New Michigan Law Means Kids Can Opt Out of Spam 183
tekiegreg writes "Thanks to a new Michigan Law, parents can now opt their kids out of Spam. One wonders whether or not such severe penalty will make Spammers think twice ($30,000 fine and 3 yrs/jail)." I wonder how much legislation will actually help keep kids from being spammed, but if it works, I'm happy to say I'm under age 13 if it means I get less spam.
Kids only (Score:5, Insightful)
It's almost as if the legislators are making a compromise...
Re:Kids only (Score:1)
Spam is annoying as hell though and I agree that anyone should opt-out.
Re:Kids only (Score:3, Insightful)
WON'T SOMEBODY PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN!
Re:Kids only (Score:4, Insightful)
Hell, that argument's so persuasive that it gets used for things that have nothing to do with children, like same-gender marriage.
Re:Kids only (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the stupidest thing I've heard all day... and I've been watching daytime television. Seriously. Infomercials and sportscasters are thoughtful than this.
I guess we're going to have to start nullifying the legal relationships of couples who fail to produce offspring, and deny licenses to post-menopausal women.
Re:Kids only (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay, first... quick check of Luke-Jr's posting history to find out if he's just a boring slashdot stdtroll.
*insert posting history analysis music*
Hmm, no, he doesn't seem to be a troll (seems moderately clueful even). Standard homophobic bigot? Uncertain, but probably not. Has no gay friends and generally no comprehension of gay relationships? *DING DING DING* I think we have a weiner! :-)
Luke-Jr: people do get married without any intent or expectation of having children. It may be a shock to you
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
Define "natural"
Something that only happens in nature?
Well, homosexual acts have been documents in many species, including dolphis, bonobo, elephant seals, whales, and many others.
Gay sex is as "natural" as straight sex. If you doubt otherwise, perhaps you should find a gay person and ask them.
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
Thinking in a practical legal sense, it is (to put it mildly) rather impractical to think of the state intervening to verify a married couple is having regular sex, and cancelling their marriage license if they "fail". Or would you consider it okay if they only had sex
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
*facepalm* *grin*
If it weren't for the fact that such a child would probably end up killing him/herself in such an intolerant family environment, I'd say that you really deserve at least one gay kid.
You just keep telling yourself that. After all, if you keep saying it, that makes it true, right? Right?
Ah well, in
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
It's a good thing that your grasp of genetics (ever heard of recessive traits, just for starters?) is as flawed as your grasp of logic. It increases the chance that your sacramental blessings (ie. kids) will one day come up to you and say "Dad, we still love you and all, but you really are a fucking nutjob."
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
Look, I understand if you're too much of a cowa*ahem*, I mean, too concerned about your personal privacy to tell us, but I am kind of interested re: which specific religious belief system you currently subscribe to (that includes these elements as part of their, um, party platform). I think most of the Christian variants have a position similar to that you're espousing, but the one most of my family subscribes to [uca.org.au] is generally fairly mellow on this point. They don't, for example, state that a marriage
Re:Kids only (Score:2)
Anyway, I'm now going to perform a standard routine that I'm sure you've encountered many times before - probably just about every time you're in a social situation, in fact.
"Right... uh-huh... very interesting..." *backing away, smiling, nodding* "...Excuse me, I... ah... have to go talk to... someone in... another place." *walks away very quickly*
But what about porn (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:But what about porn (Score:1)
Re:But what about porn (Score:2)
On the plus side, at least Hotmail makes an attempt at filtering.
Heck yeah (Score:5, Funny)
spam for tweens (Score:3, Funny)
The Internet is still the wild west (Score:3, Interesting)
International Issues (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey. I love protecting the kids. Perhaps we should all get a law. I'd also like to grow hair and be taller. But until leglislators can change the fabric of reality, these things are not going to happen. Makes for nice press. Little else.
Just How Many Stooges were in the Three Stooges? [whattofix.com]
Re:International Issues (Score:1, Informative)
Since I only email kids who are my relatives, I don't have to verify any email addresses I mail to.
But if you often send mail to kids, well, then that's an issue.
