FTC Tries to Can Sex Spam 168
F_SMASH writes "The United States' Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has charged a group of companies and individuals with failing to include required warnings on 'sex' related spam e-mail."
Anything free is worth what you pay for it.
Offshore? (Score:4, Interesting)
One of the companies, Global Net Ventures, is based in the UK. How is the US FTC going to charge them?
Re:Offshore? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm seriously hoping the FTC wins this suit.
Re:Offshore? (Score:2)
Re:Offshore? (Score:3, Insightful)
Likely. (Score:5, Informative)
Many countries have signed the Hague Convention which include the rules on cross border enforcement of civil judgments.
Re:Likely. (Score:2)
Wait a second, did Canada get annexed by the USA while I was on holidays?
Re:Offshore? (Score:4, Interesting)
Little things like borders have never stopped US authorities before [indymedia.org.uk]
Re:Offshore? (Score:3, Funny)
I love how a million American parents are writing a million complaint letters to Clearchannel etc for flashing 1 second of Janet Jackson's breast. Here they are at the mercy of the porn spammers, and can't do a thing.
Re:Offshore? (Score:3, Insightful)
The UK is fairly friendly with
Re:Offshore? (Score:2)
They don't need to, the U.K. government will do it for them. No country with any sense wants to risk trade with the US for the sake of an internet porn spammer.
It's the same old issue of a spammer in Antartica 1000 miles away across the world, pressing "send, send, send".
Block naval or air shipments of fuel "shiver,shiver,shiver can't seem to make hand work!".
Re:Offshore? (Score:2)
Re:Offshore? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Offshore? (Score:2)
I find it hard to believe the any country would be particularly interested in protecting spammers. Seems to me more like a case of the UK being helpful because they know their citizens are sick of spam and this will help rid the world of it.
I don't know if the UK is as strict about porn as the US, but I don't think it matters too much. I don't think they would consider this a porn issue.
Re:Offshore? (Score:2)
Nations shouldn't write their legislation so that it extends beyond their borders that is a receipe for chaos, confusion and injustice. I know this just from trying to be a law obedient resident of both US and Finland alternatively. Just figuring how to declare taxes is a chore.
To address international problems lik
Re:Offshore? (Score:4, Insightful)
Um, CBS broadcast Janet's "wardrobe malfunction." Clear Channel decided to quit airing Howard Stern in many areas. And it's not necessarily American parents who are doing the writing, it's right-wing organizations [parentstv.org] who take credit for most of the organizing.
Howard is (and I am) still waiting for the FCC to treat Oprah Winfrey the same way his show has been treated by Michael Powell (the chairman of the FCC). I regularly do not tune in Mr. Stern's broadcasts but I know that many do and I believe the increased attempts at "regulation" (read doling out fines) have nothing to do with decency on the airwaves -- something the FCC got out of the business of being concerned with during the Reagan Administration.
After all, according to Republican rhetoric, the market ought to decide what should be aired. It was the Reagan FCC that decided that market pressures should decide what the vertical and horizontal blanking intervals should be like (if you do not work in television, you probably don't know what these are for -- but you are the market making these decisions).
I had thought that the FTC ought to regulate spammers.
Re:Offshore? (Score:5, Informative)
Well, from the MSNBC article:
And quoting from the CNN Money article:
Now if all the companies and people involved are outside the US, or they keep all their money stuffed in their mattresses and pay cash for everything, maybe they can just run away.
But if they've done any banking within the US, they probably stand to lose all their money if they don't show up in court. (now if only groklaw would cover these cases....)
Re:I pitty the Joe-Jobbed out there then... (Score:2)
But if there was a mix-up, the innocent bystander could contact the FTC, petition the court, or show up to the hearing.
That's easy. (Score:2)
Re:Offshore? (Score:3, Funny)
My guess is send them a bill with a link to PayPal.
