Forbes Sympathizes with Poor, Abused Fax.com 485
An anonymous reader writes "Forbes invites sympathy for Fax.com and other junk faxers who are apparently being victimized by 'a small army of plaintiffs, attorneys and self-appointed activists', and Forbes particularly takes aim at 'the high-tech ambulance chasers' whose offenses include providing 'step-by-step instructions on Internet sites, printable legal forms and names of attorneys who specialize in the trade' to individuals who've received illegal junk faxes and want to do something about it. Because of these nasties Fax.com is 'all but out of business' and Forbes seems to be worried that email spammers might share the same fate. Help, I think I've fallen into a parallel universe."
Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:4, Informative)
Quoth the poster:
Too late. The spammers "CAN-SPAM" act has already taken away our individual rights to redress grievances through courts of law. Individual recipients of spam cannot sue spammers. The power is left in the hands of attorney generals.
(sigh) Yet another legal illiterate /. er. The sky is not falling, Chicken Little.
The "CAN-SPAM" act, while a shitty law, specifically exempts [spamlaws.com] laws like Washington's that prohibit falsifying headers and subject lines. For those too lazy to RTFA, here's the relevant section:
What this means is, law's like Washington's [wa.gov] are untouched by CAN-SPAM. So take off the tinfoil hat and join the real world.
Why do you hate America? (Score:5, Funny)
1> Supressing threats to Republican hegemony
2> Raising money
3> Distracting Fatherland Security from Saudis in favor of Liberals
4> Could you repeat the question?
Re:We don't have to use the courts... (Score:5, Informative)
It's the profit motive of the spammers that needs to be attacked, and additional laws are unlikely to help a lot. The more we make their businesses unprofitable, the less we might see of them.
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now if only poloticians were open minded, creative, pure and logical enough to see th
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:5, Insightful)
---Ben Franklin
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:3, Informative)
Not to belittle your argument, but this is often misquoted. Perhaps you meant . . .
They that can give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty or safety. [bartleby.com]
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:3, Funny)
---Bellamy Brooks
Re: Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:4, Funny)
[One of my first programming tasks so long ago was to write a routine to randomly print one of 5 phrases. I went kindof off the wall, checked out a few library books on famous quotes and proverbs, and selected a few dozen for my submission. Trying to be cute, I guess, I included the quote of above. When t the assignment came back, that quote was circled.]
Re:Sneaking in on a good thing. (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, it seems like wing nuts are not the correct item for this applaction. Traditional hex nuts can handle more torque and would therefore hold everything together better through the rocky legal battles ahead...
Or, in other words, did you miss a hyphen there? It's ASCII 45, if you can't track it down on your keyboard.
Re:A very bad bad omen for us all (Score:5, Insightful)
This assembly line type of legal attack on a corporation or government will only do bad in the long run because each and every corporation/government entity with an insurance policy will be driven out of business by a continuous parade of frivioulous lawsuits.
A company breaks the law by sending out junk faxes. Its entire business model is designed around violating federal law. Why shouldn't lawyers line up at their door? Slashdotting with lawyers instead of HTTP requests... a fitting end for a company that flagrantly disregards federal law and pisses people off.
I'm surprised they lasted this long. I wonder how they decided on this business model. Hey, I have a brilliant idea! I'll do a random search through the U.S. Code, pick a section, and build a business around disobeying that law!
Re:A very bad bad omen for us all (Score:4, Insightful)
They sent over a thousand faxes to a single company within a week. I'm more suprised that someone hasn't gone postal on them.
Hey, I have a brilliant idea! I'll do a random search through the U.S. Code, pick a section, and build a business around disobeying that law!
Don't forget, just breaking the law isn't enough. You have use breaking the law as a method of advertising. If you are not making money on the deal then Forbes will not write an article decrying the injustist of them actually enforcing the law when you are just trying to advertise.
How about spray painting advertisements on Junk Faxerss' homes? Or beat the crap out of them and then give them a flyer. Remember, you are a respectible businessman and as long as you are trying to make money you can do no wrong.
