UK Anti-Spam Laws Criticised 88
stripyd writes "The Guardian has an article
about the ineffectiveness of British anti-spam regulations. Asside from the limited penalties,
the Office of the Information Commissioner have yet to actually hand out a fine. From personal
experience, the OIC aren't good at answering email on queries regarding the law, their web site, or suggestions that the current procedure of tracking down, printing out and mailing off (with a stamp!) a five-page pdf form to report miscreants be streamlined. The form itself is good for a few yuks, until you remember your taxes are paying for it to be outsourced to private sector hosting."
Better in Belgium (Score:5, Interesting)
Also in The Netherlands (Score:5, Informative)
In The Netherlands, you can report spam on-line as well at the Spam Klacht (lit.: "spam complaint") website. This is an official website of the OPTA organization, which monitors and control telecommication in The Netherlands. Note that the link to the Spam Klacht website is even an SSL link.
Re:Also in The Netherlands (Score:4, Informative)
I read through some of the tidbits there, and it appears to be setup pretty well. And it appears our legislation is very nice too... "opt-in" conditions including
- If it's a checkbox form, then the user has to check it - it can't be pre-checked for the user.
- The opt-in description is not allowed to be 'vague' where "I hereby give permission for company X and partners to send me e-mail" is declared 'vague' enough.
- You cannot implicitly re-use old contact lists such as those acquired from other companies or through company take-overs; one has to first contact the user again and ask them if it's okay to establish a NEW relationship. Only if the user agrees to this they can start to 'spam' again.
However, I was also quite baffled to find that the OPTA
1. Excludes all these rules when it is spam sent to a company.
2. Excludes all these rules when it is spam sent to a fax machine!
Now #1 I could rationalize if I tried hard.
#2, however, is just ridiculous. Apparently it is not illegal as it was at some point judged to be the same as 'colportage' (door-to-door sales). yish. I can only hope that at least there's a law against sending a looped-back black fax
Re:Also in The Netherlands (Score:2, Informative)
Point 1: You are right, but law is to be changed.
Point 2: You are wrong. Spam by fax van be reported online too!
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:2)
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:1)
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:3, Insightful)
But I guess I've been trolled once more in this discussion, I suppose it's time for me to really shut up now <g>
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:1)
Of course, I have a counterpoint, and I'm not trolling you
Not a large percentage, it's true, but some of that spam does get routed through Belgium on its way back to mailboxes here in the United States. It wouldn't be that hard for them to put in a set of automatic filters to discard anything that wasn't and then go after the the relay points, if that's within their power.
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:2)
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:2)
why spam-proof that address? (Score:1)
here goes: inspec.eco@mineco.fgov.be [mailto]
Maybe this would generally be a cool idea: post honeypot-addresses all over the net, and cause spammers to spam people who CAN and WILL do something about that...
Re:why spam-proof that address? (Score:2)
Thanks to you as well for helping in trying to make that email address useless.
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:2)
Good job you didn't include the address in plain text, you wouldn't want them to get the spam before you sent it
Re:Better in Belgium (Score:2)
Limited scope (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Limited scope (Score:1)
When has a law not been criticized? (Score:1)
Re:When has a law not been criticized? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:When has a law not been criticized? (Score:1)
Ah! a make-work scheme to keep unemployment figures low before the next election. cunning
Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:1, Troll)
Is there any such thing as a British libertarian? :P
As for the site, it says nothing about the Reg 22 in question, a search only finds the same letter in Word [amaze.co.uk] format. However it does look like they spent a pretty penny on their web designer. That's more comforting to the public than enforcing the law, I guess.
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the Information Commissioner's Guidance on Regulation 22 [informatio...ner.gov.uk] (you have to scroll down to p.24 of the pdf). What, you expected something accessible from that bunch of clowns? Think again...
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:1)
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:3, Insightful)
British politicians and lawmakers are just like politicans anywhere - totally cynical bastards with their own agendas.
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:2)
Aye, over here!
>:(
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:2)
Re:Outmanned, Outgunned (Score:1)
not really, after the people of the uk had to live through several years of laissez-faire capitalism in the guise of thatcherism and have realised how soul destroying an experience it is. however, the uk does have the liberal democrats who are like; well, libretarians + democrats, i.e., the best of both worlds
Death threats??? (Score:1)
Re:Death threats??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Death threats??? (Score:1, Interesting)
I cannot say how I know this, without blowing my ONLY contacts I have with this "Underworld".
I CAN say this... the "Russian Mafia" is throwing in a huge pile of cashola to fund smart Russian and E European programmers who write the likes of SOBIG and other nasties lurking out there.
Tracing this activity is almost inpossible. With the mechanisms in place today, it's impossible to probe a box to see what it's 'listening' to.
There are ways to detect '
Reason... (Score:4, Interesting)
Most of the spam offences are committed outside of the UK. I consider this a localised solution to a global problem.
Re:Reason... (Score:1)
Coming to think about it, I don't think solution was a good word to use. The laws still would not 'STOP' or stamp out spamming. I should of said...'deterrent' instead.
Re:Reason... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Reason... (Score:2)
Compared to the successful anti-spam laws where? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Compared to the successful anti-spam laws where (Score:1)
Some of us just want to make a practical start on the problem...
Laws are useless without enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
It's therefore relevant in planning anti-Spam legislation that the legislators consider how they can follow up on whatever laws they draft to make them more than a 'toothless tiger'.
British spam (Score:5, Interesting)
"How to understand Americans - get the guidebook!"
