Spammer Gets $11 Billion Fine 478
Spad writes "It's not a typo, The Inquirer (amongst others) is reporting that an Iowa-based ISP has been awarded $11.2 billion in a case against spammer James McCalla, who was found guilty of sending over 280 million illegal spam emails. Under state law, the ISP was entitled to $10 per illegal e-mail sent. According to the Quad-City Times, McCalla has also been banned from using a computer for 3 years. From the article: "CIS acknowledged that it is unlikely to see any of the judgment money but said that it was time that spammers learnt that their actions would result in an economic death penalty"."
Bankrupcy? (Score:5, Insightful)
This dude just got F'd in the A.
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:5, Informative)
Nope, judgements and federally subsidized loans cannot be discharged by bankrupcy.
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's see... $11.2 billion, at the highest tax bracket of 35%, that's $3.92 billion he'll owe the IRS.
IRS publication 525:
Canceled Debts Generally, if a debt you owe is canceled or forgiven, other than as a gift or bequest, you must include the canceled amount in your income. You have no income from the canceled debt if it is intended as a gift to you. A debt includes any indebtedness for which you are liable or which attaches to property you hold.
If the debt is a nonbusiness debt, report the canceled amount on Form 1040, line 21. If it is a business debt, report the amount on Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040) (or on Schedule F (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Farming, if the debt is farm debt and you are a farmer).
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:4, Informative)
It looks like cancelling a loan as a gift is simply counted as a gift (incurring gift taxes) instead of straight income (as with an otherwise-forgiven loan). The first $11,000 is tax-free; the next $9,089,000 counts against the $1 million lifetime gift limit, and then gets gift-taxed.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:4, Funny)
If they are smart. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:If they are smart. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:3, Insightful)
Judges have to rule based on the ther arguements heard, the law, and legal presidents. When you've made the judge's email inbasket unusable for a decade your shit might be pretty weak, but that is not supposed to apply.
As for why the government is on the top of the pile I guess it's the "your first after me" principal
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:3, Insightful)
A while back I actually found the statute in the USC covering this, but I'm not a subscriber and don't hav
Re:Very rough, hopeful translation (Score:3, Funny)
Minor inconvenience x 280 million = One Big Freaking Inconvenince to Society.
And as they say: if you can't do the time, don't send the spam.
Not exactly... (Score:5, Informative)
The filing of either a Chapter Seven straight bankruptcy or Chapter
Thirteen debt adjustment immediately stops any lawsuits from being filed
or judgments being taken against you. If a law suit is pending at the
time of such filing, it can go no further. If a judgment has been
taken, its enforcement can go no further. If a creditor has a judgment
and is garnishing your wages, the garnishment can be stopped. Filing
for Chapter Seven straight bankruptcy may relieve you of the obligation
to pay the judgment. In a Chapter Thirteen debt adjustment, you may be
able to satisfy the judgment over a period not to exceed five years. If
the judgment has placed a lien on your home, that lien can be removed if
it interferes with your homestead. If lawsuits or judgments are a
threat or reality, the protection afforded under the bankruptcy laws may
be an appropriate solution for you."
It appears that in some states the law is a little different, but generally the answer is yes, you can file bankruptcy.
Re:Not exactly... -- more (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:2)
Also, half the battle of a lawsuit is collecting the money...you cannot collect what the person doesn't have, and I am pretty sure the gov't is not allowed to force a person to give so much that he cannot live (i.e. become homeless).
No
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:2, Informative)
And yes, you can go bankrupt and not pay your debt, depending on the judgement of the court, but he will have to surrender everything* he owns.
Re:Bankrupcy? (Score:5, Interesting)
Either way, though, the law did exactly what it was intended to do---send a message to people who flagrantly violate the law, ethics, and basic human decency in a way that irreparably harms the general public. As such, it isn't a mockery of the court system. It is reasonable enforcement of a reasonable and just law.
More to the point, there's no way that this person could reasonably claim not to have known that spamming is illegal, harmful to a free society, and offensively unethical. Thus, this behavior can only be classified as sociopathic. Now $11 billion probably qualifies as grand larceny, so with a little luck, this will end up resulting in incarceration of the person for failing to remit the court-ordered sum. This is exactly what should happen.
