XS4ALL Wins Anti-Spam Suit 140
johnpc writes: "In a court case started by Dutch ISP XS4ALL, a judge ruled yesterday that spam outfit AbFab is forbidden to send spam to all subscribers of said ISP. The judge writes: 'The essential point is that XS4ALL has no legal conveyance obligation. (...) XS4ALL does not wish to convey messages which its customers have not asked to receive and therefore does not wish these messages to be delivered through its systems, in this case from Abfab. The question of whether the unsolicited sending of large volumes of advertising messages by e-mail should be referred to as 'spam' or 'electronic direct marketing' is not relevant to this dispute.' This is obviously not a solution to the spam problem within the Netherlands, but it is a step in the right direction. You can read an english abstract of the ruling. Unfortunately, most of the actual case documents are in dutch, some of which are still being translated."
Hey, it's progress (Score:1, Redundant)
Now if my own country (United states) would get a similar precident....
Horray for XS4All!
(reads more closely)
Re:Hey, it's progress (Score:3, Insightful)
A judge ruled that an ISP doesn't have to use its own resources to deliver advertisements (for free) for someone else to whom they have no obligation of any kind?
US companies have no such problem that I am aware of, and it greatly disturbs me that a judge in any country should have to state this explicitly.
Re:Hey, it's progress (Score:2)
I have to laugh (Score:2, Insightful)
If the US congress tomorrow passes a law that clearly and completely illegalizes spam, the amount of pr0n and online diploma spam I get will drop ZERO PERCENT.
How do you sue? Like I'm going to sue a korean mail relay. Stop. You are wasting my time. This problem can't and won't be solved by Trent Lott and Tom Daschle. Stop pretending it will.
Re:I have to laugh (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I have to laugh (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I have to laugh (Score:1)
When we have the laws that make it illegal, it will become a problem for the government, as it has to make sure that these laws are followed. More and more restrictions will arise thanks to these laws, and might actually slowly make spamming a hell of a pain for the spammers.
No, its called 'Friction' (Score:3, Interesting)
Something like this in the US would undoubtedly increase the cost of doing business for spammers aned their clients.
Some spamming companies would get caught, have judegements filed against them, and have to pay up. Korean mail relays notwithstanding.
No, I don't agree with your assertion that a judegement like this in the US would cause spam to "drop ZERO PERCENT".
I'm willing to listen to your arguement, but as you've presented it its baseless.
Re:I have to laugh (Score:3, Insightful)
Wham-Bam 90% of spam is eliminated.
Re:I have to laugh (Score:1)
Just my 0.02
Alex
Re:I have to laugh (Score:1)
Re:I have to laugh (Score:2)
Re:I have to laugh (Score:4, Insightful)
AbFab had sold their services to a few big names in Holland and this made them get on their knees begging the public for forgiveness about the spam they had send by means of AbFab.
Any legal solution has to include punishment for the companies trying to sell the goods, not just the mail boys.
And they are generaly in your own country!
small steps folks, small steps (Score:1, Insightful)
This is a great step in the correct direction.
Progress (Score:1)
Die spamers!
Nice precedent (Score:1)
Here it is: the first of many (Score:2, Interesting)
Gotta win one of these in the US to make it a reality though.
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:2, Interesting)
That's right, the Netherlands are situated in 'unreality'. Hello? I think you mean that a similar case has to be won in the US to affect the amount of spam you get when you live in the US.
I'm sorry to be complaining here, but I get so tired of Americans who think the world ends north of Minnesota and south of Texas.
One little ruling in an insignificant country like the Netherlands does not change the world, but it's a start.
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
(My reply could have been a little friendlier, sorry
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:5, Informative)
The point is even better than that. The ISP can tell a company not to send email through it's servers. If that company does, then the company can lose up to 2.5 million whatevertheircurrencyis. XS4ALL doesn't have to change or try to block any spam at all from the company. Overall, this brings down XS4ALL's operating cost, plus reduces the spam their customers get. Good news, I hope it goes forward.
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:2)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is even better than that. The ISP can tell a company not to send email through it's servers. If that company does, then the company can lose up to 2.5 million whatevertheircurrencyis. XS4ALL doesn't have to change or try to block any spam at all from the company. Overall, this brings down XS4ALL's operating cost, plus reduces the spam their customers get. Good news, I hope it goes forward.