Re:A very bad bad omen for us all (Score:5, Insightful)
Cry me a river. They run an 'assembly line' sending unsolicited faxes, which is (I believe) a civil offense. The appropriate remedy is for the victims to file civil or small claims suits.
If certain attorneys are making it easy to do that, then good! They need to find a business model that allows them to be profitable without breaking the law, and they won't have to worry about going out of business.
frivolity prohibited in court (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A very bad bad omen for us all (Score:3, Insightful)
If they are basing their business on breaking the law, then don't you think they SHOULD be run into the ground?? Imagine if a company figures out how to make money by occasionally coming by peoples' homes and chopping into the house with an Axe.
Woah woah (Score:5, Funny)
I totally misread *that* title.
Re:Woah woah (Score:5, Funny)
Must be time for bifocals & a cognitive transplant...
Re:Woah woah (Score:5, Informative)
Try reading "Eats, shoots and leaves", currently a top ten seller in the UK and due in the US sometime the colonials learn not to make tea with salt water.
Forbes magazine is a pale shadow of what it was under the senior Forbes. Steve Forbes the son was the clueless google eyed loonie who ran against GW Bush for the GOP presidential nomination claiming GW would not do enough for the ultra-rich (like himself).
It is somewhat rich to be given lectures in entepreneurship from a person who inherited every penny he owns. Come to that it was a bit much hearing the loonie prate on about 'familly values' and doing the standard GOP pander to the anti-gay bigots when Steve inherited his fortune from his gay father.
Not only that but... (Score:3, Informative)
Eats Shoots & Leaves is a hysterical read BTW. Doesn't seem to be available in the US yet, but here's the amazon page [amazon.com] where you can order it from.
Re:Woah woah (Score:3, Funny)
You've failed to make it clear which phoney entrepeneur you're referring to. Please resubmit with requested clarification.
Re:Woah woah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Woah woah (Score:3, Funny)
Here's one from the Houston Chronicle today:
City cools jets of pedestrian dousing fountain
I heard one one on the radio last night too:
Come to our meeting tomorrow night. It will be held in the XYZ building which is located at 101 Brodway at 7:00 P.M.
Q: Where will the XYZ building be at 8:00 P.M. and how fast is it moving?
BTM
Re:Woah woah (Score:3, Funny)
Come on now, you can tell me either of those facts and I can tell you the other but I can't tell you both from a single place and time.
I don't read Forbes (Score:2)
Or is someone paying them to be a mouthpiece?
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:2)
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider their audience. The people who read Forbes are business people. They like it when they and people like them are praised and dislike the people who get in their way, just like the rest of us. So Forbes prints articles which damn anything that is "bad for Bidness" (any Bidness).
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:5, Informative)
Boeing's 737, with almost 4,000 planes in the air, is the most successful commercial airliner in history. But the company's largest and riskiest project was the development of the 747 jumbo jet. When a non-executive director asked about the expected return on investment, he was brushed off: there had been some studies, he was told, but the manager concerned couldn't remember the results.
It took only 10 years for Boeing to prove me wrong in asserting that its market position in civil aviation was impregnable. The decisive shift in corporate culture followed the acquisition of its principal US rival, McDonnell Douglas, in 1997. The transformation was exemplified by the CEO, Phil Condit. The company's previous preoccupation with meeting "technological challenges of supreme magnitude" would, he told Business Week, now have to change. "We are going into a value-based environment where unit cost, return on investment and shareholder return are the measures by which you'll be judged. That's a big shift."
The company's senior executives agreed to move from Seattle, where the main production facilities were located, to Chicago. More importantly, the more focused business reviewed risky investments in new civil projects with much greater scepticism. The strategic decision was to redirect resources towards projects for the US military that involved low financial risk. Chicago had the advantage of being nearer to Washington, where government funds were dispensed.
