Spammers Sue Spamee 453
sebFlyte writes "In an interesting take on the law, some (alleged) spammers are suing some poor chap who got them blocked by ISPs due to the fact they kept sending him spam. According to Spamhaus the company doing the suing is on their books as spammer, and also as a spyware company... If this case goes the wrong way, things could get very sticky for anyone wanting to report spam."
Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Insightful)
However, it doesn't matter if spamming is legal or otherwise, this is just another example of rich people's law.
If this spammer is doing reasonably well, he might just have enough money to drag on. This will have a big impact on the victims, because even if you're rightfully entitled to complain about a spammer, you would now have a second thought if you have enough money to defend yourself for few months, even if the outcome is in your favour.
On a side note, the spamee, Jay Stuler is appealing for help from the public in fighting the suit and has set up a PayPal account to pay for his legal fees and is asking for donations. Maybe a bit of "email campaign" asking recipients to donate $5 and pass the email to 5 friends?
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Interesting)
But really, all this guy did was complain to his ISP. You cannot get sued for complaining. If there is a lawsuit, it should be against the ISP for canceling the account. No? Seems like a million lawyers would jump at a countersuit on this one.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Insightful)
As this case illustrates, you can be sued for anything. Sure, you probably won't lose, but can you afford to take the case far enough to be sure? Most people can't.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:2)
=tkk
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:2)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Interesting)
It just has to lead to 'unreasonable imputations' on your character.
Ie if I said "Hired man posts on slashdot", "Slashdot readers are known to steal company time surfing the site" "People who steal from companies are criminals" then I've said 3 things that are true.
But I've also probably defamed you (legally that is). Its all in the imputation.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps he should look for a way to counter-sue on those grounds. He followed the law, made a simple request based on the TOS of the ISP, and he's being harassed with a frivolous lawsuit intended to seek damages for something he is not liable for.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that just to get to the point that you can ask for the lawsuit to be dismissed will probably cost you thousands of dollars. Just to sit down with a lawyer to look over the suit in the first case might cost you a few hundred. Even a few thousand dollars can break the bank for some people.
There should be a system (perhaps there is, and someone can point me to it) whereby an individual can ask for a case to be reviewed before even talking to a lawyer. This is just taking schoolyard bullying to a higher level -- if you fight back it will only get worse for you even if you eventually win by getting the bully in trouble.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Insightful)
In federal court you can move to dismiss before doing _anything_ in response to a complaint with a Rule 12(b)(6) motion for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted. It's something you could even research on the internet and file yourself if you can't afford a lawyer. In addition, you can move for Rule 11 sanctions, which c
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Interesting)
However what some judges would do, is ask witnesses(etc) questions on behalf of the person representing themselves to make up for that persons lack of representation. (Especially if the judge thought the person sueing/prosecuting was just beating on some poor guy)
More often then not the judges questions would tear huge stinky holes in the case. Dunno about te US, but over here the best lawyers are definately the judges.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Interesting)
So for example Big Corp normally spends 2 million on their own lawyers, and little guy spends $1000 on his. With this system, the lawyers aren't allowed to be paid directly, instead an escrow company gets $2001000 and gives Big Corp a credit of $1000500, and gives little guy a credit of $1000500. These funds can be spen
What he should really go for... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:4, Insightful)
Motion to Dismiss: Anti-SLAPP, not CAN SPAM (Score:5, Informative)
"SLAPP" is an acronym for Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation. It basically means all of the lawsuits that big companies file against "the little guy" when "the little guy" exercises his First Amendment rights to protest in a "matter of public concern." A really good run-down of the reasoning behind Massachusetts' anti-SLAPP statute (only because that's the one I'm most familiar with) is here [bna.com]. Historically, these suits will often present as claims for defamation or "interference with contractual relations" for the statements made by the defendant.
There are certain legal tests that one must meet in order to have their "petitioning activity" qualify as being "protected" under the statute. Without more facts and knowledge of the analagous statute in NH (if there even is one), I wouldn't hazard a guess as to whether or not "contacting SpamHaus with information about a spammer" would fit. Might be a good case to bump up the appellate process and make new law in the jurisdiction, though.