This is the point I'm not sure I agree with. According to the ruling (at least the English translation, which I'm assuming is accurate) "XS4ALL has no legal conveyance obligation", which means they don't have to relay the spam. I'm not sure where this translates into AbFab can't send mail to the mail servers. IT seems to me it would more logically mean that XS4ALL doesn't have to deliver the mail if it is sent to their servers (they have no legal obligation to convey these messages to their users). It's kinda like if I get mail for someone else at my house. I have no legal obligation to convey that message on to the correct address, I can just throw it out. But I can't charge the person who sent it to my house (even if they did it on purpose). They other question is what happens if a user requests email fro AbFab. Out of all their users, I'm sure their is at least one person who wants whatever crap it is their selling. As this ruling talks about unsolicited email, if a person signs up for it, can they be charged for sending it?
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1, Troll)
What? We're well aware of Alaska and Hawaii!
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1, Offtopic)
I wouldn't be so sure...;-)
Anyway, brings me to the following (-1:Offtopic, +1:Interesting):
What are the most Northern, Southern, Eastern and Western of the United States?
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
Nope, I did not mean the continental US, I meant all 50 states.
Including Alaska and Hawaii:
Northernmost: Alaska
Southernmost: Hawaii
Westernmost: Alaska
Easternmost: Alaska
What??? How can that be right? Alaska easternmost?
Well, look at a map or globe. Alaska actually crosses the 180 degree meridian (Aleutian islands). Therefore, it is both the easternmost and the westernmost state.
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:2)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
First of all: the USGS survey team can proclaim all they want as far as I care, but aside from that:
the most southeastern point in the US does not mean it is the southernmost and the easternmost at the same time, or even either of those, (again: you're not going to argue that Point Udall is more eastern than Alaska, right?), but more importantly: enjoy the beach!
Re:Here it is: the first of many (Score:1)
victims & sentence (Score:5, Informative)
The sentence translates to:
The sentencing judge:
everyone who holds an e-mail address ending in a domainname containing the word XS4ALL, explicitely inluding domainnames: XS4ALL.NL, XS4ALL.com, XS4ALL.net, XS4ALL.org, XS4ALL.co.uk, XS4ALL.be, and the domainnname hacktic.nl.
Great, what about the rest of the planet? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Great, what about the rest of the planet? (Score:1)
Am I spamming by writing this?
Re:Great, what about the rest of the planet? (Score:1, Interesting)
Blame for my innoncence for using my XS4all address when posting on Usenet during 1996 and 1997 and putting up on my website, but spam wasn't such an issue then.
Re:Great, what about the rest of the planet? (Score:2)
Xs4all allows you 5 unique POP boxes with 10 aliases each!
And you can allways abandon one for another.
Re:Great, what about the rest of the planet? (Score:2)
As AbFab was a national company with mainly national clients this was relatively easy.
It's still just as hard to fight against spammers from far away.
Xs4all is running a trial with a few hundred subscribers on a DNS-based anti-spam system, looks good so far and might be available to all in the future.
Hey dumbass (Score:2)
BTW, just how long does it take your mailserver to check each and every email coming in for these criteria? Beowulf cluster of Linux boxes does this work? Really?
The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:5, Interesting)
Similar rulings in the United States would start detailing the landscape of rights of website owners to keep SPAMMERS from scraping.
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:2)
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:3, Funny)
TO: staff@intel.com
FROM: eoiff30dn3@hotmail.com
SUBJECT: INCREASE YOUR PENIS SIZE NOW - NINE INCHES GUARIANTEED!!!!!!!
Hamibi Enterprises, a well known and medically respected pharmaceutical manufacturer announces a fantastic new brakesthru now - bring out the REAL you! Results GURANTEED!....
Got a couple of Shifmans [petemoss.com] in his family tree, I guess.
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:2)
He is bitching about Intel's practices.
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:1)
By his reasoning, he should be able to put stuff in my garage because it's hooked up to the public roads via my driveway.
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:2)
Anyway, since when is the Internet a public resource? It may have been started by the US gov, but isn't the public internet now owned by MCI, Sprint, etc...
BTW - where is your house...my garage is full
Re:The ruling is not about SPAM. (Score:2, Interesting)
Just because a system is publicly accessible doesn't mean its "public domain property".