MLATs (Score:4, Informative)
Criminal Cases Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Treaties: Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Treaties (MLATs) are relatively recent development. They seek to improve the effectiveness of judicial assistance and to regularize and facilitate its procedures. Each country designates a central authority, generally the two Justice Departments, for direct communication. The treaties include the power to summon witnesses, to compel the production of documents and other real evidence, to issue search warrants, and to serve process. Generally, the remedies offered by the treaties are only available to the prosecutors. The defense must usually proceed with the methods of obtaining evidence in criminal matters under the laws of the host country which usually involve letters rogatory. See "Questions" below.
MLAT Treaties in Force:
I. The United States has bilateral Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLAT) currently in force with: Anguilla*, Antigua/Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Barbados, Belgium, Brazil, British Virgin Islands, Canada, Cayman Islands*, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Dominica, Egypt, Estonia, Greece, Grenada, Hong Kong, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Korea (South), Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Montserrat*, Morocco, Netherlands, Panama, Philippines, Poland, Romania, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, Trinidad, Turkey, Turks and Caicos Islands*, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Uruguay.
Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:1)
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:2)
In other words, you are one of the stupid assholes that responds to porn spam, thus encouraging the bastards to send more of it. Fuck you very much.
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:2)
I agree. I have such a hard time finding pr0n sites when I am surfing. These guys provide a real service to society.
Hey! What about the children! (Score:2)
MANY CHILDREN TODAY HAVE E-MAIL.
And that makes them easy targets for porn spam. What would the parents think about it? Sure they can install filters and such, but then we have two choices:
b) Children exposed to porn
a) Hyper-protected children with stupid AOL accounts
Neither of these is a good choice.
Obviously SPAM needs to be regulated (and of course, disappear, but the world's not perfect).
Re:Hey! What about the children! (Score:2)
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:2)
Those people are probably also turned on by goatse and/or tubgirl.
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:2)
Please don't make that mistake again.
Re:Hurray For Sueing Spammers (Score:2)
it's about time (Score:2, Insightful)
Eh? (Score:2, Funny)
Never mind.
Hmm... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Because the lawmakers in the US don't care about right and wrong, and they don't care about the general public, they care about the companies that give them lots of money. The DMA wrote the Can-Spam act to ensure that they could continue to spam, and congress passed to to ensure that the DMA members would continue to bribe them.
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
You might want to loosen your tinfoil hat some.
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Nope. Courts have sided against the "Free Speach Means I Get To Do Whatever I Want" argument in the past, with no sign of it changing. The fact that you are unfamiliar with the issues doesn't change this fact.
Faxes have had laws against fax spam for awhile. Those have been challeneged in court, and the laws stand. Telemarketing used to be a minor annoyance, and it grew and grew until we ended up with th
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Ahh... but you see, that is not technically "banning" telemarketing. If you're not on the list, you still get calls. It's more of an "opt-out" list. The fax spam band stands because, due to how the fax system works, the people receiving the spam would have to pay for receiving the spam. It doesn't work that way for E-Mail Spam (you don't end
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Congress is made up of many individuals, not all of whom are taking bribes from the DMA. To suggest otherwise would involve a conspiracy that is simply too large to be feasible.
CAN-SPAM is, over all, a decent law. It places restrictions on marketers that allow end-users to filter out what they don't want to see without completely making it illegal and thus denying either some unforseen but legitimate use for unsolicited em
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Some people want drugs. Some people want gay sex. Do you propose that the rest of us should be forced to take drugs and have gay sex because of those few that want them? Your argume falls apart because you are saying "A few want it, so everyone else shou
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Do you really want the government regulating speech? What they have done is what is proper. They have required honest labeling. If we could depend on honest labeling, then automatic filters could handle spam without much effort. And this would mean that the AMOUNT of spam would decrease (if nobody's looking at it, even idiots wouldn't click on the links).
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Speech like the illegal junk faxes they already regulate? Speech like that of Telemarketers, who have to respct the DNC list? Speech like yelling "FIRE!" in a theatre?
