Spammer Sued Under EU Law 102
IngramJames writes "A British businessman has successfully sued a company who sent him a spam email. The case was settled out of court, so is not binding, but it's promising that the spammers had to cough up £300 for a single email! It's being reported (in a much more readable way) on The Register and the BBC." From the BBC article: "Three years ago the EU passed an anti-spam law, the directive on privacy and telecommunications, which gave individuals the right to fight the growing tide of unwanted e-mail by allowing them to claim damages."
Can't wait! (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Can't wait! (Score:1)
Not clear wether this law can reach the Asian spammers.
Too bad our own government (the US that is) wimped out and decided not to protect us from them.
-Crossing my fingers the EU will kill the spammers
Nice job... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
The guy'll be doing the airdance before the first May flowers push up out of the ground.
Re:Nice job... (Score:3, Interesting)
If I decided to commission a detailed spam campaign on your behalf (but without your knowledge - lets call it a 'gift' from the members of my botnet).
How could you prove you DIDN'T instigate the run, and how could you prove its not your fault?
Do you enjoy giving your money away?
This fine hopefully won't set off a trend.
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
In my unprofessional experience, most of the "I DIDN'T KNOW!" lawsuits or big news stories concerning spam invovle a reseller program of some sort.
Now, another thing I'm seeing more recently are people getting updates from websites with maybe a few links for advertising (or requests) for advertising due to people forgetting to turn off the 'email me' feature on a website when they register. Thats technically an opt-in, but they still end up complaining and screaming SPAM!
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
It's still hard to be sympathetic.
Perhaps those companies shouldn't default the checkbox to checked, and/or sneak the checkbox in at the very bottom in a smaller typeface? Obviously the user has every opportunity to stop the emails before they start, but that doesn't neccessarily cure the company sending them of any blame.
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
At the same time, I absolutely hate the websites that switch that option on whenever their TOS changes or when they feel like it.
Now, I've had friends that think they're important when they get email and after a year or so, they complain very loudly. The problem is, they cause the problems themselves because they check every box they can just to get email.
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
I have had advertisements from serveral companies where I spcifically turned the preference for mail off at time I signed up, only to have adveristing from them a few months later. I seem to remember Yahoo doing this a few years ago.
Further (purposefully) complicating things is that sometimes the wording on the opt-out is tricky. Sometimes you click on a box th
Re:Nice job... (Score:4, Insightful)
If the default is to receive email - the user has to go out of their way to not receive email - exactly how is that opt-in?
Clue: If you have a mailing list of people who don't really want to be on it, it probably isn't an opt-in mailing list.
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
No, that's technically an opt-out. Anyone can anonymously subscribe anyone else to such a list, providing a means to untraceably mailbomb the victim of your choice. The unwanted ema
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
Re:Nice job... (Score:1, Informative)
it isnt exactly a new concept.
just cause it involves the "interweb" doesnt make it a new concept, doesnt make it a new situation that must be handled differently, you hired a company to break the law for you, that is a crime (or civil offense depending on what law)
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
Suppose that instead of sending spam, your competitor posts paper notices in parts of the city where it's illegal. How do you prove that you DIDN'T do it, and how could you prove that it's not your fault?
Or perhaps they buy mass-media time, showing photoshopped pictures of how proud your company is that they enjoy killing puppies for sport. How do you prove that you DIDN'T do it, and that you don't really kill pup
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
We are not talking about anything as serious as you mention, of fucking course the police would investigate a murder properly and not be thrown by a calling card.
The differences don't even need clarifying suffice to say I most certainly don't think
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
Lets see...
Sorting the approx 20-30 real mails I get from the approx 5000 messages that people attempt to drop in my account each day.. Takes about an hour a day, which equals a loss in productivity of approx 10-12%. With my hourly rate that equals to at least 60-70 euro in
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
They do need clarifying, and I wasn't actually saying that you think what I suggest, but that *YOUR OWN LOGIC* dictates the conclusion that all laws are bad because you can frame someone.
Arguing triviality just tells me that you can't actually refute the logic without admitting you were wrong. It's trivial to forge someone's signature (much easier than creating a botnet, as a matter of fact). Does this m
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
I wish. Then the company I work for would actually get some advertising, and hopefully, some publicity out of it. And it's all free, except for fighting it in court. As it is, my boss doesn't advertise very much or very effectively.