The advantage of filing a Special Motion to Dismiss under these Anti-SLAPP statutes is that frequently, they allow for an immediate award of costs and attorney's fees, effectively stopping the frivolous lawsuit in its tracks and strongly discouraging companies from filing such suits in the future.
This guy should find a lawyer, explain ALL of the facts of the suit, and ask her to consider if this could be seen as a SLAPP suit, and how to proceed. Like I've said in other posts, most bar associations have lawyer referral services (LRS) that require member attorneys to give a free or cheap initial consultation. It sounds like this would be a great case for someone to take on.
Not all lawyers are bloodsucking bottom-feeders. Some are, and they give the rest of us a bad name. Just keep an open mind when you want a lawyer.
Legal Aid (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is that the US doesn't generally believe in such fallback systems. Hey, I like the US for a lot of
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Insightful)
Problem is, many states don't have laws against frivilous lawsuits, so there may be no basis for a countersuit, especially if the spam itself were not illegal. This is why we need tort reform like Newt Gingrich was touting in his contract with America in which there'd be a loser pays system for lawsuits. Sadly, his ideas have been largely forgotten.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:4, Insightful)
Yea, amen, and halleluja. Remove the incentive for a big win even if they lose, and the "necessary evils" we call "lawyers" will spen more time golfing than harassing over baseless claims.
Even better, make lawyers who file claims determined frivilous subject to disbarment. To make it "fair," create civil grand juries to assess case merits before it ever sees a court room.
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:4, Interesting)
But many, including California, have laws against SLAPP lawsuits, and this would seem to fit firmly into that category. SLAPP == Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation, as I recall. Where "public participation" has to do with maintaining the Commons, e.g. if Corporation X sues Joe Penguin for speaking up against it in a public forum, then Joe can relatively inexpensively file to have it dismissed as a SLAPP suit ...
and Joe can collect triple damages if it's established that
the suit was just to prevent Joe from opposing that
toxic waste dump (or equivalent).
Two things wrong there, and before you even finished the sentence!
That article was rather devoid of essential facts; I'd really like to know if for example California's SLAPP statute could apply. (Many other states have them too.)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:3, Informative)
Now i know he spoke to the ISP reporting the problem, he would probably be pissed about the spam and complained vigerously and the co-ercing the isp to terminate the account thing would possibly be dismissed,
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Funny)
But you CAN help! DONATE! (Score:2)
You can find more information here [spamshield.org]
Re:But you CAN help! DONATE! (Score:3, Funny)
why is ICanSpam a defense? (Score:5, Insightful)
Breach of contract is the authority that ISPs are using to shut spammers down.
The victim was reporting violations of AUP contracts with their ISPs to the ISPs, NOT violations of ICANSPAM.
This case should have already have been thrown out of court.
Anyone tracked down and named the lawyers yet?
Re:why is ICanSpam a defense? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:why is ICanSpam a defense? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:why is ICanSpam a defense? (Score:3, Informative)
This Proves it... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Funny)
One drunken evening a year or so ago I absolutely lost my cool when I came home to a deluge of spam that was bigger than I had ever seen. After dutifully reporting each and every one of them to Spamcop I stumbled across one particular email that was sent by/for a business that was stupid enough to use their 800# in the body of the mail. My evil mind went to work, and after a few minutes of scripting in my head the following conversation (as far as I can remember it) ensued.
[ring ring]
Thank you for calling XXX, my name is Kathy, how can I help you? Me: (using the biggest, dumbest, drive-time DJ voice I can muster): KATHY! HOW ARE YOU?! You're lucky listener number 20 tonight! Are you feeling lucky? Are you?
K: Wha...? Who is th- DJ: Kathy! You listen to Brian and Bob in the mornings on Z-101, right? K: Umm... yeah! (Who's gonna get a call like that and say no, hm?) DJ: So here's the story Kathy - we got your name from some of your co-workers and entered it into our big contest drawing this month, and...