Re:International Issues (Score:2)
No, only the ones you actually send e-mail to.
And if you only send e-mail to those that explicity give you an e-mail address, you can probably rely on them to tell you where they're from.
Re:International Issues (Score:3, Insightful)
Or you can just... you know... not email people you don't now.
Re:International Issues (Score:2)
yeah that will work (Score:5, Insightful)
oh the oppression!
They don't ... (Score:5, Informative)
This is something false that people think is true because it keeps getting repeated over and over by people on sites like slashdot. The US have the most spammers in the world. Here are the top ten spammers:
United States: 42.11 per cent
South Korea: 13.43 per cent
China (including Hong Kong): 8.44 per cent
Canada: 5.71 per cent
Brazil: 3.34 per cent
Japan: 2.57 per cent
France: 1.37 per cent
Spain: 1.18 per cent
United Kingdom: 1.13 per cent
Germany: 1.03 per cent
Within the US, IIRC, the number one spamming state is Florida.
One reason this falsety spread though is that Chinese server admins used to have very lax attitudes to open relays, which meant that the (mostly American) spammers often used Chinese servers to send their spam. Russia comes in because Russian mafia hacker groups are known to set up botnets - armies of infected zombie XP machines connected to the Net - and they then sell the use of the botnets for doing things like sending spam to (mostly American) spam groups.
IMO blaming the Chinese and Russians in these cases for spam is like blaming the manufacturer of a gun used in a murder, instead of the person who decided to pull the trigger. You don't fix a problem by blocking the symptoms - you go to the source of the problem.
Re:They don't ... (Score:1)
Re:They don't ... (Score:1)
Re:They don't ... (Score:2)
I don't think the gun is the symptom; I think the gun is the tool. Whilst I agree that the best solution is to allow the tool and prevent the crime, it's not always the most pragmatic solution. We in the UK, have lower violent crime rates than the US and it probably has something to
Re:Err (Score:2)
I don't if I would put gun manufacturers in the same boat as ignorant users. If anything, gun manufacturers are the ones creating the botnets
Just to clarify, yes, that's exactly what I meant! The ones who create/run the botnets and sell the services are the 'gun manufacturers' in that analogy.
I don't blame the users whose systems have been compromised at all. Firstly, they're just pawns being used in the whole thing, and it cannot really be their fault, they were just sold defective products without be
Re:They don't ... (Score:2)
this list, or are they the remaining ~%19?
It's been a while since I got a spam from Nigeria (and I haven't blacklisted the country). Most "Nigerian 419" spam doesn't actually come from Nigeria. In fact, most of them don't even claim to be from Nigeria but from a wide variety of countries, some from Africa, some from Asia, some from Europe and some from Latinamerica.
Something I've noticed is that whenever there is a newsworthy disaster, out come the "widows"
Can they opt out of dupes? (Score:3, Funny)
Send Email to Utah, Go to Jail [slashdot.org]
The Institute for Spam and Internet Public Policy is reporting that two new laws in Utah and Michigan are going into effect next week, creating 'do not email' registries for children's email addresses. According to ISIPP, 'Email marketers who send unpermitted messages to email addresses or domains on the child protection registries in Michigan and Utah face stiff penalties including prison and fines.'" (Note that ISIPP has a vested interest in publicizing these laws, since they offer a service intended to establish that senders are in fact within the law.)
Oh Great (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh Great (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Oh Great (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh Great (Score:2)
Got a question though: Is it true that you wanted to run away from home when you were a child, but couldn't bear to leave your brothers' behind?
Re:Oh Great (Score:2)
Re:Oh Great (Score:2)
Kind of like the U.S. Dept. of Defense using access to kids' high school records for recruitment purposes?
Re:Oh Great (Score:3, Interesting)
You'd assume that the published list would be MD5s of the lowercase version of each email address, and that the full database would only be available to the michigan government, their contractors, credit agencies, anyone who cracks their website.
At least, that's how everyone here would probably implement it. They don't need to release the email addresses, just provide a way to check whether they're on the list or not.
Re:Oh Great (Score:3, Informative)
https://www.protectmichild.com/answer.html?src=q&i d=4 [protectmichild.com]
QUESTION: How is the privacy of registrants maintained?