What about stores in a Mall? I can just walk in off the street, does that I mean I can do what I want in the store?
I think "Hamibi" is a good example of people trying to make causes [like Kevin Mitnick another criminal]. I mean how can you do something that at the least is clearly bad faith [if not illegal] then sit back and cry your rights are violated when they stop you from abusing other peoples equipment?
Tom
Dutch language verdict (Score:2, Informative)
Well, I read the 8 page verdict, and there's not a whole lot there that's not in the English abstract. So don't worry, I don't think you're missing a lot.
(Sorry, I'm not going to translate 8 pages of Dutch legalese into English).
Re:Dutch language verdict (Score:1)
http://www.rechtspraak.nl/uitspraak/frameset.as
I don't understand (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I don't understand (Score:2)
The not-so-simple answer: a correct definition of unsollicited e-mail is hard to make. At the receiving end it may look easy (based on contents) but think of the shades of grey when replying to a posting. Example: You ask for help on selecting an upgrade for your PC, you are doubting whether a Yoyodine tapedrive will work. One reply is "I use a Yoyodine tapedrive and it works great", one is "we at WeSellHardware sell a lot of Yoyodine tapedrives and customers are happy", one is "Special offer for Yoyodine tapedrives!". The middle one is both usefull information and a sort of advertisment. Is it spam ? Depends on what the receiver feels about it.
Re:I don't understand (Score:2)
That's why the important thing to go after is unsolicited bulk email. The "I posted about Yoyodyne tape drives and got a response from a Yoyodyne reseller" example is one thing; the "I posted about Yoyodyne tape drives and me and everyone else on the group got a bunch of messages about hot and horny mortgage lenders" is another.
It should be fairly easy for a reasonable-sized ISP to prove the bulk part all by themselves; even smaller sites can usually do it via news.admin.net-abuse.email.
Single, human-sent-to-a-specific-person commercial email doesn't scale fast enough (and costs the sender too much, even in this economy) to be the same problem as scrape-the-net-and-blast-it-out stuff. Attack the latter first.
the magical forgetful cookies (if they even use'm) (Score:1)
(which after you uncheck them, and submit,
but forget to put in a password, they magicaly
become re-checked)
does not help make that line any clearer.
and in my opinion. anything i did not check my-self, or ask for would be spam. even if it is useful, i did not ask for it.
This is such flaming bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
Get ready for a long one. YES, spam sucks. We all know it, we agree with it, no one likes it. Guess what? DEAL with it!
In order to legislate the Internet, parallels must be drawn between it and regular society. Why? Because the Internet IS regular society, en masse. You've read all the shite about it being a global community, well, it IS!
We've all seen the posts before comparing spam to junk mail and why that makes it legitimate. No one has bothered to fully explain that so I'm going to, because IT'S TRUE.
You move into/purchase/rent/lease a house. Your address is thereby registered in various marketing pools. By participating in surveys, signing up for credit cards, buying various things, your Home Address gets propagated around the Real World net. Advertisers troll these networks and eventually pick up that you, Person A, live at Address B. And so they begin to send you mass mailings. The ones you receive may be personalized to your community. Depending on how much information you've volunteered to the Network, they may be personalized to your age/sex/religion/choice of pets/favorite video game console/etc. These people pay money to the (very much legitimate) US Postal Service to see that their advertisements/coupons/etc. are mailed to you.
Now we move to the Internet parallel. You have signed up for an Internet Address. The Internet is public. I will repeat this. The Internet is PUBLIC. Therefore people on the Internet can determine your address, just as much as I can browse the white pages looking for Real World home addresses. Depending on how much information you have submitted through various channels to the Internet, people may have put together certain profiles about you. Just as in real life, they will determine which advertisements are best suited to you, and make sure to send them to your PUBLIC address.
Being that this is Slashdot and no space to write novels, I would hope that we have all seen the obvious parallels between Home Addresses and Internet Addresses. If not, reread the above paragraphs until it makes sense.
Now, onto the problem (and indeed, I will propose the Solution)...