I think that the problem with spam is that it's so cheap and so untracable,
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
Do you really think that the company which sells Viagra - I forgot the name - doesn't know through wich channels (legal and illegal) their product is sold? It's a medicine for *** sake.
It is fairly easy as a company to protect yourself from liability. Denounce the companies which sell your product in illegal ways.
If you sold it to a distributor who unknowing to you sold it trough spamming you can always sue him.
Follo
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
How would they know the sale came from a spam run, or from a friendly word of mouth email, or from a slashvertisement or anywhere?
Get a spam filter and stop whining.
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
I have no problem with companies selling trough referals as long as they know that the referrer is a reputable company or person itself.
What is it with all this irresponsibility. Don't you care that those companies clog up the internet and annoy people with no end for a quick buck.
The only ones responsible for spam are the companies making money of it and they are the only ones who can stop it.
Simple answer to this one... (Score:2)
Whatever else happens, I'm generating publicity for the company, they may end up doing very well out this spam on their behalf.
If I tried to make the spam unappealing to negate the above effect, it'd be more obvious that it was a bogus campaign done without their knowledge.
Of course, the intelligent ones out there reading this will be sure to think of clever ideas that look like they w
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
I would look to see whether you actually benefitted financially from the run. If you had an uptick in orders but also a lot of complaints about spam, then you should check that out and disclaim the spam. Heck, you should stop taking orders from whatever link the spam has. If you made money off of it, that's a good sign you helped or at least did not stop the spam invasion.
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
It should be upto the person who was spammed to prove the company he is suing is guilty of the actions he claims they are.
How would you go about that with a spam email sent via a random home users' computer controlled via a command issued on an IRC server somewhere by someone we don't know borrowing control of a botnet built up from activations on a dodgy image file served up from an even dodgier porn website at the request of a person we don't know supposedly because of a backhander given
Re:Nice job... (Score:1)
Re:Nice job... (Score:2)
This is the part where they go through the company records, company bookkeeping to see if there's a money trail. Lying about it to the court would be a serious offense, so I doubt many would falsely try that defense. In the end, it is exactly the same as when the RIAA say "I saw these files coming from your Internet connection", the standard is "preponderance of evidence".
If the company was falsely accused, *they* w
But... (Score:3, Interesting)
Court fees?
Lost wages from taking days off of work to go to court?
Lawyer's fees? (Well, you can save on that by getting a season of Law and Order on DVD, I guess...)
Great in principle, but I fear the day is theirs
Re:But... (Score:3, Informative)
Not a lot, in the UK (Score:4, Interesting)
What's more, it works. I was involved in a case in which a company sued a friend claiming payment for work they had not, in fact, done. Although we screwed up mildly on the paperwork the judge in the case decided that did not matter and gave judgement in our favor. The other side walked out feeling very upset, but realised the cost of going to a higher court to try again would be much greater than the amount claimed. So they gave up.
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:1)
It currently costs 30GBP for amounts claimed up to 300GBP. Mr Roberts deliberately kept the damages claimed at 300GBP so that he could pay the cheapest fees, as I heard him explain on the radio the other day.
The maximum costs for the small claims court is 120GBP, which would allow you to claim up to the maximum claim amount of 5,000GBP.
.
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:2)
My only personal insight into the American justice system is when I casually asked the bailiff why they don't just use appointments for the speeding ticket judge instead of forcing you to wait in line the whole day. His response: "Duh, people just plead guilty in the mail if they know they'll lose a day's pay to fight it."
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:1)
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:1)
Wrong. The cost depends on the amount being claimed.
To claim less than £300 it only costs £30 which is obviously why the guy only tried to sue for just under that amount -- if he lost he'd only loose the £30, rather than £50 quid for the next level or higher.
Since it's the small claims court the costs are limited, generally you only have to pay expenses (which are limited) if the judge considers a party to be behaving unreasonab
Manners (makyth man) (Score:2)
When somebody prefixes a remark with "I think..." implying they are not sure, and suggests that the amount is claim-dependent, prefixing your reply with "Wrong" is bad manners.
I'm making this point because we've been recruiting this year, and one of the questions I always get asked about candidates is "are they safe to talk to clients?"
I am assuming you are in England because you use the vernacular ("£50 qu
Re:Manners (makyth man) (Score:1)
Maybe. Unfortunately it's fairly impossible to convey emotion via a purely textual medium so I would advise against getting too offended -- no malice was meant.