ANSWER: The security of a list of child-accessible e-mail addresses was of great concern when designing the Protect MI Child Registry. Registered e-mail addresses are stored in such a way that the addresses will not be revealed, even if the system's database is compromised. Even the state does not have access to the registered e-mail addresses.
Re:Oh Great (Score:2)
Logically, once the first spammer is successfully prosecuted, the majority of bulk mailing software will probably evolve to allow a list of "email addresses not to spam under any circumstances". All I need to do then is figure out a way to get my email address onto that list...
oh goody, another law. (Score:4, Insightful)
If the sender of each illegal message in my inbox actually got prosecuted according to existing laws - there could me millions of dollars in fines. Nothing is consistently enforced though - so its pretty much as if the existing laws don't really exist. I don't see why this one will be any different.
Re:oh goody, another law. (Score:1)
Easy to enforce? (Score:3, Interesting)
Some??? Who's this so called expert that claimed they are easy the enforce?
you misunderstand (Score:2)
When I was a kid... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:When I was a kid... (Score:2)
The force of the jury (Score:3, Interesting)
So when someone is finally taken to trial for sending spam to kids, they won't escape from a jury saying "sorry, I didn't know..."
Re:The force of the jury (Score:2)
Why tragically? Because they shouldn't be able to go "I didn't know I was sending porn to kids", because they the should have checked. And if they didn't know, they shouldn't have been doing it.
Myself, I figure crypto signing is the way forward. If I can verify who you are, your mail gets through, otherwise it drops in my spam folder. Tragically, I appear to be alone in this belief.
Re:The force of the jury (Score:2)
Of course, sending pornographic materials to minors is illegal no matter what, so I don't see what this law accomplishes.
Encrypted? (Score:3, Interesting)
Can somebody explain how the registry can be encrypted, and STILL be available to spammers so they know who 'not' to spam?
Spammer> I don't want to get suid... can you tell me who not to spam.
Govt> Sorry, that's classified.
Hash (Score:1, Informative)
1. Make hashes of every kid email address using SHA-512 or whatever.
2. Makes list of hashes queryable via some service.
Bulk-Mail Advertisers (spammers) do this:
1. Send a query of every email address they want to test to the list. If it's a kid email address, they get some sort of message telling them so.
So, basically, you can't just browse the list for email addresses to send to. You have to at least have the email address (or guess it) first.
Re:Hash (Score:2)
If a hashed database is made then I really hope they put a time delay on it so spammers can only check X amount of addresses at a time.
Re:Hash (Score:2, Informative)
That's the genius (Score:2)
Re:Encrypted? (Score:2)
So you really don't gain any new email addresses you didn't have before.
Re:Encrypted? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Encrypted? (Score:2)
Govt: Sorry, that's classified.
Ignoring for a moment why the spammer wouldn't want to be suid (is that a sort of identity theft?)... doesn't stuff like that already happen?
Pilot: I don't want to get shot down... can you tell me where are the nuclear power stations that I must stay 30 miles away from?
Govt: Sorry, that's classified.
Builder: I don't want to get sued... can you tell me what rules apply to the house I'm building?
Govt:
Spam is hardly the issue (Score:5, Insightful)
We allow advertising for Snickers, M&Ms, Coke & Pepsi all over our high and junior high schools, and allow Universities (like the former U of Minnesota - now a research facility instead of a school) to sell students personal information to any bank or credit card company we choose.
Spam is hardly a threat compared to corporate "education".
Re:Mod down - not insightful (Score:2)
Marketing in schools - can you deny they are targeting kids specifically?