So Boeing's civil orderbook today lags that of Airbus, the European consortium whose aims were not initially commercial but which has, almost by chance, become a profitable business. And the strategy of getting close to the Pentagon proved counter- productive: the company got too close to the Pentagon, and faced allegations of corruption. And what was the market's verdict on the company's performance in terms of unit cost, return on investment and shareholder return? Boeing stock, $48 when Condit took over, rose to $70 as he affirmed the commitment to shareholder value; by the time of his enforced resignation in December 2003 it had fallen to $38.
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:5, Insightful)
The common factor being that they are British publications. One could ask why anyone reads any US publication given that they are mostly devoted to reporting 'character' and 'personality' stories completely ignoring any political issues of any substance.
If CNN were reporting in Iran today they would have reduced the power struggle there to a series of stories on who had the best looking turban.
The FTs comments on Boeing are right on point. Boeing was once a great company, then they stopped being in the business of making planes and started to be about squeezing contracts out of the US federal government. What is most astonishing about this change in direction is the time it took place - right at the end of the cold war when it was pretty obvious to anyone but the Boeing CEO that military spending would be winding down.
Sic transit gloria. If you read the decline and fall of the great powers what is astonishing is the fact that while eventual decline is inevitable there is no reason why the Roman empire could not with better management have survived a couple more centuries, the fall of the great powers was usually the result of hubris, of stopping the work of empire building and started waving flags, declaring empire days and generally lording it over everyone else.
I believe that the greatest threat to the pre-eminent position of the US today is the folk who have adopted the Condit strategy, forget how the US became great - by leading the alliance of the free world and instead start lording it over folk. Forbes is merely one of the organ grinders who are playing the tune here.
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:3, Funny)
It's like Seventeen for executives. Seventeen does pointless lists of the cutest boys and best dressed actresses, Forbes does pointless lists of the richest boys and totally awesomest briefcases.
I know it sounds like I'm joking, but it's only funny because it's true.
Absolutely not! (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree with the submitter, Forbes standing up for a junk fax company seems quite contradictory to their usual position. Forbes is decidedly against the "nanny state," preferring to believe that people ought to be able to educate themselves and make informed consumer choices. Forbes is generally not in favor of outright fraud or theft (which is what junk faxes are).
Re:I don't read Forbes (Score:5, Interesting)
They call the lawsuits an "unintended consequence" of the 1991 law. But it seems to me that the problems fax.com is having are exactly the intended consequence. Exactly what other consequence were they talking about?
I'd be upset too. (Score:5, Interesting)
"Fax.com's Katz called the practice "blackmail and extortion," among other choice words. On the other hand, Fax.com didn't exactly help its cause when it sent 1,634 junk faxes in one week in 2001 to the Washington, D.C., law firm of Covington & Burling, resulting in yet another successful lawsuit against the company."
Wow, let's assume that each fax page takes about 6-seconds (because you want high quality) and that each fax consists of a cover page and one page of content. Further that each fax transmission requires a 3-second handshake - 15 seconds phone time per fax. That means that 15 * 1634 = 24510 seconds or 7.8 hours of tied up phone lines. Yeah, if someone, over the course of the wee decided to tie up one of my phone lines for an entire workday, I'd be upset too.
If it were actually legal, there would be at least six other companies doing the same thing. With all that traffic, it would be hard for anyone to get a legitimate fax through.
Re:I'd be upset too. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's almost the fax equivalent of a denial of service attack but in hardcopy.
Re:I'd be upset too. (Score:2)
Friday was code complete and I made it (after a hard push -- late nights, week-ends). So, my motivation is just low enough today to actually whip out the calculator.
Only 6? (Score:2)
You could probably send out those 1,634 faxes in a week the first time, and 1,634 more the following day. All for the cost (to you) of 20 dollars per month. Even if you only average 1,500 per week, get a
Re:Only 6? (Score:4, Insightful)
The cost to the receiver are tremendous. The cost to the sender, not so much so by an order of magnitude. As such, and without any form of technological prevention, the legal arena is the proper forum for stopping a flood. The same thing happened with autodialers. If it wasn't for legal preventative measures, autodialers would have stopped the telephone from being a useful method of conducting business and managing your private life.
