here's Why (Score:2)
Re:Credit on your bill? (Score:2)
As of a year or two ago, it was said customers generallly have a white list and a black list and customers can control their message reception based upon those lists. Unfortunately, there are a lot of scenarios where a sequence of events prevents those lists from permitting the correct messages to come through p
Re:Credit on your bill? (Score:2)
Re:Credit on your bill? (Score:2)
The answer is simple. My previous provider, Verizon, used to charge me for incoming SMS, although I requested them repeatedly to turn off that feature. Now, I'm with MetroPCS, I don't get as much spam as I used to have with Verizon, and as an added bonus I don't get charged for any of it. The free market did work in this case.
Translation for Non-US mobile phone users (Score:2)
1 We are charged for receiving calls!
2 Spammers need not pay - if they are calling local, only the receiver pays.
In the case of local to mobile calls this cross-subsidisation of the landline network by mobile phone customers is a distortion of the market not pre
Arms race (Score:3, Informative)
spammers will simply call you from offshore countries using VOIP or POTS, they can block the caller ID making blocking very hard for providers
face it they are scum and a phone is a lot harder to block than IP addresses, the only solution really is to stop SMS entirely, its always the few that ruin it for the majority
Re:Arms race (Score:1)
No problem. Providers will just pull a "Telus [slashdot.org]" and block such messages from countries that refuse to respect the law.
The answer to that is...?
Re:Arms race (Score:2)
When I got a mobile phone, for some reason all the "friends" of the previous user of that number had their caller ID sending disabled. It was usually easy to avoid accepting calls. Even on that, I get caller ID info without using up any minutes.
SMS: spammer pays (Score:4, Insightful)
The most important point here is that sending SMSs costs something (lower prices for bulk sending of SMS messages are offered, but the typical spammer's business model still won't work, even if they just have to pay ~5 cents per message, it's too expensive for spamming). Then, the fact that money has to be paid also helps identifying the source (as far as I know, the identification for billing cannot be forged, so the telephone companies can find out who spammed).
In many European countries, SMS has become absolutely indispensable (and a major source of profit for the telephone companies). I read that in the US (at least under certain circumstances) the recipient rather than the sender has to pay for SMS messages - that's really an idiotic arrangement. I think Americans should rather look how SMS has been implemented in other countries than contemplating to give it up and missing the huge advantages it offers (being able to deliver a message to someone who is too busy to pick up a phone, sending telephone numbers etc.).
I have been using SMS for many years (in Switzerland) and I don't think I have ever received SMS spam.
Re:SMS: spammer pays (Score:2)
Re:SMS: spammer pays (Score:1)
The cell phone companies here in the US get you coming and going, but they take only half as much in each direction. So, in the end, it balances out....sort of.
Re:SMS: spammer pays (Score:2)
A large part of the reason SMS is so popular on your side of the pond is your voice charges are so expensive. Here nobody thinks twice about calling anyone locally. Last time I was in Europe people had to think about making a call to decide if it was worth the cost. SMS is cheaper so you do it.
I have SMS on my phone, and I do use it. However the difficulty of entering text on a phone makes it a bad idea for most things. (however when I need to send something like a IP address it works good because t
Cell Phone Spam (Score:2, Insightful)
Although they are not my carrier, I hope that other carriers will take notice and support them on this issue.
No one should ever have to pay for advertising unless without their consent. If you want to spam me then get my permission and pay me for it. If I agree then pay for part of my bill, not just the cost to send your message, but more so that my service is cheaper.
Re:Cell Phone Spam (Score:1)
If my phone bill was reduced from someone paying me [slashdot.org] (not my carrier) to send me messages, I still don't think I'd be signing up for it. I'm already advertised to nearly everywhere I go, I'd hate to get ads (even if I am comp'ed) on my cell or PDA.
disable text messages (Score:1, Interesting)
Texting is for kiddies.
Whitelisting is not the answer (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Whitelisting is not the answer (Score:2)
Re:Whitelisting is not the answer (Score:2)
I hate whitelisting. Its just a poor way to protect the end user. There are many instances, both for email, or cell phones where a whitelist will block an important transmission.
But it seems to work pretty well in Japan. DoCoMo lets you choose to block all mail from the Internet or from other mobile phones/terminals, then whitelist domains/addresses you want to receive mail from (up to 40, IIRC). I'm currently blocking Internet and Vodafone, with Vodafone-using friends whitelisted, and my spam has drop
Re:Whitelisting is not the answer (Score:1)
White-listing isn't a cop-out. It's a great way to keep people you don't want to hear from from bothering you. If I want to take *your* call, I'll add you to my list. Otherwise, piss off.
Max
Re:Whitelisting is not the answer (Score:2)
seems less than profitable (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, I would think that the conversion rate would be lower as well. I mean, with e-mail spam I can understand that a few people out of a million might see and open the message and decide to go to a company's buy whatever product the e-mail is selling. With cell phones, I don't really see the same thing happening as much. With e-mail, someone can click on a link and make an impulse buy in under 5 minutes. With cell spam, the person sees the message and then has to go out of their way to pursue the product.
Re:seems less than profitable (Score:2)
Re:seems less than profitable (Score:1)
If the company running the premium number didn't receive payment for, say 90 days, there would be time to investigate complaints and suspend payment to the scammers.
Yes, it would make it harder for a legitimate startup, but many businesses have the 90 days issue.
Re:seems less than profitable (Score:2)
y'mean like calling a toll number to receive more information on the product or something?
Re:seems less than profitable (Score:1)
Only???
Remember, on that cold April day in 1994, Canter and Siegel "only" sent out 4-5,000 messages to Usenet.
Spammers are like cats. You let 'em get away with something once... and you're screwed.