"but not a native speaker"
An incorrect assumption.
"£50 or 50 quid but NOT £50 quid"
No, it was just a typo.
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:1)
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:2)
Chances are good at least one of them will have an IQ above 100, so it should be good.
Re:Not a lot, in the UK (Score:2)
When the EU legislation was ratified two years ago the Information Commissioner was given the authority to enforce it in the UK. They initially put some forms on their website. IIRC the forms wehre in pdf which you had to fill in and mail conventionally. No do not laugh, we are talking Civil Service the UK way in the days of Antonio Bliar. Even that ended up being too much for them and they took the stuff of the
Re:But... how far can this go? (Score:1)
30 pounds, paid by spammer
Lost wages from taking days off of work to go to court?
Owns is own business
Lawyer's fees?
He didn't hire one
I'm more curious as to how you quantify "damages" caused by spamming. Three hundred pounds may be logical limit - small claims - but what's keeping someone from suing for more?
Re:But... (Score:2)
Well, I don't know about you, but my company pays me while I'm on holiday, and I don't get to have the money instead if I don't use the days...
And from the article... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And from the article... (Score:1)
It says in the second sentence of the summary,
"The case was settled out of court, so is not binding..."
Re:And from the article... (Score:2)
Re:And from the article... (Score:1)
Re:And from the article... (Score:1)
- I am sure many people who don't give a damn about SPAM look at this and think
Let's sue spammers out of b
Re:And from the article... (Score:2)
Re: decided in or out of court? (Score:1, Informative)
It both says that the judge ruled in his favour (as the defendant did not defend himself) AND it it says the claim was settled out of court.
I assume the former is correct (which in all likelihood it is, as the spammers probably did not go to court or otherwise try to defend the action against them).
At this point, the claim would be beyond sewttling out of court.
Re: decided in or out of court? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'll assume you're not British and not familiar with Small Claims Courts. The company was found guilty. There was to be a later hearing to determine the amount of compensation awarded. The company offered a figure before the later hearing and the claimant accepted it.
Also at Small Claims Court in the UK, if one of the parties doesn't turn up to the hearing, judgement is automatically awarded against them whether they're the claimant or the defendent. Which is bloody brilliant because it means that if a company in the South East of England screws me, I can take them to a local Small Claims Court, which is over 300 miles away from them, and if they don't turn up, I've won. If they don;t pay, I can then go back for a warrant, have bailiffs seize their property (at a cost of £100+ per time) and auction it, returning time and time again until not only is the judgement satisfied but the bailiffs fees too.
How will it be paid..? (Score:3, Funny)
The Messed with the Wrong Man (Score:3, Informative)
Roberts, who runs his own Internet business as well as the Jersey and Guernsey country code domains, used his legal know-how to apply EU legislation to a UK company, Media Logistics.
It is believed to be the first time the legislation has been used in the UK, and could open the doors for thousands of other cases.
Back in August, Roberts received several marketing emails from Media Logistics. They were just a few of the many thousands that he and every Internet user receive each year, except that Mr Roberts tracked the email back to the company using its IP address.
Recognising that as a UK company it came under the EU law, he sent a letter demanding an apology, damages and the name of the company that had given Media Logistics his email address. The company apologised but refused his two other requests.
Unfortunately for the company, Roberts, 37, is a recognised internet expert and was studying for a law degree, which he has just been awarded...
Re:The Messed with the Wrong Man (Score:1)
Jaysyn
Re:"DIY Legal Defence"? (Score:1)
Re:"DIY Legal Defence"? (Score:2)
Are you kidding? It would be great.
We, the hackers, the spam recipients capable reading headers and of using whois and traceroute and so forth to track down senders of emails, collect money. They, the mainstream companies who've been conned by spammers into paying for their dubious services, realise what a bad idea it is and m
Re:"DIY Legal Defence"? (Score:1)
It can be quite that simple. In Germany [wikipedia.org], a lawyer is known for threatening citizens with legal action for breaking trademark law on behalf of companies that are not aware or supportive, unless these citizens cough up. And in the USA [corante.com], 30% of all DMCA take-down notices are estimated to be improper and possibly illegal.
The initiators of these actions (or extortions, if you like) get away with it because the cost of paying up outweighs the risk of losing. And the reaso
Not one change in spam here (Score:1)
Doesn't help individuals though (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Doesn't help individuals though (Score:1)
Re:Doesn't help individuals though (Score:1)
Male Enhancement Industry Dead (Score:3, Funny)
Too bad, so sad.