Exploring the potential economics of the situation does nothing to elevate these people's status above the kind of spore fungus clinging feverently, despite the efforts of a professional, to the back of a well-respected but elderly companion animal.
Note: (Score:5, Funny)
Tim
war dialing (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, real sophisticated. Call every damn number you can, sequentially, and listen for the whistle. Didn't mention the many millions more of non-fax numbers it called and hung up on.
Sent him information (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sent him information (Score:5, Informative)
Forbes.com
28 West 23rd Street
11th Floor
New York, NY 10010
Phone (212) 366-8900
Fax (212) 366-8804
Re:Sent him information (Score:4, Informative)
use the reporters email address or use the 5th avenue address (magazine). you're wasting your time sending snail mail to forbes.com
Re:Sent him information (Score:5, Funny)
And educate we will
Re:Sent him information (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sent him information (Score:5, Informative)
Your article, Fax and Friction (1/20/2004), gives the me the impression that companies illegally sending faxes should be allowed to do so without the threat of civil lawsuits. That's akin to arguing that murderers shouldn't be subject to civil lawsuits because the Feds already can prosecute them criminally. How does that make any sense?
There are laws against junk faxes, and both the victims and the FCC can prosecute against perpetrators. Why should it be different because some financial institutions your magazine adores use Fax.com?
Re:Sent him information (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sent him information (Score:3, Insightful)
And what about companies that receive faxed orders from customers? How are they supposed to block junk faxes? How is this any fundamentally different from a company selling it's services over the web receiving a DOS attack? How about telemarketers calling people on their cell phones and causing them extra service fees? Maybe I'll drive over to your house in the middle of the night to wash my car in your driveway with water from you spigot? Just because a system can be abused doesn't make it legal, fair, mor
It just shows... (Score:2, Interesting)
Rewrite! Lead sentance should be... (Score:5, Insightful)
Duhhh.... (Score:5, Insightful)
And spammers/junk faxers don't?
This comment brought to you.... (Score:2)
Post Forbes Fax Numbers, PLEASE! (Score:5, Interesting)
64,583 faxes later they'll start to appreciate what we mean.
I regularly get faxes at 2 AM on my home number, on a line that hasn't been used for faxes for 5 years!!! So I hooked up a fax machine to see who was sending them, but the remove requests don't work and there are to many to try and stop them...
Re:Post Forbes Fax Numbers, PLEASE! (Score:2, Informative)
Forbes.com
28 West 23rd Street
11th Floor
New York, NY 10010
Phone (212) 366-8900
Fax (212) 366-8804
Re:Post Forbes Fax Numbers, PLEASE! (Score:5, Insightful)
Phone (212) 366-8900
Fax (212) 366-8804
To truly imitate fax.com, make sure you send the faxes to the top number.
Spin doctoring (Score:3, Interesting)
What?!?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What?!?!? (Score:5, Insightful)
Duh.
Re:What?!?!? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What?!?!? RealityCheck! (Score:5, Insightful)
Now hold on there a minute, big fella. What do you mean both sides of the story?
There *is* only one side.
The side The Law is on.
What they're doing is equally as legal as selling heroin. (just to be clear not even slightly, not even for an instant, not even once)
You don't see Forbes.COM publishing articles saying "pity the poor crack-dealers" now do you?
Re:What?!?!? RealityCheck! (Score:5, Informative)
Actually you do
Forbs ran a "pitty the poor bud-growers" article a few months ago: link here [forbes.com]
Re:What?!?!? RealityCheck! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What?!?!? RealityCheck! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What?!?!? RealityCheck! (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd call tying up a hospital's phone lines to be VERY life threatening.
I used to volunteer there. If you tied up the phone lines, there was no way a nurse was going to be able to page a doctor for an urgent patient situation. Again, very life threatening.
Re:What?!?!? (Score:5, Insightful)
But it is not balanced. A real journalist doesn't mutely present both "sides". A journalist also has to judge, and present, the motivations and past behaviors of the people involved as well. All sides are NOT equal. A journalist is not a debate moderator.