Go Verizon.
Re:seems less than profitable (Score:1)
on which posts are to be on certain topics as defined by each newsgroup. Advertising posts are off-topic on the vast majority of newsgroups, and those that do allow ads usually have specific rules that most Usenet spam violates.
Furthermore, posting any message to 20 or more newsgroups is considered abuse OF Usenet (as opposed to posting one off-topic or flame message, which is just abuse ON usenet), and this has a negative effect on the network by loading it down with useless
Geez! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Geez! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Geez! (Score:2)
Re:Geez! (Score:2)
Re:Geez! (Score:1)
Re:What I find funny (Score:2)
Re:What I find funny (Score:2)
Who pays? (Score:4, Informative)
And if someone does that 100 times, voila-$10 on my bill. There's not any incentive for the mobile carriers to make it stop, except of customer complaints. Which, in this case, are probably what caused the lawsuit, since Verizon wants to be seen as proactive on the issue. But I really doubt that they mind that much. If there were no complaints, do you think they'd sue?
Re:Who pays? (Score:1)
Re:Who pays? (Score:2)
Re:Who pays? (Score:2)
I guess it's worth the difference, though, since T-Mobile has rate plans that start at only about twice as many minutes/month as we use while AT&T (and Verizon, and Cingular, and Sprint) start at about ten times as much as we need and are priced accordingly.
Re:What I find funny (Score:1, Informative)
This does cause harm! (Score:1)
Another type of spam... (Score:3, Interesting)
Here seedy companies, usually based in Tokyo phone your number and hang up after 1 ring. They then bank on the fact that you will call them back figuring you missed an important call. The number that comes up on the display is for a pay per min, up front minimum charge service. When you don't pay, they actually send goons to get the money out of you.
Granted it is difficult to block numbers comming from a specific area code, especially if you live in that area. I fortunately do't live in the area where most of these calls come from, so seeing a different area code is a pretty good indication it is spam.
While white listing is a bit of a pain, and as others have pointed out may block important information you were not expecting from comming through, the amount of spam I was getting previous to turing it on was mental. something to the tune of 20 a day using a e-mail address on my phone that there is no way a name generator could come up with. I was limited to 25 characters for my name and I used a random set of numbers and letters as well as the few non-basic characters I was allowd to, and still within 20 min of setting up the account I had spam.
Now if only I could get a spam filter plugin for my phone things would be great, though I do believe the filter should be hosted on DoCoMo's end and configureable by myself.
Re:Another type of spam... (Score:2)
If I ever saw that kind of thing, I would drop them in a hurry because such a company cannot be trusted.
Re:Another type of spam... (Score:1)
However in regards to the callback scam you mentioned, I do get about 2 of those a week.
Re:Another type of spam... (Score:1)
Now the other way I could read that is that they aren't true toll calls which, for example in the US would be something like 1-900-555-1212) but simply extortion schemes that try and arbitrarily charge you money.
Or perhaps, there is yet another possibility I have not thought of....
Nigerian cell phone spam (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Nigerian cell phone spam (Score:1)
Why does this remind me of the goodtimes virus?
Re:True story: (Score:2)
Re:True story: (Score:2)
Easy to do.. (Score:2)
oops, i said too much.
GroupShares Inc. [groupshares.com] - A Free Stock Community
Re:Easy to do.. (Score:1)
Faxes (Score:2)
This spam actually HURTS consumers! (Score:1, Interesting)
Most cell phone providers have limits on the number of text messages a person can send and receive. If your cap is 50 for the month, and you get 4/day, you're 70 messages over your limit. If they charged as 20 cents a message (which some do) that's an extra $14/month.
This doesn't seem like much, but that works out to an extra $168/year (that's enough to buy a new phone every year) per person. Now imagine how many people are getting these messages out of the 4.7 million messages that were sent!
Carri
Re:This spam actually HURTS consumers! (Score:2)
Over here (Norway), you can send and receive an unlimited amount of text messages; the only limits are the storage capabilities of the phone and actually getting a subscription that specifically limits the number of text messages you can send out (usually on cell phones used by children where mommy and daddy are footing the bill).
You pay to send text messages, obviously, but you don't have to pay anything
Re:SMS Spam shows charging for email won't work (Score:2)
Just go to the home page of your cell provider, and look for something along the lines of "send a text message to a friends' cell phone". View the form's source, and that will give you the info you need (usually just the addy of the email gateway).
In Canada:
Most of the cell phone spam I get... (Score:3, Interesting)
Bah!
There is justice in this world! (Score:2, Informative)
I did a DNS and phone directory search for the company (The Phoenix Company, Pawtucket , RI), called up the phone phone numbers listed. I also filed a complaint with my cell carrier, and with FCC. I got a form letter response from FCC last month, and thought that was the end of that... till I saw this p
no charge? (Score:1)
Re:no charge? (Score:3, Informative)
You can send text messages through an e-mail gateway. 9175551212@yourcarrier.net, 9175551213@yourcarrier.net -- and since certain blocks of telephone numbers are reserved to cell phone carriers, and the assignments are published by The North American Numbering Plan Administrator [nanpa.com], you can text 917555nnnn@yourcarrier.net and get probably 8500 successe
In Japan . . . (Score:2)
I don't know how bad spam is in the US, but in Japan, things have improved markedly over the last year or so. Not so much by the anti-spam law passed two years ago--with predictably negligible effect--but NTT DoCoMo, the largest keitai carrier, has been very proactive in fighting spam itself. Not only do they have user-settable black-and-whitelisting by source (carrier/Internet), domain, or address, they have an address where you can report spam to them, and they shut down spammers' connections pretty qui
why won't this work? (Score:1, Interesting)
Damit... (Score:1)