Mass spammers like this are, IMHO, a danger to society, no different from terrorists threatening to blow up part of the power grid. They consume vast amounts of resources for illegal purposes, defrauding the public of those resources. As far as I'm concerned, prison would be a good start, followed by institutionalization or long-term psychotherapy, depending on the results of thorough psychological testing.
Write your congressmen and women and demand that the judgement be tripled.
Chew on your own hay (Score:5, Funny)
Real justice? (Score:2)
That seems beyond excessive.
Re:Real justice? (Score:3, Funny)
I think they should have cut his nuts off instead.
Re:Real justice? (Score:2, Interesting)
IANAL, but I'm guessing forging the ISP's address in the header has something to do with it. Seems perfectly fair to me; it's not legal to forge someone's signature in meatspace either.
Re:Real justice? (Score:2)
It really doesn't matter anyhow, as with the amount of emails sent out by your average spammer, any penalty that might actually stop them will bankrupt the target. 10 cents a mail still comes out to 110 million, after all, and that's low. At 10 cents a mail, some morons will do the math and still decide it's economically feasible.
It might as well be a 40-zillion dollar judgement! (Score:2)
It's a nice symbolic gesture, but it'll never stop spam. There are too many morons out there who actually buy stuff from spam advertisements. Even if one user out of a million clicks on an ad, it didn't cost the spammer anything to send out those million messages from other people's PCs behind their unfirewalled DSL connection.
re: too many sales from spam? (Score:2)
In my own experience, when I've actually tried to visit a web-site or reply to an email given in a spam ad, it was already disabled/shut off. It seems like the war on spam has escalated to the point where ISPs are getting fairly efficient at shutting down the spammers' mailboxes and web presences within minutes or hours of them sending out a barrage of ad
Re: too many sales from spam? (Score:2)
Part of the issue (and definitely the hardest to solve) is that the ISP's have no choice but to take a reactive approach. As you correctly pointed out, the ISP's have "escalated to the point where ISPs are getting fairly efficient at shutting down th
Re:It might as well be a 40-zillion dollar judgeme (Score:2)
$5.5B from SpammerDude, $5.5B from D1sc0unt V1agr4 Inc.
Fraught with problems, but I'm just some moron on slashdot - what do I know about legislation?
Re:It might as well be a 40-zillion dollar judgeme (Score:3, Interesting)
OK, so let's do a scenario. You own "Divide By Zero's Friendly Software Store" and I own "Alizarin's Discount Software, Bowling, and Small Appliance Emporium." I don't like the fact that you get more business than I do, so I contract a spammer under the table (and possibly by saying I'm you) to send out some spam advertising your company's mail-order services. Somebody reports it
Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:3, Funny)
Why does that sentence look weird?
(going to google.com)
define: learnt
---No definitions were found for learnt.
Well at least we learnt one thing today.
Re:Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:5, Informative)
These are alternative forms of the past tense and past participle of the verb learn. Learnt is more common in British English, and learned in American English. There are a number of verbs of this type (burn, dream, kneel, lean, leap, spell, spill, spoil etc.). They are all irregular verbs, and this is a part of their irregularity.
Now you learnt something else: Google is not an answer to everthing.
Re:Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:3, Funny)
you might also check out the definition for "comeuppance" while you're there
sorry guys (Score:2)
Re:Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:2)
Re:Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:2)
Quoth Dictionary.app on Mac OS X:
learn |l?rn| verb ( past learned |l?rnd|or chiefly Brit. learnt |l?rnt|) [ trans. ] 1 gain or acquire knowledge of or skill in (something) by study, experience, or being taught : they'd started learning French | [with infinitive ] she is learning to play the piano | [ intrans. ] we learn from experience.
It's common here in the UK, like burnt is used instead of burned.
Man, I really pissed off the grammar nazis... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Guess they learnt their lesson! (Score:2)
Please, tell me that's a joke.
Would love to see more of this (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Would love to see more of this (Score:5, Funny)
Personally I love my server setup to deal with Spam: greylisting -> postfix -> mailscanner -> razor2 -> pyzor -> dcc checks -> spam assassin -> clamav -> bitdefender -> mailscanner -> ~/Maildir I haven't had a real spam get into my INBOX in months
Wow, do you get any mail at all?
Re:Would love to see more of this (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not overly impressed with the spam filtering. I have MANY false negatives, and too many false positives.