(uncomfortably long pause...)
K: And wha-? DJ: AND YOUR NAME CAME UP IN OUR 80'S ROCK TRIVIA CHALLENGE, KATHY! ARE YOU EXCITED?! K: Oh yeah, what are we-? DJ: Kathy? K: Yeah?
DJ: ARE YOU READY TO WIN $50,000 DOLLARS?!
(pause)
K: ARE YOU SERIOU-? DJ: We're ABSOLUTELY serious, Kathy! You are exactly ONE question away from winning FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS!
(at this point, I knew I had her. I could hear her cup the phone with her hand and start yelling at what had to be an entire office full of people.)
DJ: Kathy? Are you ready? Get the men and women at work with you to help out!
K: Sure!
(she was hyperventilating at this point)
DJ: Kathy, here's what we want to know...
(another uncomfortable pause)
DJ: For fifty thousand dollars...
(yet another pause, during which I heard the sound of ten different computers firing up Google in anticipation...)
DJ: What one-hit-wonder from the mid-80's was notable for their lead singer's visible physical deformity?!
(sheer, dead silence for a moment that lasted forever)
K: What WHAT?
DJ: TEN SECONDS!!
(at this point, she freaked. she tried to cover the phone and missed, and as I loudly counted down from ten to one I heard an entire office simultaneously melt down. "One-hit WHAT?! DEFORMITY? WHAT THE...!?"
DJ: THREE! TWO!
K: OH MY G-!
DJ: ONE! OH, NO! You JUST missed it, Kathy! Fifty thousand dollars, and you JUST didn't get it. It's too bad, too - I gave you SUCH a hint!
K: You WHAT? Hint? WHAT TH-?
DJ: Oh, Kathy - I practically gave it to you. I told you to get some help from the women... and MEN AT WORK! It was Men at Work, and you must be feeling really stupid right now not remembering Colin Hay and that freaky wandering eyeball he has! Remember that eye? Of course you do! You must be feeling so stupid right now!
(at this point my roommate, who's been watching the entire affair in bugeyed amazement, chimes in with "So FUCKING stupid!!" loud enough for her to hear it. I nearly had an aneurysm...)
DJ: Yeah, that was Bob... he calls 'em like he sees 'em. How you feeling, Kathy?
(it's at this point that I'm pretty sure I earned myself a warm spot in Hell, because she sounded like she was about to be sick...)
K: Oh God, I was so c...
(and if I wasn't going to Hell yet...)
DJ: But don't forget, Kathy - there's only one other person on our mega prize list today, and if they miss the Trivia Challenge question too, the money is YOURS!!
K: Are you SERIOUS?!
DJ: I'm DEAD serious, Kathy! Before the day is out you just might have that money! But remember, you have to get to the phone within two rings - so stay close to the phone and answer with our slogan! "Brian and Bob rock me HARD!" Can you do it now?
K: Bri... um, Brian and Bob rock me HARD!!
DJ: Excellent, Kathy! So remember, a
Re:Can Spam Act as defense (Score:5, Interesting)
The funniest thing that anyone did to a spammer was a woman who checked out the registration records on a spam domain and found that they had used a free e-mail address from yahoo, hotmail, or someone similar.
When she sent a test e-mail to it, it came back as undeliverable because there was no such address.
So she obtained the address and then used it to change the DNS servers for the domain to her own.
She set up an e-mail account to match the one in the spam and sent back a canned reply to everyone who expressed interest in the spamvertized product that they were really stupid to fall for such things. If I remember correctly, she also set up a web page for the domain to tell the interested buyers how stupid they were.
The first-time spammers were, I think, from South America and were extremely upset to lose their domain and all the potential sales from the spam. But all their complaints did nothing to get their domain back again.
The Spammer Strikes Back (Score:5, Funny)
WARS
Episode V
The Spammer Strikes Back
It is a dark time for the Internet. Although Spamford Wallace has been shut down [theregister.co.uk], Atriks spammers [spamhaus.org] have driven the irate users from their inboxes and pursued them into court [p2pnet.net].