The US Postal Service requires MONEY in order to send out bulk mailings. The cost IS proportionate to the amount of mail that one wishes to send out. If I wish to print one million full color ten page Pennysavers and send them out to my "most likely to buy stuff" list of targets, I must pay a requisite sum to the Postal Service in order to see that these ads are delivered. This is where the Internet FAILS MISERABLY. ISP's do not care about bulk mail. Open relays allow far too many people to send far too many identical messages without caring about how many poor souls are copied on the same duplicated message. The ISP level is where it MUST CEASE. The current system is retarded and asinine. Those that maintain SMTP servers MUST begin to charge appropriate rates for bulk mail. There is no reason not to do this. Yes, I hear you whiners coming with "I'm a busy business professional, mail rates will hamper me!" BULLSHIT. *I* am an extremely busy business professional. I send AT MOST fifty emails a day. DAMN sure that they are all NOT identical ads merely being copied to various other people. At the ISP level, this is not in any way difficult to filter out and charge for.
I propose a simple and effective email charge system, where bulk mailers are FORCED to pay an appropriate amount in order to mail to a few thousand, tens of thousand, etc people.
The problem now is that our "open" network allows spammers to do their business virtually for free. If we can force them to conform to a business model that mimics the Real World and no longer lives in Fantasy Land, I will guarantee you that our goal of receiving less spam will be accomplished. However, I can't say this enough: Attempting to legislate against this practice is not only ineffective, it is UNCONSTITUTIONAL and completely worthless. Restricting people from advertising their products to PUBLIC networks and PUBLIC addresses on those networks goes against everything our country was founded on.
There also exists a second solution, which I'm sure many people will bitch about as well. But it's simple: Maintain TWO email addresses. Keep one public, open to any senders. Go through it as your business needs demand, and filter out any important emails. Keep the second address PRIVATE, that is, only accept emails from people on your "accept" list. I submit that this is really not that horrible a thing, and many of us are doing it already. Is my
In short summary, legislating against spam is yet another of the giant wastes of time that government spends its time doing. It needs to be addressed from the economical model (reasonable ISP charges) or from the personal level (maintain public/private email addresses). Anything else does nothing but waste clock cycles.
--t
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
Thorizdin
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
Not really.
I receive loads of pr0n spam, and I'm actually one of the guys who are seriously offended by this sort of crap. I also make a point of publishing the fact that I don't want spam in my
And there's another difference you're overlooking. "Real" junk mail doesn't cost the recipient anything (other than the time to throw it away), while many people actually pay for their net connectivity by volume or by duration, both of which causes them to pay for receiving spam.
And, of course, at least some countries have laws allowing for "no junk mail" stickers on mail boxes, and disallowing delivery of junk mail to those. This actually works; I've received only one piece of junk snailmail this year [and its sender won't dare to do that again], in contrast to roughly 400 spam mails per day.
I propose a simple and effective email charge system, where bulk mailers are FORCED to pay an appropriate amount in order to mail to a few thousand, tens of thousand, etc people.
If it's used to compensate the recipients for their loss, it may actually be fair.
Restricting people from advertising their products to PUBLIC networks and PUBLIC addresses on those networks goes against everything our country was founded on.
Not quite. It has never been legal to steal, and spam is stealing bandwidth and connectivity cost.
A rough equivalent to stealing bandwidth by spamming is stealing capacity of a bus or train - so if you think spammers should be protected by the constitution, you're implying that people who ride a train/bus/plane or any other piece of PUBLIC transportation without a ticket should be protected, as well.
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:1, Interesting)
See also - the federal junk fax ban... PAssed because it costs virtually nothing to send faxes, but passes the cost onto the recipient in the form of paper, toner, maintenance of phone line, inability to use that line for business, etc...
I fail to see why that same 1970 case doesn't apply to email, or why spammers ought to be able to send me anything without my express double-opt-in consent. If I want their crap, I'll search for it and ask for it. I'll verify it. But don't you dare presume to *think* that you know my preferences or desires. Don't you presume to think that wasting even a femtosecond of my time is your right. I have the absolute right to be let alone and fully intend to enjoy it - so keep your fucken opinions to yourself and those who request them. Leave me out of it. I ought not to have to delete anything - there's 500 million people on the net - if even 10% of those people sent me an email every day, I'd never get anything done.
God damned spammers ought to be taken out and shot.
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
The Internet is not public. I will repeat this. The Internet is NOT PUBLIC.
It has some public elements. Parts of it are held by public institutions. Other parts of it are exposed to the public.