I'd say I have 25 spams per day get through, about 100 that it filters correctly, and about 1 false positive per week.
But as you can see, I get a lot of email (webmaster for a large ecommerce site).
But, I still use it and like it. I ought to be better about training the spam, but marking the 25 emails as spam that get through is a cho
Would love to see proportionate justice (Score:3, Insightful)
Last I heard MacDonalds was initially assessed damages equivalent to a couple of days' coffee sales (or profits?) in a case where they were singularly arrogant (and idiotic) in their own defense. The pop media turned that into a case for tort reform, and it eventually got settled for less money -- but people still whin
Re:Would love to see more of this (Score:5, Funny)
I'm going to send you an email about Nigerian unaccredited penis enlargement viagra. I'm guessing your computer will catch on fire.
R.I.P. (Score:2, Informative)
you can count on friends (Score:5, Funny)
Sic the IRS on him instead (Score:2)
So the IRS will be knocking on his door, asking for their rightfull taxes.
Re:Sic the IRS on him instead (Score:2)
$4,620,000.00
That is a real bite in the ass that can't be ignored.
-nB
Oblig. Family Guy (Score:2, Funny)
Congressman: That's the spirit Frank! But I think a real number might be more effective.
Sign off option (Score:2)
Whisper on a scream (Score:2)
At the same time, though, that under the current judicial system and global nation-state system, this amounts to not much. One guy who was unfortunate enough to be based in the US got nailed. Great. But I've got the sneaking suspicion there are more offenders scattered in places the long arm of American law just can't effectively get to. And their
Re:Whisper on a scream (Score:2)
Lockheed-Martin Defense Systems
"When you care enough to send the very best."
Extraordinary rendition (Score:2)
google cache of actual court document (Score:2, Informative)
Did any of the spam hark .... (Score:2)
I remember these being all the rage some time ago...
Ouch silly sentence (Score:2)
It would be fine if there was a default of seizing all the assets gained from their actions
This type of sentence gives them no hope of rehabilitation and will most likely drive them to a further life of crime . After all if you owe that much , then you won't want your earnings g
Re:Ouch silly sentence (Score:3, Interesting)
The lower the risk of being caught, the larger the penalty assessed has to be to compensate. Obviously, as in this case, there are functional limits. The size of the penalty, past some point, makes no difference; it spells economic death for the pe
Re:Ouch silly sentence (Score:3, Interesting)
How about 1 second of community service for each illegal e-mail, based on the amount of time he's wasted of someone else's life. Something like 15 years of picking up trash would seem fitting.
Hooooooray!!!! (Score:2)
How he can pay: James McCalla LOTTERY WINNER! (Score:3, Funny)
----
FREELOTTO GROUP INTERNATIONAL
Prize Remittance Division (PRD)
RE: OFFICIAL WINNING NOTIFICATION
FILE REF NO: 07- 321786542
FAST NO: 2912144
LOTTO REF: FL/0507/FAST
Dear Prize Winner,
This email confirms that you have received from the FREELOTTO GROUP INTERNATIONAL an official notification of your lotto winning in the FREELOTTO AUTOMATIC SUBSCRIPTION TICKET GAME (F.A.S.T) played on the 1st of january 2006, at our lottery office complex Trafford, London.
You have won a FREELOTTO PRIZE OF £ 500,000 [five hundred thousand pounds sterlings], a prize payout of your winning has been approved by the FREELOTTO GROUP. In accordance with the United Kingdom lottery ordinance, you are authorized as the lotto prize winner to request claims of your winning prize.
The FREELOTTO AUTOMATIC SUBSCRIPTION TICKET (F.A.S.T) GAME is an online promotional program organized by the FREELOTTO GROUP INTERNATIONAL. A total of 500,000 different email addresses are entered for the FREELOTTO AUTOMATIC SUBSCRIPTION TICKET GAME (F.A.S.T).
SINCERELY,
ROBERT A. V. BENARD,
GROUP PRESIDENT - FLG
Banned From Using a Computer (Score:2, Interesting)
I can get mired in technicalities, it is obvious the judgement refers to a personal computer. But that line does get fuzzy. Does an iPod count? A PDA? A cell phone?