And why wouldn't I hate corporations? They've ignored public responsibility, denounced the public charters that once were REQUIRED to start a corporation, and can't even be fiscal responsible to shareholders, employees, or community. Surely, it's in my own best interes
Evil people (Score:3, Interesting)
Damnit! (Score:1)
Living in Michigan sucks =(
This Law Is Evil (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/sample.cfm?content
Not Evil.... (Score:2)
Let's go over this:
The point of freedom of speech is so that everyone can voice their political opinion. The new law does not punish people who send e-mails with links to credit card advertisements. RTFA before screaming "Constitution!" The new law bans sending messages to children related to such things as pornography, illegal or prescription drugs, alcohol, tobacco, gambling, firearms, or fireworks. While the government cannot exercise prior restraint to prevent people from advertising illegal serv
Truly Naive (Score:2, Insightful)
"From my perspective as a parent, I'm horrified by what comes in" to her three children's e-mail accounts, Gov. Jennifer Granholm said during a news conference Thursday. "This will put an end, we hope, to inappropriate e-mail getting to our children."
It will not put an end
Errors in post, link to text of void statute. (Score:4, Insightful)
It bans some email. It doesn't tell you which email; you have to guess. Lots of spam is ok under the statute. It's not limited to bulk email, one is enough. Have you verified everyone on your contacts list isn't actually a michigan minor? How exactly did you verify that? It's not limited to commercial email.
http://www.isipp.com/michigan-email-child-protect
There's the text, which was missing from the main post. Do you understand it? Does your lawyer understand it? Are you in compliance?
The statute is not a law. One of the basic rules of american law established by Marbury v Madison is that an unconstitutional statute is not law.
This statute appears to be unconstitutional for the reasons discussed in Cyberspace v Engler, which stuck down Michigan's previous attempt at banning the internet because of the kiddies.
http://www.cyberspace.org/lawsuit/ [cyberspace.org]
Some of the fun provisions in the act:
they can make you come to michigan with all your business records to answer questions.
They can seize your computers.
If they were serious about protecting kids, they wouldn't be charging a fee to check the list.
Oh and it's not just parents who can add names - government officials can add kids' names, probably without telling them.
For fun, check the linking policy.
http://www.michigan.gov/som/0,1607,7-192-26915-20
It's a shakedown.
It's not constitutional.
It doesn't protect against spam.
It bans some email but not others.
Spam is a real problem. This isn't a real solution.
Personally, getting on the federal and state do not call lists has been great for me.
This isn't like that.
Don't be a dupe.
This is what we fought Reno v ACLU for - to keep the government from shutting down the internet.
Re:Errors in post, link to text of void statute. (Score:3, Insightful)
No kidding. I work for a company that has something like 10 million emails in our database. Our clients are top-drawer companies that run opt-in lists. One pass through Michigan's database is $70,000K for us. AND since the law says that each sender has to validate their own lists, then our clients much do the same thing, netting MI another $70K. And this on a *monthly* basis. I suspect that our runs alone would pay for the entire database and the employees to run it - $1.7 million per
Re:Errors in post, link to text of void statute. (Score:2)
No but it is limited to commercial email, and not all commercial email at that:
spam in EU (Score:2)
Why not make this something global and not only to protect children..?
Although this would not realy solve the problem. ISPs should take more action to prevent that unsolicited e-mails are being send on their subnet anyway.
Presumably 13 because... Easier to enforce? (Score:1)
I also think that the bill is more of an anti-pedophile bill in reality, since it does not limit itself to commercial e-mails and is under-13 not under-18.
The police are a lot more interested in keeping pron folks away from under-13 than teens. It should be easier to put teeth onto this.
Opting out? (Score:2)
American tax payers money at work :) (Score:2, Insightful)
Follow the money (Score:1)
Great (Score:2)
If I were in charge of the lawmaking process I would create a new protocol for commercial email (bills, recipts, some advertizing) that had strict requirements like digital signatures that let people chose what organizations they wanted to get.
Then I would ban commercial, automated email entirely. (You could still individualy email clients, o
Happy Birthday (Score:2)
what CowboyNeal really means (Score:2)
Lying ABout Your Age (Score:3, Funny)
Why do kids *need* email? (Score:2)
Hey! What an idea! Having the parents be involved in what their children are doing online!
Too bad it's easier to get "for the children" legislation passed instead.