But the vast majority of the Internet is owned by private companies.
I'm responding to a troll. Shoot me now. (Score:4, Insightful)
Rather than repeating yourself, it would have been better to clarify which sense of "public" you meant. Open to all the people, like a public meeting? Maintained at the public expense, like a public library? Open to the view or knowledge of all, like when a fact goes public? I have a couple of servers permanently connected to the Internet, and only parts of them can be considered "public" in any of these senses (and not at all in the "funding" sense, alas). Perhaps you simply meant that you can't control what people do with information that you've disclosed (made public). I can agree with that, but I think "the Internet is public" is a poor way of expressing it.
I propose a simple and effective email charge system, where bulk mailers are FORCED to pay an appropriate amount in order to mail to a few thousand, tens of thousand, etc people.
Which bulk mailers will be forced how and by whom to comply with this?
If we can force them to conform to a business model that mimics the Real World and no longer lives in Fantasy Land...
Hate to burst your bubble, but at this moment in time the Internet exists in the real world, and your proposal exists in fantasy land. How were you intending to transpose them?
However, I can't say this enough: Attempting to legislate against this practice is not only ineffective, it is UNCONSTITUTIONAL and completely worthless.
To which constitution were you referring? The Internet does not have a "constitution" of which I'm aware. I take it that you're not proposing to legislate that ISPs should have to charge for bulk mail, then? Or would that be both constitutional and worthwhile? You mentioned forcing people to comply, so I assumed you meant law, but now I'm not so sure.
In short summary, legislating against spam is yet another of the giant wastes of time that government spends its time doing. It needs to be addressed from the economical model (reasonable ISP charges) or from the personal level (maintain public/private email addresses).
Oh, so you are against legislation in this case. You expect every ISP under the sun to spontaneously start charging for bulk mail. Well, if that's our only solution, then my guess is that spam is here to stay.
My bet is that an improved set of mail protocols will be the answer. That's why I'm working on them full time right now. Ask me about them in another four months or so.
Re:I'm responding to a troll. Shoot me now. (Score:1)
Re:I'm responding to a troll. Shoot me now. (Score:1)
That's a good question. In my experience, people who write "it is UNCONSTITUTIONAL" (in ALL-CAPS) are generally advancing some argument along the lines of "the income tax is illegal because Ohio was not properly admitted to the Union until 1953". (Really -- people actually say this [straightdope.com].)
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:1, Insightful)
I disagree with the notion that one of your proposals could be the solution to the spam problem. Charging for mail sent and using different addresses for different purposes are two often-heard proposals, which are just as often rejected because they either do not work or are even more in fantasy land than the current system.
Just two facts: If you're using separate mail addresses, what are you going to do with the mails coming in on the "spam magnet" address? Ignore them? If so, why don't you just stop using an email address in these situations at all? If you are sifting through the shitload of spam to find legitimate messages, you might just as well use one address for all as sorting them first only to look at all anyway isn't going to save you anything. Then there's the problem that it's simply impossible to keep mail addresses secret. They leak through CCs, worms, web greeting cards ex-friends on a mission, etc.
Then about the send-fees: Faxes already cost the sender money, and I get a shitload of faxspam anyway, clogging my fax machine, costing my time to money. If you want a system like paper junk mail, use paper junk mail.
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:1)
Re: This is such flaming bullshit (Score:2)
So do we in Denmark, and as of July 2000 Denmark has also banned spam [cauce.org].
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:2)
1. Political: You would need to get EVERYONE to agree on a new standard. We can't even get everyone to upgrade sendmail. We can't even get everyone to agree that closing relays is a good thing.
2. The technology-scaling challenges in creating and tracking such stamps are overwhelming, and perhaps impossible to overcome. As someone pointed out, the USPS is a monolithic system, and it's easy for them to make sure all stamps are at least cursorily checked for authenticity. Not so with e-mail, which is a store-and-forward system. You can't open a connection from each final-hop mail server to the origin, so you need some sort of "one-time pad", which is difficult (impossible?) to do without centralization.
Jay the ex-AOL mail guy
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:1)
I'm not holding my breath for such laws to be passed though....
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:This is such flaming bullshit (Score:1)
Little problem with that... I run SMTP servers on most of my boxes for development, testing, etc. SMTP servers don't have anything to do with ISP's.