The government already regulates speech. If they were to try to stop anyone from talking about X, there are few instances where they can justify it. (The "Fire" example would be one example where they can.) However, saying "You can not force anyone to listen to what you want to say"
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
No, but "Your" != "All".
I am ***NOT*** defending spam, or the activity of spamming. Keep in mind that spam is a moneymaking venture that would cease to make money if it was not welcomed by its target market.
Willing, albeit stupid, buyers have a right to buy any legal product sold legally. Of course, illegal UCE should be dealt with under fraud or other applicable civil/criminal statutes.
Also, bear in mind that you acce
Easy filtering from here! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Easy filtering from here! (Score:2)
There are still plenty of difficulties, but the internet isn't quite frictionless. A lot of spam originates in America in one form or another, and I doubt many spammers are actually willing to physically move to another country to continue their wa
Re:Easy filtering from here! (Score:3, Funny)
WARN1N6: Thi5 M355^ge's con7en7 m1gh7 no7 b3 sui.ted for...
MOD PARENT UP!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Images in the subject line? (Score:5, Funny)
(my emphasis)
Seriously, are their email clients that display images in the subject line?!
Re:Images in the subject line? (Score:5, Funny)
Somewhere, some PHB at Microsoft is thinking this would be great for Outlook 2005.
(.)(.) Big and Buxom! (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, are their email clients that display images in the subject line?!
Piece of cake, mate ;-)
Actually, yes. (Score:2)
For "full" graphics, you'd probably need to have the DCL script uudecode the body of the message, which could contain the image data, which the subject line could then pass to an image viewer to display.
So, yes, it is possible. Provided you can find anyone using a VAX.
Re:Images in the subject line? (Score:2)
Is an xpm ascii art?
8======== (Score:2)
Re:Images in the subject line? (Score:2)
down with p0rn! (Score:2)
Good to see the FTC actually doing something about something that's really an issue. But about about the vioxx spam? Wasn't it just recently slashdotted that Vioxx spam took the crown from sex-related spam?
O well, at least my spam filters can finally get some rest.
The FTC going after spamers is like someone (Score:4, Interesting)
That's supposed to have worked... (Score:2)
Re:The FTC going after spamers is like someone (Score:2)
The solution is going to have to be technological, not regulatory.
I disagree. That's like saying, "we should not use the law against bug-exploiting black hat hackers, but instead we should build bug free programs."
Bug free programs will never exist. Likewise, there is always going to be some way to sneak spam past all the technological filters we create. If there is not some legal consequence, people will just keep doing it.
Just MHO. What do you think?
Not really (Score:2)
When it's all said and done... (Score:1)
Re:When it's all said and done... (Score:2)
Crucifixion's a doddle! (Score:2)
Re:Crucifixion's a doddle! (Score:2)
ye olde english death penalties (Score:2)
beheading
keel hauling
disembowlement with bowls being set on fire
put rat(s) in cauldron, put caludron mouth up against stomach, heat base of cauldron
The english used to have some great death penalties. Too bad they (and we) are all wimps now. We need to bring back some of these and the ones like it.
Thanks Alot! (Score:2, Funny)
Sex? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not go after the 419 spammers who are stealing people's life savings? Or how about the fake pills and illegal drugs? Just business, I guess.
Re:Sex? (Score:2)
Re:Sex? (Score:2)
Re:Sex? (Score:2)
In this case it makes lots of sense. It's really hard for the FTC to go after a bunch of asshats like 419 spammers and phishers who operate completely illicitely and launder thier money. It's relatively easy for them to go after companies (e.g. porn sites) that do things like take credit cards and operate like real buisnesses.
Jeff
Re:Sex? (Score:2)
Forget society for a moment and think that the parent should give the concsent, nevermind society.
Truth be told, shoving porn in a kid's face without a parent's consent is the equivalent of sexual harassment (think flashing a kid??), and should be punished accordingly.
Of course we're too busy throwing hackers in jail for life-long sentences...