Evading the dreaded Distributed Mail Corporation [virtualmda.com], a group of freedom fighters led by Jay Stuler [spamshield.org] has established a new secret base on the remote ice world of Ohio.
The evil lord Darth Haberstroh [pcpro.co.uk], obsessed with harassing young Stuler, has dispatched thousands of spambots [virtualmda.com] into the far reaches of the Internet...
Re:Pivotal Scene (Score:3, Funny)
Jay Stuler: Wait, so who is?
Darth Haberstroh: Ummm...must be one of those old fogies I sold Viagra to.
Jay: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
Only in America (Score:2, Funny)
Does this case hold? (Score:5, Insightful)
...wait...what?! (Score:5, Funny)
Just Remember.. (Score:2, Funny)
Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:5, Funny)
But if we get some idiot judge who's magically got some extra money and an errectional problem... well I suspect I may have to change my Gmail account incase I get sued for reporting a scam..
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:3, Insightful)
We all know "spammers are bad" but the law does not see it the same way. The law is flawed, so the ruling will probably be flawed. Placing the blame on the judge is shooting the messenger.
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:3, Insightful)
They have the right to send spam, and I have the right to complain to their ISP over it, just because something is legal doesn't mean you can't get banned for it, there is nothing illegal about trolling but many sites will ban you on the spot for it, and justifiably so.
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:2)
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:2)
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:2)
Anti-spam foundation SpamHaus has listed Atriks on its register of known spam operations (ROKSO), which states the company has violated the act by using misleading subject lines.
SpamHaus also says it has had complaints that software is being installed by Atriks on users' computers without their permission - which is a felony.
These spammers were not within their rights according to CAN SPAM. That aside, I hope that some legitimate bulk email house (If such a thing exists) never gets the
Re:Lets hope we get a real judge (Score:2)
tthis is convoluted (Score:5, Insightful)
No wonder people are saying to heck with the internet. Spam, virii, worms, spyware, goofy OS problems
Vital Data for Your Spamming Company (Score:5, Informative)
My personal favorite, the "Atriks Personal Domain Owners with Credit Cards" Database. Unless you've been sleeping for the past 10 years, this means harvesting whois records (against the ToS) and using them to spam people. SpamHaus tidbits.
Re:Vital Data for Your Spamming Company (Score:4, Informative)
uhhhh (Score:3, Funny)
This just in... (Score:5, Funny)
Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:5, Insightful)
If Person-A tells Company-B to do something which may or may not be legal to Company-C...
And Company-B goes ahead and does it.
Isn't Company-B the liable party here?
e.g. -- If I tell my Landlord to kick out my loud upstairs neighbor -- and for some reason he complies and *does* it.... As far as I know my neighbor's furious, my landlord's getting sued and I'm nothing other than stoked.
Anyone?
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:3, Interesting)
Each ISP has an abuse@ISP.com emailadress, where you can report malicious activity of a user.
If you, as a person, notice that a user of a certain ISP is using its subscription for illegal activies (like, if someone is probing your machines for days, constantly trying to get a virus through to your domain, spamming you, you just trace them back and include logs.), or any activity that might be against their userpolicy you can email then there to report said activities. And they will investigate the matter (
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:2)
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:3, Informative)
Well yes, but so are you. It's called defamation of character. There can be an argument made that you willfully and knowingly sought to deceive others on the legality or ethical nature of Company C's actions by telling the ISP (Company B) that Company C was spamming you.
Defamation of character is one of those things that is just meant to be
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:4, Informative)
Person A may well have liability in this case. It depends. If you make a valid complaint to your landlord about your neighbor, and your landlord follows appropriate procedures and evicts your neighbor, you are both in the clear. If you make a false complaint, knowing it to be false, or with reckless disregard for the truth, and your landlord acts on that complaint, your neighbor would have a claim against you. Your landlord might or might not be in the clear depending on whether he followed appropriate procedures and whether it was reasonable of him to take your complaint to be valid. If you make a valid complaint but your landlord fails to follow appropriate procedures, then you should be in the clear but your landlord may be liable. The landlord-tenant example is actually not ideal as far as general tort law is concerned because landlord-tenant relations are often governed by special state or local laws.