"Sizzling Shots of the Queen - Join today!"
It all gets rather too much at times.
More seriously, I'd say in the UK we have more trouble with semi-legitimate opt-out marketing than pure spam, almost all of which seems to come from the USA (yes, re earlier story, particularly Comcast and the baby-Bells)
There are so many sites in UK cyberspace geared towards getting email addresses for "free newsletters", and any club or association seems to want to send emails with a bare minimum of content and masses of advertising added. This I see as an attempt to legitimise spam, rather than mass-mailing, people are paying asociations and clubs to sell their products for them. Affiliate programs suck, and so many firms have been founded to do just this in the UK.
How many times must I tell them? I already have enough Tea.
Re:British spam (Score:4, Funny)
Re:British spam (Score:1)
Re:British spam (Score:1)
"Free newsletters" (Score:3, Insightful)
Enough Tea (Score:2, Funny)
Otherwise, you can never get the last bit of fluff....
Ineffective. (Score:1)
if (potentialSpam.EmailAddress.endsWith(*.uk))
{
id(potentialSpam.PotientialSpammer);
fine(potentialSpam.PotientialSpammer.potentialSpa
}
else
{
System.out.println("Does not concern us, processing next message...");
}
Just J/king
Policy conflict... (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, anti-spam legislation is only effective against "legitimate" slimeball businesses. And at present, their contribution is minimal compared to criminal slimeball businesses. The latter cannot only be addressed by technical fixes, after which point legal solutions may have a chance of working.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm just about to send of my first dozen forms to the OIC, and as with any UK government department, all you need to do to get action is threaten them with their own regulatory body to get action.
Also, I've picked my targets carefully, some big names that have ignored written warnings.
Top of my hit list are:
xmr3.com (uk bulk mailer that pretends it's legitimate)
Yahoo.co.uk (those adverts at the top and bottom of yahoogroups mails are illegal, but Yahoo think they are above the law)
Ticketweb.co.uk (claim that every time you buy from them they have thr right to start samming you again)
- Andy_R
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
They do. IIRC, the law excludes e-mails sent to prior customers.
Email queries to the OIC (Score:5, Interesting)
> answering email on queries regarding the law
My personal experience was going to their site to look for guidelines on the use of cookies and the collection of anonymous data. Finding lots of "guidelines" about stuff (which are basically extracts of legal documents it seems), but nothing that seemed relevant, I mailed them my question. Three weeks later I got a reply, which was at least relevant, if amazingly long and almost as confusing as the other stuff on their site that I couldn't undertand either.
They've got a hell of a long way to go in my opinion. During the trial of Ian Huntely, the police even admitted they were confused about the DPA! What hope is there for the rest of us?
Re:Email queries to the OIC (Score:2)
I've no clue. All I can say on this matter is, it's actually pretty simple. A 4 hour training session ought to be enough to get people to understand it, so if the police, or anyone else, has data-handling employees who don't understand it, then they're not providing enough training.
Re:Email queries to the OIC (Score:2)
On a course, a teacher will say that data should only be kept for "as long as necessary." The student will ask "How long is that?" and the teacher will say "It depends on the data, the reason it's being kept, and the intended use o
Must be a term for this... (Score:2, Insightful)
That is, when some story comes up about spam and a govt. official is interviewed, they can point to the spam law being passed.
See also Data Protection Act, Freedom of Information Act.
The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:5, Informative)
The reason the UK spam laws are weak is not a coincidence either. The UK government uses the electoral register to sell your data (regardless of whether you "opt out") to third party marketing companies to get revenue.
It's not freedom of information as you might know it, it's a case of "do as I say, not as I do".
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:1)
How do you know?
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:2)
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:4, Informative)
This is a lie. It's not even maintained at the national level, but at the district council level. By law, anybody can see a copy of the register (under supervised conditions) and certain companies are allowed to use the register for restricted purposes. For example, credit agencies can use it to verify your address. It is illegal for them to pass the data on to anyone else or use it for any but a set of restricted purposes.
The editted version of the register may be bought by anybody, but you can opt out of that. See here [electoralc...ion.org.uk] for more details.
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:2)
> national level, but at the district council
> level.
Agreed - the OP was talking through his bottom, although it's a very widely held belief in the UK - I know lots of people who refused to sign the electoral roll duing the Poll Tax years because of this.
However, the government's proposed identity card system and the accompanying *centralisation* of just about all citizens' data (electoral and otherwise) could bring about the theft/abuse of such dat
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:2)
This is the biggest lie of them all. I stand by my original comment.
MBNA Credit is a credit company. They also sell credit cards. There's a loophole as wide as goatse for them to abuse their privilige. Do you want me to send the junk mail I get from these companies since signing the electoral register? It can be arranged
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:2)
However, getting lots of junk mail does not constitute evidence. There are any number of sources they could have got that info from.
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:2)
I don't believe this is true. You can pay for an electronic copy of the electoral register, but I believe this has the opt-out parties removed.
You can inspect the official register and your local council office, which doesn't have the opt-out parties removed, but you can't buy a copy of this version, as far as I'm aware.
Besides, it's quite clear why the
Re:The Office of the Information Commissioner (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, it's an uncomfortable reality. Because the illusion of censure on your own information is important, but it's completely non-existent.
What's wrong with "private sector hosting"? (Score:2)
They, probably, need a paper complaint because they can't prosecute without it -- law enforcement is backwards that way -- justices still wear gowns, for crying out loud! Given that, hosting the PDF through the private company is almost certainly cheaper for the taxpayers.