I'd LOVE to "Deal With It" (Score:3, Funny)
I am attempting to deal with spammers. Unfortunately, justice is thwarted by the law, so I cannot deal with spammers the way George Bush is dealing with al-Qaeda, but I get as close to that idea as I can.
What's spam? (Score:2, Funny)
During recent renovations to the worlds first and best web-mail system, MicroSoft were kind and talented enough to add a heuristics-based artificial intelligence spam-blocking feature. At first I was sceptical - I mean, I use a sophisticated L.I.N.U.X. [redhat.com] system to try and reduce spam, and still I receive around 10-20 spam messages every day. Imagine my suprise the day I peered over a colleague's [cjb.net] shoulder to see the work of art that is the new HoTMaiL.NET [hotmail.com] User Interface. Not only was it exceptionally aesthetically pleasing [microsoft.com], but it had a helpful 'Junk-Mail' mailbox to keep precisely that - Junk Mail!!! I proceeded to enquire about this fantastic, energy saving innovation [microsoft.com]. My co-worker simply could not contain her delight with the system. She confided that since the HoTMaiL [hotmale.com] revamp, she had received a total of zero unwanted messages, including ones from a mentally unstable transient [stallman.org] who had been stalking her for weeks!!
I'm sorry if I rant, or come off as an 'astro-turfer' (whatever that means), but I prefer to think of myself as an evangelist [brigada.org]. Simply put, HoTMaiL.NET is the finest e-mail system currently in use, and I would have no problems whatsoever in recommending it to anybody who would rather receive less unwanted mail. I'm sure that when the Netherlands receives access to the civilised Internet, the judge's decision will be overturned as their population migrates to a powerful, easy-to-use system such as MicroSoft's spam filter.
Re:What's spam? (Score:1)
This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:2)
Why? Because it means that screening e-mail will become commonplace and ethically acceptable in future.
Take a less essential system such as IRC. Large channels often have ridiculous bans in place.. for example, kick/ban all those with French hosts, AOL users, people from Asia, people with nicknames they don't like.. and so on and so forth. E-mail could become a similarly uncontrolled system.
Do you really want to use a provider who, yes, blocks spam.. but, if the administrator doesn't like the French.. oh well, that means no-one using that ISP will receive any e-mail sent from French ISPs? Or, say, mail from Middle Eastern countries?
So, yeah, blocking spam is good.. but making this screening behavior morally acceptable simply means that a lot more mail is going to be screened in the future.. and you might not be getting all of the e-mails you are due.
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:1)
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:5, Informative)
Because of this verdiect XS4ALL doesn't need to screen email. Whenever a customer receives unsollicited email from ABFAB, they can report this voluntarily and ABFAB has to pay.
XS4ALL is defintely the very best ISP in the Netherlands (and possibly even in a more global sense) in the 'your rights online' category. They were the first ISP in the Netherlands founded by a couple of 'hackers' starting their business in may 1993. From the start they offered services such as mail by UUCP and telnet-access to powerful UNIX-machines. In 1997 they were the only (!) Dutch ISP to refuse to cooperate in a nationwide 'tap', because they didn't think the law being referenced in the tap-order could actually be used to order a tap. A judge proved them right. During the Serbian war they kept B52, the radio station of Belgrado, on-air online. They encourage their customers to use encryption by giving every single one of them a personal copy of PGP. They mirror almost everything cool in the open-source world and have donated the official machine and bandwidth of the munitions international crypto-resource. They are the primary sponsors and organisers of the 'hacking-festivals', HEU (Hacking at the end of the universe), HIP (Hacking in progress) and HAL (Hackers at large). They have never pulled content of their customers, when they received orders to do so, unless the order cam from a judge. They support Linux/BSD by offering documentation, howto's and software on their website. It's even possible to meet most of the sysadmins on irc and talk about how their systems work, ask about the specs and generally talk with them. I could tell you more, but I think the point is made: XS4ALL is no threat to our online privacy and rights. I would almost say that they're the dream-isp of almost any slashdot-fanatic.
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:1)
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:2)
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:2)
It is directed at the root of the evil.