Also, given how essential computer use is nowadays, this almost infringes on barring the pursuit of life, liberty yadda yadda. Yes he committed a crime, but it is almost to the point w
Re:Banned From Using a Computer (Score:2)
Re:Banned From Using a Computer (Score:3, Insightful)
Really ... who cares? He's demonstrated that his primary of using a computer is fraudulent and illegal.
If you commit vehicular manslaughter, and after you get out of jail they say you can't drive a car, what do I care that you can't get a job
Pointless (Score:5, Interesting)
From QuadCity Times: The lawsuit claimed that McCalla sent more than 280 million illegal spam e-mail messages into CIS's network...
He claimed that under state law in effect at the time, he was entitled to $10 per illegal e-mail.
Kramer said then that he likely will not see any of the judgment money.
Then what precisely, would be the point? If the claim is that this will somehow economically damage a spammer, when in fact not even a single dollar may be paid out ultimately to the aggrieved party. Not to mention the ruling is in Iowa but the spammer is in Florida, so there may be jurisdictional disputes, reciprocity or not.
This is merely smoke and mirrors, to make some people feel like they are doing their part in the war on spam. I don't see spam drying up. It seems to be getting worse. There has to be a real crackdown, perhaps even prison time if any inroads are to be made.
Wake me when they string this spammer up to a tall tree by his thumbs.
Re:Pointless (Score:2)
1 spam email should be considered a serious crime. Spammers are now commonly sending millions but that should not mean that we treat cases of individual unsolicited mail less seriously.
Access denied (Score:2, Insightful)
br? No porn for you!
Erm, what? (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, 11 BILLION dollars? That's more than the GDP some nations.... it's not only improbable that they'll collect, but what is the real point of asessing such a sum? They might have assigned a billion gazillion trillion quillion dollars for all that amount matters. My concern is "how will that help deal with the rest of them", so my cheering for this judgement is a bit tempered by the insanity of the judgement. Indebting an individual or even small group of individuals with 11 billion dollars is just as bad against spammers as the idiotic size of the RIAA lawsuits from a few years ago - last thing we need is sympathy for spammers because the hammer of justice fell too hard....
Re:Erm, what? (Score:2)
James McCalla is a WINNER!!! (Score:2)
---
Euro - Afro Asian Sweepstake Lottery
An Affiliate of Foundmoney International
Arena Complex Km 18 Route de Rufisque
I.P.P Award Dept.
Johannesburg, South Africa.
Ref: EAASL/941OYI/03
Batch: 03/06/MA34
WINNING NOTIFICATION:
Attn:Dear Sir/Madam
We happily announce to you the draw of the Euro - Afro Asian Sweepstake
Lo
GREETINGS (Score:2)
I AM THE AWARDEE OF RECORD OF A US FEDERAL COURT JUDGMENT OF ELEVEN BILLION TWO HUNDRED MILLION US DOLLARS ($11,200,000,000.00). UNFORTUNATELY, MY BANK ACCOUNT AT WELLS FARGO CLAIMS IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR THEM TO PROCESS SO
Ouch! (Score:2)
Appeal? (Score:2)
Here's the short list:
DRM: As the sony rootkit points out, a little slap on the hand is all that the good corporate citizens get in a bad situation. RIAA sharing-is-evil corporatethink included.
Trusted Computing: Loss of control over much of anything on a computer that used to be mine.
Representative Democracy: I don't really care who's running the insane asylum, but it bothers me more that the indivi
Patent Trolling Lawyers...should chase SPAMERS (Score:2)
fine? (Score:2)
The problem is Visa/MC/PayPal (Score:2)
Re:The problem is Visa/MC/PayPal (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Although most spammers are trying to sell "products", there are plenty (Nigeria, Phishing, etc) that don't.
2. It's extremely easy to accept credit cards (takes about 2 days to use PayPal-- I'm sure it's similar for other companies)-- Placing the burden of spammer-checking on the credit card gateways (or parent companies) would significantly increase the cost to businesses of accepting credit cards.
3. It's be rather easy for me to spam YOUR product in an attempt to (a) blackmail you, or (b) get credit card companies to drop you (in the case of a competitor).
3a. It would be equally easy for you to spam and then claim that it's actually me doing it.