Evolution theory is not the same as creationism. Creationism is not science, it is religion.
Corporate sponsored anti-environmentalist screed is NOT the same as a global scientific consensus. The motivations of each side are wildly different, and should not be given equal weight.
People who believe tax cuts are always beneficial are not as believable as pay-as-you-go fiscal conservatives: The tax cutters have twenty years of debt accumulation and other after-cut hangovers undercutting their position. Presenting them as equally believable as a pay-your-bills economist is misleading and does not serve the reader well.
Presenting pro-war neocons' arguments, long after they were proven farcical, as equivalent to those who have actual on-the-ground experience in political matters is not fair, nor is it balanced.
Life is not a football game! Everything is not an two-sided matchup of two noble teams!
Presenting the pro-Fax.com side as roughly believable as the anti-fax.com "side" is disingenous on any level. It is not journalism; at worst it is Machiavellan manipulation of perception. In this instance, it rehabilitates the fax.commers as underdog victims of liberal trial lawyering bloodsuckers in the eyes of the readership of Forbes.
A journalist has the responsiblity of weighing the credibility of the sources of arguments. And to inform the readership of the fact.
Sometimes there just isn't a balance! Sometimes one side is just wrong. And a journalist must say why.
We ALL should be acting out against junkers! (Score:2)
We need to be spamming the spammers, flooding the telemarketers, and faxing the faxers.
I mean, I don't want to sound too harsh, but really, if we the affected people do not speak out against this, who will?
Your beloved politicians? Please.
Not quite parallel (Score:5, Insightful)
So in your universe does Forbes usually champion the folks who are sick of intrusive marketing, instead of catering to the mindset that capitalists and business owners should be free to do anything they want to try to make money?
It's different here.
Re:Not quite parallel (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What the... ?! (Score:2)
Hey, did you guys check out the "Sponsored links" box on the right side of that page?
Paralell Universe, indeed!
He Sounds Like he's Serious (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah I'd say those are the most likely scenarios...
Faxes from the Hellmouth (Score:2, Funny)
Perhaps Kevin should get John to write a simpering, knee-jerk monologue about how the athletic lawyers are oppressing the junk-faxers because they are "different".
People should just stop suing junk faxers ... (Score:5, Insightful)
People should just stop suing junk faxers and start putting them in jail. Advertising should pay for the media it comes in through, not steal from it. Junk faxing, and spam, is theft, which is a crime, and should be dealt with as a criminal case (which in many jurisdictions can be brought to court even by average citizens).
Sympathy for spammers? (Score:2)
Link to this spam trap and wait for the fun to start!
Re:Sympathy for spammers? (Score:3, Funny)
My god - there's so much wrong with this piece of code that I don't even want to start.
Misinterpretation of article by slashdot (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Misinterpretation of article by slashdot (Score:3, Insightful)
But if I am indeed selling penis enlargement pills, then I'd better be careful that I've got written permission from you.
I don't get it. (Score:2, Interesting)
What Forbes fails to realise... (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me repeat that.
FAX.COM is breaking the law.
The people who have been on the receiving end of this lawlessness have been given a direct route by which to punish the lawbreaker. Eminently sensible in my opinion.
To me it seems that this is the ideal application of sensible real-world law. Forbes sees it as an attack on a legitimate business. Bollocks.
Self appointed activitsts?? (Score:3, Funny)
This is exactly what is supposed to happen! (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm not shedding any tears over Fax.com.
*CRUNCH* ... goop. (Score:5, Interesting)
Er... no, I'd say that was actually the point of the law. It's like the cockroches are shocked at the idea of having to scatter when the light comes on. "But-but-but... but the dark was so NICE!"
Fine by me. Speak up loudly, guys, it makes you easier to target and squish. Fax marketer, meet boot. Boot, fax marketer. I'm sure you'll get along famously.
Fax.com Remove Form (Score:4, Informative)
Does anyone know if this actually works?
War dialing (Score:5, Insightful)
So these are the obnoxious fuckers that leave empty messages, dead air, and fax tones on my voice mail?