Re:This isn't as good as it sounds. (Score:2, Interesting)
This is not the victory that many of you think (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, XS4ALL is not an U.S. based ISP, so certain concepts like that of common carrier status may not apply. But such things used to apply in the U.S., even if they don't apply today.
The reason this isn't a victory is that it essentially declares that the ISP may transport ("convey") whatever data it pleases.
Well, it is a privately owned company, and I can see some merit to the argument that what it does with its resources is its own business.
But now apply the same logic to all ISPs, particularly the large ones, in light of the behavior of the media. That's right, folks: this ruling means that ISPs have the right to refuse to transmit any data they see fit. In short, they have the right to censor. After all, there's nothing that prevents them from selectively filtering.
How would you like it if an ISP decided that it didn't want to bother transiting any Slashdot traffic? Or Kuro5hin? Or any non-mainstream web source? What if they start dropping data based on the content of the data itself? Think it can't happen?
You say you could go to another ISP? Tell us that when the only ISPs left are AOL/TW and AT&T (the former, at least, has a very large interest in being selective about what you, the audience, see).
This may be a "victory" in the fight against spam, but it has ramifications that are so bad that I'll take the spam, thank you.
The reason it went to court.... (Score:3, Informative)
It could have filtered out all their mail, but chose rather to try and get Abfab to stop sending the mail, therefore meaning that it has not had to do any censorship at all.
Re:This is not the victory that many of you think (Score:1)
I'd switch to a different ISP.
If an ISP is going to block email, then it should indicate exactly what email it's blocking (what domains, keywords, etc.). As long as it does this, I have no problem with it; I can switch providers if I don't like the policy of my current one. However, if one of the functions that it's charging you for in your monthly bill is delivering email, and it deliberately blocks certain email without telling you what it is that it's blocking, then it's committing fraud (charging for services not rendered). But as long as it's telling you what it's doing (and as long as it's not doing anything illegal), your ISP should be able to do what it wants to with its property.
Re:This is not the victory that many of you think (Score:4, Interesting)
XS4ALL has always wanted to change that, has always opposed censorship and blocks of any kind (except self-imposed by users, instead of ISPs) and what this court ruling states is that because XS4ALL explicitly and implicitly imposes the conveyance obligation on themselves, it is as legal as if it were a forced obligation.
The reason there are no exlicit legal bounds to the rights and privileges of email, other 'new media' communication methods (think IRC, ICQ/IMs) and ISPs in general is simply that this is a 'new' media. This court ruling means that another step is made towards legitimizing and legalizing the rules and regulations that bind ISPs and the duties they have to attend to, as well as public (as in 'beyond the computing/internet community') awareness of the issues. This is important. It is not a single solution; it is not the big strike that ends spam immediately. It will be a long process but at least progress is being made. That is the hippy coolness of this news.
Re:This is not the victory that many of you think (Score:2)
Unfortunately, I don't think common carrier applies to ISPs. Because they don't act as such.
Consider:
You take an envelope to a post office, pay due fee for delivery, and they will deliver that. They can't deny the use of service from You.
You go to Your local telco. You ask for a phone line to be installed, and pay due fee for the installation. They can't deny the use of service from You. They can't deny it even later for as long as You continue to pay the bills and not attach dangerous devices to the line.
You go to an ISP. They may decide not to sell service to You. If You tell them that they must, and they accept that they really can't deny that, we're on the right track. You get the internet connection, including a public address? Wrong. If You get a static IP, it's a public address. Dynamic IP is not a public address in the same sense. OK, You use the connection, and the ISP tells You that You can't do that or they'll terminate.
Oh yes, then there are service requirements. Can You call Your ISP and get a problem solved? 24h a day? Even sunday morning @0400?
Backbones probably are common carriers. They don't look at the bits they transport. They sell bulk. They sell to ISPs, local telcos, and such. They would probably sell to You too.
ISPs already do this (Score:2)
censorship? nah (Score:2, Informative)
anyway in can understand that some people may see this as an ISP trying getting censorship power this way... but if you now enough about what XS4ALL stands for, you will know that is absolutely NOT their intention... XS4ALL is by far one of the most cyberrights-aware (if that's a word
Ricardo.