Re:Why do kids *need* email? (Score:2)
Re:Why do kids *need* email? (Score:2)
And just out of curiosity, how would you set up a mechanism which doesn't allow you to "nailfile/chmod a+rwx diary"? Put in a request for the key, but the kid has a 48-hour period in which he/she can veto it? Let him/her know in
Re:Why do kids *need* email? (Score:2)
Remember, your kids won't be happy if you're able to go through their email without them having any way to keep at least some of their messages private. But I'm 15 so I am slightly biased in this area
It could be an interesting project for me to try out though...have you got any ideas on how I'd go about it? Modifying something like Hula [hula-project.org] perhaps? I don't know too much about
The answer (Score:2)
No.
Spammer... (Score:4, Interesting)
If you send ads, it's up to you to MAKE SURE those ads go to people that want them. Sending XXX "college amature cam" porn to 10 year olds is not targeting your market, is it?
STFU and get a real job.
--
BMO
Re:Spammer... (Score:3, Interesting)
If we as a community did the right thing and killed spammers (yes, we know who they are - all the way back to the two immigration lawyers that spammed usenet) - not 'took them off the net', not 'harassed them', not 'made them uncomfortable' - but killed them as in 'putting real bullets through their real bodies and made them stop being alive' dead - the sp
Re:Spammer... (Score:3, Interesting)
It's been illegal for decades to send X-rated snail mail advertisements through the US Mail to minors.
How is this any different? It's also not an automatic list - the email has to be submitted by the parent (or by a clueful minor who is sick of spam). Indeed, it's very limited in scope and I am sure that it will weather the inevitable court challenges.
Re:Spammer... (Score:4, Insightful)
I just set up an email account for my son, 7, so he can send mail to his grandparents and practice typing. He's got a nice gmail account and the Mac OS X parental controls whitelists who he can send and receive mail from. Any other addresses that go to his account or that he tries to send to are forwarded to me so I can add them to the list if I see fit.
Safari similarly limits the websites he can go to so he can't go directly to gmail to bypass the whitelist.
Government doesn't need to protect kids from spammers. We're all perfectly capable of doing it ourselves. The problem is that most people really don't care - they say they care but they don't care enough to act - to spend $20 on software that will do what this bill does, or to spend an hour learning how to secure their kids machine.
Re:Spammer... (Score:2)
Re:Really? (Score:2)
Apples. Oranges.
Porn and teenage boys is a rite of passage. One of the whole points of it is that it's illicit, and therefore "cool". The penalty for finding Dad's porn was "death" as in "he's gonna 'kill' me if he finds out". Forget about laws. Think about the beating....
MARKETING porn to teenage *anybody* is a whole different ball of wax. And that's where the line is bei
Re:Spammer... (Score:2)
I seem to have touched a nerve.
How's it feel to be a spammer *criminal*?
Funny how you don't come out from your anonymous posting. Coward.
--
BMO - Lumber Cartel (TINLC) number #2501
Re:Spammer... (Score:2)
Yeah, that's what Sanford Wallace used to say.
How come if it's such a great job, you have to hide behind an anonymous posting? Eh?
--
BMO
Re:Whats the point anyway? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Whats the point anyway? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Whats the point anyway? (Score:2)
Fact is, businesses have to take into account the laws of the countries and states whhere they operate. If they can't obey them, then they shouldn't be in business.
Re:Whats the point anyway? (Score:2)
The 'No' button takes you right to the porn; That Minnie Mouse is one hot Furry
On the net, we are all children (Score:3, Interesting)
At a previous Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference, I asked this question of the chairman of the FTC, who was speaking about children's privacy on the net. As you might expect, I got no good answer.
It seems to me that the essential quality of being a child that causes us to make special laws protecting them are:
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Complete Bullshit (at least the parent post) (Score:2)
I don't see how this law can survive intrastate commerce and equal protection challenges.
I hate spam as much as the next guy, but I also hate power grabs more like this one.
Re: interstate commerce (Score:2, Informative)
from cyberspace v engler permanent injunction:
A state's power to regulate commerce may be limited by the right of Congress to regulate interstate commerce. U.S. Const. Art. I, 8, cl. 3. Michigan's effort to regulate what information may be transmitted to Michigan's children, via the Internet, attempts to control Internet communications which might originate within Michigan, in other states, or in other countries. The Commerce Clause precludes the application of state statutes to commerc
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)