Why isn't this considered electronic trespass or hacking?
Is Forbes trolling us? (Score:4, Interesting)
Forbes is just *too* bought-n-paid for... (Score:3, Interesting)
I wouldn't count on Forbes getting a clue any time soon.
Spam here to stay, conventional business profits (Score:3, Insightful)
The Star Tribune had an article in it a few months ago about how the email address you put on your product registration or other request to some otherwise legitimate company is getting bundled with your name and address and entering the direct mail list market where they ultimately filter down to the penis spammers and others.
And then there's the banking (don't all spam businesses take credit cards?) industry, the ISPs selling the connectivity that keeps spammers in business, and so on.
I'm kind of reminded of a scene from the end of some thriller movie where our naive but honest to the core hero finally has the horrifying realization that his superiors/hero/idol is behind the awful crime he's been trying to get to the bottom of all along.
Big business doesn't want spam to end, they've figured out how to stay clean and make money.
small crimes (Score:3, Insightful)
because only big crimes should be punished...? gg forbes.
the court has effectively sanctioned an unintended consequence of the law that has ensnared many businesses in a legal web of fines, threats and a lot of aggravation
No, those were the intentions. Change sentence to "ensnared many businesses providing illegal services" and you'll see the reasoning.
The laws and stiff fines ranging from $500 to $1,500--applied to each fax rather than the mass
Ok, i was under the assumption that the people at Forbes had some understanding of money. I guess not. If the fine was $1,500 per mass, that would be paltry. The faxes would get out, and a even if 1% reached a human eye the benefits would be reaped. The $1,500 would be recovered a hundred fold in fees from the client paying for the bulk faxing. Make it a per transmission fine and you might not be able to recover the fines from fees.
Forbes makes it sound like a $1,500 per bulk would be more than adequate. So are they saying that they don't care if it is still illegal just as long as the fines aren't restrictive enough to stop someone from making money?
contradictory assertions in article (Score:5, Insightful)
2)"What's happened is there's a whole cadre of lawyers who want easy money," says Wolfe & Wyman attorney Stuart Wolfe, whose Irvine, Calif., firm is defending several clients accused of sending junk faxes.
Given the limited $500/fax fines, and the admitted total of $6000 over three years of work earned by Livingston, just what business (even legal) would attempt to exploit such tiny earnings potential? I mean, who is Wolfe (and the reporter) kidding? You want to argue free speech rights for fax and email spammers, fine - fight it out in the Supreme Court and let the chips fall. But that argument is so ridiculous that I can't believe the reporter included it with a straight face. Never mind the fact enforcing financial penalties against civil wrongdoing is how tort law is supposed to work.
(shakes head in astonishment at the absurdity of it all)
--Maynard
Advertizing... (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing.
That's right. If it weren't for advertizing nothing would ever get done. Fax.com is providing a valuable service to humanity.
Attorney Bites a Lawyer. (Score:3, Funny)
Looks like Attorney Bites Lawyer to me. What irony !
I was a faxer (Score:5, Interesting)
Everyone we faxed the newsletter too subscribed by placing their business card in one of our card bowls placed at restaurants around town. We didn't offer a prize or anything else with the subscription, so we weren't tricking anyone into anything.
At the bottom on the newsletter were unsubscribe instructions: write unsubscribe on this newsletter and fax it back.
Everyday we'd get unsubscribe requests, and everyday we'd process them. Many times someone would call from a business and unsubscribe one day, and then a couple days later a receptionist or something who sat near the fax machine and depended upon us for her daily chuckle would call wondering what happened to us, and we'd resubscribe them. Then, a week or two later someone from the business call and unsubscribe again, ad nasuem.
One day, without any notice, I was sued in small claims court by a local attorney who claimed that I was sending him unsolicited faxes, and as such owed him $500 for each of three faxes that he'd received unsolicited from me. The faxes weren't unsolicitied, and I had recorded in my files that someone from his office had called in to request the fax. Also in the files were notes detailing that someone had canceled, then restarted, then canceled the subscription of the course of a week and a half.