One relevant cause of action is what is called "tortious interference". That is where A improperly interferes in the business relationship between B and C.
To take a parallel criminal example, suppose that gangster A hires hit man B to kill rival C. Surely you don't think that only hit man B has committed a crime? Gangster A is guilty at the very least of "solicitation of murder" and, depending on the jurisdiction, may be guilty of other crimes as well.
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is that he went to the ISP and said that they should kick out Atriks because they are spammers. Suddenly the situation changes.
To go back to your example if you tell your landlord to kick your neighbor out and he does so you're golden. However, if you tell your neighbor to kick your neighbor out because he is running a prostitution ring out of his apartment and he does so
Re:Soo... let me get this straight... (Score:2)
But there's the catch. It is most certainly not illegal for an ISP to block e-mail from a particular domain. ISPs do it all the time. This is why Company B isn't liable. Person A, however, reported on Company C's behavior, and if Person A can't subtantiate those claims, Company C can sue for damages. Even if Person A is vindicated, this can end up costing Person A a lot of money, so Person A might very well settl
paypal link... (Score:5, Informative)
Here [spamshield.org]'s his site with the paypal link. There's some other goodies about the lawsuit and him on the site.
Atriks website, contact info, privacy policy, etc. (Score:5, Informative)
You can even sign-up [atriks.com] on their website. I would suggest being careful about that thought. According to their privacy statement [atriks.com], they can sell your name and e-mail address to (other?) spammers.
We may share some of your information such as name and e-mail address with third party sponsors.
Re:Atriks website, contact info, privacy policy, e (Score:5, Informative)
866-624-7008
Re:Atriks website, contact info, privacy policy, e (Score:3, Funny)
Non-Issue (Score:2)
Maybe a change of career is justified (Score:2, Insightful)
If the law is occasionally on their side, won't that make them just a little more socially acceptable?
This is akin to a drug dealer claiming defamation of character because the local mothers reported him, and his buyers no longer feel safe coming round his place.
Contracts lost to perform illegal activities? Defamation? They must have GOOD lawyers.
Obviously frivolous (Score:2)
I think this would be a great place for a counter-suit. Send a chill through the spammer community.
In related news-- I was recently approached by a spyware/spam company ("Vista") wanting me to let them place active-x ads on my sites. I wrote about it here [blogspot.com]. They offered me "a few thousand dollars". Tough to pass up...They need to li
Re:Obviously frivolous (Score:3, Interesting)
The retort is that Haberstroh did things for which her should be charged, but has not been. This could be hard to prove, especially if Haberstroh stayed just inside the letter of the law.
A legitimate problem! (Score:4, Insightful)
Even normal companies can have practically all their external email communications shutdown if they're blacklisted by a site like spamhaus.
The problem with the blacklist system is that it's guilty until proven innocent.
Unfortunately, I'm not smart enough to know what the best solution is. However, there are a lot of smart people here, and perhaps together we can come up with something legal, yet effective!
Re:A legitimate problem! (Score:2)
I have no problem recieving notifications from companies who I've agreed to recieve email from...
I do have problems with companies (including very large companies) that feel that because at one time or another I did business with them they have full right to fill my inbox with drivel and resell my address to their partners to do the same. Often they even do this when I've checked the 'I would not like to be notified of new products' (or whatever).
So if ifilm, or travelocity,
Re:A legitimate problem! (Score:3, Insightful)
My company abides by all the rules of good conduct. However, there are a couple of scenarios that break your assertions:
Scenario 1)
A site requires an email address to sign up to limit the number of accounts-per-person to 1. The site doesn't send don't send any email after the initial confirmation email.
However, if people enter in enough garbage addresses, the "good" company gets blacklisted by the various spam organizations.