This must be a bummer.. (Score:1)
time is money (Score:2)
Did the amount of time and energy spent on this case roughly equate with the settlement?
I am all for suing spammers, but let's make it real money, say £300,000.00?
Still waiting for... (Score:1)
Settle for £300? (Score:2)
I don't get it. The guy won in court and had an excellent chance to set a legal precedent, and settled for just £300? I don't say that he could get more in court but it would make a great victory in the anti-spam war. Why waste it
Re:Settle for £300? (Score:2)
Roberts took the company to court in October and won, with damages to be decided at a hearing on 4 January 2006. Just prior to Xmas, however, the company offered £300 as a final settlement which Mr Roberts agreed to. He is due to receive the cheque tomorrow.
I don't get it. The guy won in court and had an excellent chance to set a legal precedent, and settled for just £300? I don't say that he could get more in court but it would make a great victory in the a
Re:Settle for £300? (Score:1)
Re:Settle for £300? (Score:1)
Re:Settle for £300? (Score:1)
So WHO can I sue? (Score:3, Funny)
1) Receive spam
2) Sue the bastards.
3) Profit!!
With 2 years spam saved in my inbox (on another machine because eventually THAT became unmanagable) Im looking forward to this guys "spam kit". However Im wondering if Im only limited to sueing spamming companies...can I sue the services that have an open proxy, the ISPs that allow their customers to have an open proxy? Can I sue yahoo/hotmail for allowing their services to be used for spam. Oh the possibilities.....
Re:So WHO can I sue? (Score:1)
If you can find a lawyer who'll agree to take a shot at it, I'd much rather you sued the ultimate source of the spam rather than your ISP (even if that ISP is AOL. Well, maybe...)
Oh, and I'm not sure when civil justice became a 'wrong'.
Bacon and Eggs? (Score:1)
Spammers are suing RBL maintainers (Score:2)
More information at the Abusive Hosts Blocking Lists' legal defense page [ahbl.org].
Re:Promising? No, it's scary. (Score:2)
I never asked for it, don't have a prior relationship with them, so they have no reason to mail me, not to mention that in the EU due to its privacy laws, its not unlikely that their collecting and storing of personal information on me (name, email address) is illegal in itself without my prior permission. And really, go try to 'fondle'
Re:Promising? No, it's scary. (Score:2)
How could you prove that it's the same spammer from whose list you "unsubscribed"? The spammer had no right to collect the addresses and send mails to them. This case was in the EU, not in the US where a ridiculous law allows all the many thousands of companies to send you spam until you "unsubscribe" from something you never subscribed to and thereby let the spammer
Court-ordered spam (Score:2, Funny)
Re:anti-spam laws (Score:2, Insightful)
Then you're a blithering idiot. One costs them money, the other costs them nothing. One they'll target, the other they'll just send to anywhere.
And imho this is another stupid law the EU passed before thinking about it
Actually, it's a very well thought out one. We also have others here such as a the Telephone Preference Service where you can register that you don't want sales calls and if a company subsequently cold calls, you c
Re:anti-spam laws (Score:1)
Bwhaahaaa!
One case where this does NOT work. I get calls from OneTel asking if I my S.O would like to move to OneTel. I explain that the phone lines are in my name and we already use VOIP (asterisk) to manage call costs. As Paul is getting his calls for free, why would want to sign up?
After the fourth call in a hour (asking to speak to Paul)
Re:anti-spam laws (Score:2)
perfect, now the spammers will get their judgment (Score:2, Interesting)
Anti-Spam Blocking (Score:1)
Re:Anti-Spam Blocking (Score:2)
A version of RBL which included both Spammers and advertised targets was available as a BGP feed since days forgotten. As early as 1998.
Simply, none is suicidal enough to use it except Teleglobe. At least noone that I know. I have considered its use in two jobs and have said "nope, do not smoke that stuff".
Above used to run the service so no wonder they were using it themselves. Whatever people say about Paul Vixie he is a great believer in "Though Shalt Eat Ya Own Dogfood".
Ther
I just got spammed by an individual person today (Score:1)
I replied back to the email address I found on his website so I could warn him that somebody was sending out spam emails about his book, and he said that he sent it to me because my email address was on the internet. Stupid internet, always telling everybody about me.
If you want to see the email chain, it is here [kalbzayn.com]