I took this information with me to court, but the judge explained that unfortunately his hands were tied and he was bound by the statute that required that I pay $500 for each of the three faxes -- no matter what the opinion of the court might have been about the excessiveness of the award.
That night, I removed every attorney and legal aide off the list, and within a year I totally ceased operation.
Re:I was a faxer (Score:3)
FYI (Score:5, Interesting)
Its terrible that fax.com is all but broke. "At its peak, the company boasted of a database containing 16 million fax numbers and 30 million "untouched" fax numbers, and that it could blast out as many as 3 million faxes a day on behalf of Merrill Lynch (nyse: MER - news - people ), Mail Boxes Etc. (now a unit of United Parcel Service (nyse: UPS - news - people )) and other customers. To find fax numbers, the company used a sophisticated automated "war dialing" system that randomly called and recorded millions of fax numbers."
What a sleezy business.
How to DOS a fax (Score:3, Funny)
A little math... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, it's a huge pity that they can't exploit their business model and wound up out-of-business. Tito, hand me a tissue.
Forbes.com also ... (Score:5, Interesting)
My response to Forbes (Score:3, Interesting)
Junk faxing is an illegal business. Junk faxers are in violation of the law. They are being paid by a third party to present me with advertisements using my paper, my toner, my electricity, and my phone service-- basically, they're making money at my expense. Since that's the case, I have absolutely no problem with making some money at their expense, and in fact I am currently pursuing a civil action against one of Fax.com's customers, who sent me one junk fax about every two weeks for almost all of 2003.
The very thought that you are attempting to coax sympathy from your readers for people engaged in an illegal business is laughable, and so is the sense of indignation over consumers getting fed up and using the legal system to fight back.
Drug dealing is another illegal business where some people are trying to make money in violation of the law and at the expense of other people. Are you sympathetic toward drug dealers? Are you indignant when they are penalized in accordance with the law?
----------
~Philly
It just goe$ to $how you (Score:3, Insightful)
83.9 *billion* pieces of junk mail... POSTAGE DUE! (Score:4, Informative)
For you to mourn Fax.com or even imply there was *anything* unfair about their demise is completely outrageous. To even suggest they have a 1st Amendment right to send junk faxes is preposterous.
Let's talk about the First Amendment. If the cops come by your party on a Saturday night and tell you to turn it down or they'll cite you for disturbing the peace, I'll bet you a billion dollars that no judge will accept your argument that the First Amendment allows you to play your music as loud as you want late at night in a residential area. And you're just being loud. You're not doing doughnuts on your neighbor's lawn or puking in his bushes. But it's well established that a city can make and enforce a law that says your free speech rights stop at a certain decibel level in the evening hours.
But what fax.com was doing was like not only playing their music too loud, but puking in the bushes too.
They claimed to have 46 million fax numbers (16 million in general use and 30 million "untouched"). If they sent each of those numbers just one junk fax, and we can agree that paper and toner costs per fax were 1.5 cents (half penny a sheet for paper, 1 cent a page for ink/toner), the cumulative paper and ink/toner cost of that one junk fax per machine would be $690,000.
Now imagine there wasn't a TCPA to outlaw junk faxes. Imagine there were no activists who could sue, no fines the FCC could impose, no class action causes to attract the sleazy lawyers.
Do you think you'd just get one junk fax? You'd get 5 a day, even on weekends and holidays. Cumulatively across 46 million fax machines, that 5 a day would eat up $3.45 million *DAILY* in paper and ink/toner... over $1.25 BILLION a year.
That's $1.25 ***billion*** (you know, with a B) in printing costs that the fax marketers wouldn't have to pay. Instead everyone they were faxing would have to pay a share of it. That's 83.9 billion pieces of junk mail being delivered postage due every year and the recipients have NO choice about paying.
For Forbes to do anything but celebrate the demise of Fax.com or support the TCPA shows a complete departure from any semblance of logic or morality.
You can consider me an ex-subscriber when it comes time for me to renew this year.
Re:Don't jusy whinge on /. (Score:4, Insightful)