Scenario 2)
A company doesn't send any email to i
Re:A legitimate problem! (Score:2, Insightful)
Just filter it! (Score:5, Interesting)
There were free-speech issues involved. The design of CAN-SPAM prevents anybody from saying that they're being censored. You're allowed to send all the spam you want; that's your free speech. Your right to free speech stops the moment it enters my server, so I drop it.
Now, I'm not sure exactly what the spammer's case is. What exactly did this guy do that was illegal? If he got the ISP to filter or refuse mail from them, as far as I can tell that's precisely in keeping with the intent of the act.
I wish more spammers would get compliant with the act, so that I can ignore them even more efficiently. And I wish that the FTC would start stringing some noncompliant spammers up by their gonads until the rest of them come into compliance.
This case has marks of a SLAPP suit. Depending on what state he lives in, there may be effective countersuits, but I'm not a lawyer. When you find out where I can pitch in to buy the guy one, let me know.
Re:Just filter it! (Score:2)
I have a rule in my mail program that considers every incoming email as spam if it does not come from one of the 14 names in my address book.
How simple of a solution is that?
Re:Just filter it! (Score:3, Interesting)
The activities of Atriks... sending commercial email, meet the requirements of the CAN-spam Act."
What this line meant is that the activities of Atriks meet the requirements of being spam. If you look a little later in the article:
Anti-spam foundation SpamHaus has listed Atriks on its register of known spam operations (ROKSO), which states the company has violated the act by using misleading subject lines.
And...
SpamHaus also says it has had
Sue them back!!!!! (Score:2)
Everyone who has been spammed by Atriks should file a lawsuit against Atriks. Turnabout is fair play.
Simple way to win (Score:3, Insightful)
Where's EFF, CDT, etc? (Score:3, Insightful)
Old fashion way (Score:5, Interesting)
Get spammer banned/blocked
Get spammer to sue you
Get spammers personal info from law suit
Spammer found sleeping with fishes.
You win case as your alibi is that you were too busy removing spam from your inbox to do anything that smart.
If this case goes wrong... (Score:3, Funny)
Only In America... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's about all I have to say.
Why is it that the courts actually consider cases like these that make absolutely no sense, while people who commit actual crimes have trouble getting court dates. Nice legal system.
---
On another note, the spamee never did any blocking. The ISP does the blocking... so technically, the spamee didn't really do anything but state that he received Spam.
-M
Terms of service? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't know who Atriks contracts for internet service, but dollars to donuts I bet their terms of service prohibit bulk emailing.
if things go wrong (Score:4, Funny)
i'll write my own mail solution. one time access, invitation only. you would have to log on to my system in order to send me an email.
if you want me to read the mail you'll have to pay me 10 in advance, which will be refunded if i think your mail isn't spam.
my
Name of "CAN-spam Act" (Score:2)
"We comply with the CAN SPAM act".
Sounds perfectly legit, really. "If we do X, we CAN SPAM".
Why couldn't they have come up with some other acronym to call it the STOP SPAM act or something similarly less
Donations? (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, we need to pull together and help this guy. It could have been anyone of us that reports spam. Maybe we, as a community, can donate enough cash and help this poor guy get the EFF [eff.org] to defend him?
Already happened in 2002. (Score:3, Informative)
It won't (Score:3, Funny)
This includes judges.
They will hate the prosecution from the word go and have them held in contempt of court just for sneezing, including the laywers, and hand out capital sentences.
Did you actually read the complaint?! (Score:5, Insightful)
* called the President a "criminal"
* stated that his "personal mission is to stop ATRIKS whenever he can"
* called them a "notorious spam gang"
So if he can't argue that the president is not in fact a criminal, he is in trouble. The spam gang thing, well that probably passes legal muster.
Let this be a lesson to those writting to abuse@some-isp.net. Keep it civil.