There's a problem however (Score:2)
There is a problem: The EU. They accepted a law that made spam 'opt-out' or in other words: the user should tell the smapping company to remove the emailaddress of the user from their list. XS4all was and still is fighting this stupid law, but with no luck so far. I've asked them several times to block anything coming from
AbFab is just a company sending email on behalf of mostly dutch companies. When you look at it that way, it's quite the same as the unsollicited mail you get in your snailmailbox: sometimes it's not totally useless, but most of the time it is: you get advertising shit about products you don't need or even CAN use. If advertising-mail is more targeted at people who will possibly be interested, it would be less annoying.
This verdict will probably the end of AbFab, since other ISP's will now also come with a block request and AbFab can't refuse that now. People will be out of a job.
erm. smapping == spamming aaaarg (Score:1, Funny)
Re:There's a problem however (Score:1)
They do offer a SPAM header tagging or blocking system you can ask for to be applied to your e-mail account. It uses several blocklist to tag your mail so you can filter it to a special folder (if you'd want to do that). If you choose blocking than those e-mails never arrive in your mailbox in the first place.
DNS block [google.com] (Dutch only) for explanation
XS4ALL , possibly one of the best isp's ever... (Score:5, Informative)
- On numerous other occasions [xs4all.nl] they've been in court defending the privacy of their costumers and other basic rights.
- Threre's no single ad on any of their pages. They're an internet provider, not a advertising agency! Me and many others will gladly pay some more 's for that.
- They offer analog, isdn(128k), gsm, gprs and adsl access and their service includes free licences for mcafee virusscan and pgp software (all platforms). Do you know any other ISP that does that?
- There's a whole lot of other goodies you don't find at your average ISP: a telnet/ssh shell, static ip with bSMTP (if you want it), adfree secure webmail, and good public irc, gaming and hosting servers.
- Their bussiness services are also quite exelent.
- And they're definitly the only isp in the world that grows marijuana [xs4all.nl] in the workplace [xs4all.nl]!!! (in dutch).
[DISCL: No, I don't own stock or work there, I'm just a ver loyal costumer that has been with them since 1996 both privatly and professionaly.]
SqyD
Re:XS4ALL , possibly one of the best isp's ever... (Score:3, Informative)
- best fscking helpdesk there is, answers email with the hour, and great customer-breivings. Great service.
- Heaps of linux/bsd/unix-support. This is a geek-ISP for geeks.
- You can choose your own hostname
In other words: an ISP that knows what we want, and gives it the way we like it
unsollicited spamlike email not wanted (Score:1)
Robert
Cracked spam (Score:2)
And now it seems some centralised effort is spoiling the fun for the spammers!
Look at the example [xs4all.nl] I copied to my website!
Doesn't spam cost the receiver money? (Score:1, Insightful)
That is, people who use cell phone pay for their service. Don't users of email similarly pay for their email?
Since I am paying for my email, not someone else, I would think I should not have to deal with SPAM.
Hmmm...
Letter. (Score:3, Informative)
Given the ruling, I think they will have to comply with that.
I hope that lots of others do the same. Especially if you can legally claim to control more than a couple of domains.
I used the address that I found on their site as "how to find us":
ab.fab Interactive Media Group
Postbus 9088
1180 MB Amstelveen
[the netherlands]
I hope that this will at least stop the "spamfactories".
Roger.
MOD Parent down (Score:1, Offtopic)
Post 1 [slashdot.org]
He actually seems to know what he's talking about, but it's rare that someone not in the codec industry to know this much about codecs. This is most likely the search-copy-paste routine: Google the current story, clip what you find, post a reply. As proof, read his post and then read this [washington.edu]. It's a direct rip.
Post 2 [slashdot.org]
Wow! That's some heavy code he displays as a "hack I devised". Well then he may want to take a look here [codeguru.com] because it displays the exact same code. Somehow I don't think they are the ones performing the ripoff. Another classic search-copy-paste routine. He also makes references to coding a "next-gen" game engine for Cinemaware. Why? So they can make better versions of Wings, Defender of the Crown, and The Three Stooges [cinemaware.com]?
Post 3 [slashdot.org]
Off the bat it seems he's getting lazy. There don't seem to be any outside sources "cited". But he makes a fatal flaw and shows he's just a simple idiot, claiming to rm -rf
If there ever was a good example of who to add to your Foe list, this is it. Yeah, I'm probably an idiot for even bothering with this, but I already do origami and listen to George Michael so why not nail the coffin shut.