Of course they are! (Score:5, Funny)
You're a middle-aged guy stuck in a bureacratic position. You spend your days debating horribly dreary points of order and generally struggling to effect any meaningful change...
Then somebody comes up to you and says, "Hey [your name], wanna drop what you're doing and spend a few weeks/months looking at porn?"
Yeah, tough decision there.
Re:Of course they are! (Score:2)
Damnitt! (Score:2, Funny)
What I want to know is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Subject: PharmaBGHZ8
Message:
Hurtnig?
At least with porn spam, you have something to look at.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:2)
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:3, Funny)
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Go Feds! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Go Feds! (Score:2)
If they were REALLY serious about doing this we'd have a serious FBI/FTC RICO sting operation that would take down some ISPs, some credit card merchant processors, and a whole bunch of other "legitimate" people in addition to the spammers.
This would have the net effect of cutting off the "air supply" of the spam industry by sc
Pork is worse than SPAM. (Score:2)
True, but... (Score:2)
They should bottle it instead (Score:2)
Right problem, irrelevant solution. (Score:2)
The only way to allow people to avoid sex-spam completely is to get rid of it, and that's not in the ability of the FTC.
This is like a speeding ticket, it hurts someone who is hurting safety. This move cannot help any "innocents" (in fact, it helps nobody) who just want a clean inbox.
Re:Right problem, irrelevant solution. (Score:2)
Not that I think it will work, but I do consider that enforcing honest labeling is a reasonable thing for a government to do.
Re:Right problem, irrelevant solution. (Score:2)
They do not accept unsubscribe requests, and they generally ignore federal laws on fruad.
If anyone listens to the FTC, they will still make explicit titles hard to interperet, and therefor hard to filter. You wouldn't expect your newspaper to put all solicitations in the back seperated from everything just to make things easier for you the subscriber... how can you expect the equivilent of people
Of course, I misread this. (Score:2)
I wonder if they would bust themselves for spamming.
oh, so *that's* what "CAN-SPAM" meant (Score:4, Funny)
Re:oh, so *that's* what "CAN-SPAM" meant (Score:2)
up until now, i had always interpreted can-spam the same as you.
other titles (Score:2)
Re:other titles (Score:2)
Re:other titles (Score:2)
whoa! (Score:2)
Step in the right direction. (Score:2)
Its funny but the US government has failed to see the one way they actually could go after this type of spam. In much the same way that the FCC can "censor" public television and radio. The FCC is allowed to censo
Re:Step in the right direction. (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't consider it reasonable for the govt. to decide what minors can and cannot watch. That's their parent's job. But honest labeling makes the parent's job feasible. OTOH, I would be quite opposed to their censoring spam, including sex related spam. But I would be in favor of their regulating the honesty of the sending e-mail address, at least for commercial e-mail,
Can Sex Spam? (Score:2)
LK
Actually wouldn't it be a better idea... (Score:2)
X-Unsolicited: Yes
X-Suitable-for-children: No
And then yes, make ALL spam that doesn't comply, illegal. Better regulations, gentlemen
Of course, this is the REAL world
No opt out link? Oh no! (Score:2)
I think they mean they lacked the required "yes, I'm reading your spam"-opt-in link.
I don't know what's more frustrating, the obstinance of spammers or the ignorance of lawmakers.
What about: (Score:2)
Dear Friend,
Hope this mail will not constitute an embarrassment to you. I came across your name while searching for a good Partner.
My Name is Mr.Abu Tanko personal assistant(P.A)to Mr.Kayode J. Naiyeju, the Accountant General ofthe Federal (AGF), Federal Republic of Nigeria. Recently,a large sum of money was recovered by the present democratic government from the estate of the former military dictator, General Sanni Abacha who died in 1998.This money was stashed in variousaccounts abroad,especially in Lux
Re:Screw SunTrust (Score:2)
Re:Porn? (Score:2)
That's easy. (Score:2)
Re:Related question: (Score:2)