Re:Did you actually read the complaint?! (Score:3, Interesting)
Now and if this is all wrong and all of the sources (including Spamhaus [spamhaus.org] and ALTRIKS OWN WEBSITE [atriks.com]) that list ALTRIKS illegal operations is just part of a massive campaign by the defendant to defame ALTRIKS, th
Call em! (Score:3, Informative)
Phone: 603-624-7008 | Fax: 603-624-9089
Toll Free: 866-624-7008
Buy Insurance Against Frivolous Lawsuits (Score:4, Interesting)
Here's a FAQ on it:
http://www.iii.org/individuals/auto/b/umbrella/ [iii.org]
You're just crazy to risk pissing anyone off without such a policy. Think about it. For $300 per year you can feel confident that some jerk can't shut you up just because you can't defend your right to say truthful things. Instead, let your insurance company pay to defend you in court!
Summons (Score:4, Interesting)
Thankfully, some other /.ers pointed me to this donation site [spamshield.org]. I will certainly drink some crap beer for a night and give the extra money to help this guy out!
It has happened before (Score:5, Informative)
In 2002, in Australia, a spammer tried to sue the guy who reported them to the SPEWS blacklist. Case was dismissed, see the result here:
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/common/story_pagand
http://t3-v-mcnicol.org/ [t3-v-mcnicol.org]Attempt to stifle public participation (SLAPP) (Score:5, Informative)
A recent lawsuit has been filed against Jay Stuler by Brian Haberstroh
Virtually every web hosting company posts an "Acceptable Use Policy", in which spamming is prohibited, and sites determined to be spamming can lose their hosting contract. In addition, hosting providers provide an email address to report spam and other violations, generally an abuse@ email address. Hosting providers invite the public to submit alleged spam for investigation.
Providers in general do not terminate clients for a few complaints, but act when a number of complaints are received. We know of no provider that would terminate a contract after receiving complaints from one person.
It may well be that Mr. Stuler was singled out from other complainants due to his public participation and comments within NANAE, the Usenet Group devoted to email spam and related issues. While his comments may not of been favorable to the plaintiff, he has every right to state his position regarding spam in general and any alleged spam company. Whether the comments he made falls into the category of slander is up to a court to determine, should the case come to trial.
The broader issue is whether we as Internet users have the right to file complaints regarding spam, and the right to publicly participate in online discussions regarding the growing spam problem.
Suits such as this are often times filed to dissuade people from participating in anti spam activities or posting within news groups or discussion forums. The general term is SLAPP, Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation, and is not legal in most U.S. States. It would be up to the court to determine if this particular suit falls within the guidelines of a SLAPP.
As long as Internet web hosts provide an abuse email address, we encourage users to continue to complain about alleged spamming operations, and allow the hosting providers to determine whether a company violates their Acceptable Use Policy, and deal with the company in a timely manner. Public participation on discussion boards and news groups is a fundamental part of online life, and we are opposed to the attempts by some to stife discussions of the issues.
Re:Ridiculous (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, it's unfortunate when a person with a grievance seeks to have his case heard in a court of law.
Damn that legal system, giving everyone an impartial venue in which to air their grievances.
Why, the legal process ought to be open only to those people whose arguments you and I already agree with. Everybody else needs to look for some other remedy.
Re:Ridiculous (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe the judge took the case so he can award the defendant legal fees in the counter suit I hope he is taking up. Yeah... or maybe this Jay guy should sue the spammers for defamation, claiming that falsely claiming the he is defaming them is hurting his public image.
I haven't actually seen the specifics (except for what's in the article
Re:Ridiculous (Score:2)
It does not appear the lawsuit has gone to court yet. The law (as far as I know) states that the lawsuit must at least go before a judge before it can be dismissed. Once it goes before the judge, then we can see it thrown out on the first d
Re:Ridiculous (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the point was the use of lawsuits for what is effectively extortion and partly bullying. The legal process should have a mechanism such that a case can be reviewed for frivolousness before it costs the defendant a cent. There should also be an automatic fine or other penalties for cases deemed frivolous under such a system as a means of discouraging people (especially lawyers) from submitting them unless they're pretty sure they have a good case.
Re:Easy Defense (Score:2)
In trying to stop a spammer, I certainly would not turn to spamming. Then I would be no better than those I berate.
Re:They can't win.. (Score:2)