4. What about companies that accept PayPal (or similar)?
Personally, I think we're on the right track. Tougher laws, better technology. I don't think we need more to add more bloat to the process of selling products.
By economic death penalty they must mean... (Score:3, Interesting)
By economic death penalty they must refer to something that is never actually carried out, delayed by infinite appeals and more for show than anything else. They'll never get a dime of those billions, the spammer will continue to spam (check out http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200 5601040360 [freep.com] - if the legal system won't do anything about a woman who was caught three times driving with a suspended license to her probation officer they won't do anything significant about a spammer) and people like me will lose ever more faith in the system.
We have people awarding impossible fines with full knowledge that they will never be recovered (ie: they knowingly refused to mete out justice since their "justice" is only something that exists on paper and in their fantasy world). We have judges who order restraining orders against David Letterman because somebody claimed he was using psychic powers to harass her. We have people who will devote months of their lives to sit on juries and render verdict even though everybody knows from the start that what the jury says is irrelevant because everything gets rewritten on appeal anyway.
The system is broke. The overlords of the system don't care; these people have much less respect for the law than the criminals they try in their courts.
Re:By economic death penalty they must mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
So what are you saying here? That the jury system should be eliminated? That there should no appeals of verdicts, ever? You say the system is "broke" but you offer no constructive alternative. You have no faith in the justice system yet imply that an authoritarian-style system of summ
Interesting math (Score:2)
$10 x 280,000,000 11,200,000,00
Where did the other factor of ~3 go? Maybe that's the judge was convinced that, like any IT project, you should just automatically multiply the requirements by 3.
The author should know someone's going to ask questions about that because because we want to know where the money is coming from and where it's going. Not clarifying that makes the article just regurgitation and makes it look like somethings being hidden.
Not t
Uhhh... (Score:2)
Whenever you hear of malicious hackers or spammers getting caught you always see these stipulations of "not allowed to use the Internet". If you ask me, it's kind of ridiculous to impose a restriction of that sort on a spammer who probably didn't actually do the spamming, but outsourced that to some kid in Russia.
Also, regarding the judgement. If the only point of
Re:Uhhh... (Score:2)
Yeah, becuase what the spammer needs to do is send out MORE emails as punishment. Jeesh. No, money talks.
If you ask me, it's kind of ridiculous to impose a restriction of that sort on a spammer who probably didn't actually do the spamming, but outsourced that to some kid in Russia.
And if we don't put harsh penalties to 'accessories to crime', we'll have spammers thriving non-
Finally! (Score:4, Interesting)
This might be a good turning point, especially with these ridiculously silly amounts which actually do mean that life, economically, is over for you. Everything the guys ever earns above and beyond whatever the minimum-for-life-that-you-can't-legally-take-away is in his jurisdiction will go poof, for the rest of his years.
In other words, the spam equation just changed from "make tons of money, if caught, lose some and continue" to "make tons of money, if caught you're pretty much dead". That's a different game.
Re:Finally! (Score:4, Interesting)
Second, bankruptcy costs a few hundred bucks. If the spammer has any other significant debt, this judgement will actually do him a favor by clearing all his debt out.
The net effect of this will be zero, or actually enable the spammer to expand his operation with upgraded equipment.
Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
something's missing (Score:3, Funny)
$280m * $10 = $2.8b ( != $11b )
maybe they converted to Canadian for bigger effect...
he's not (Score:2)
Re:he's not (Score:2)
I'm sure he's already sent money to an offshore bank account anyway. He's probably going to end up on a beach in Morocco or something.
Re:he's not (Score:2)
Re:So.. (Score:2)
There is this high government official in Nigeria (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I would rather that... (Score:5, Insightful)
How about a real one?
So you equate a sentence for spamming with a sentence used on serial murderers and the like? What even happened to that whole "let the punishment fit the crime" doctrine? I think the financial penalty along with any possible jail time is plenty.
Re:I would rather that... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, collectively, his spamming robbed humanity of lifetimes worth of time that could have been spent doing something else.
But I do agree with you. Death sentences for spammers is just silly.
Re:I would rather that... (Score:2)
So, are you saying that, if people didn't have to spend so much time dealing with spam, they would have been doing something that created additional lives?
Re:I would rather that... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I would rather that... (Score:3, Interesting)
And, that is just for the amount of emails that he got caught spamming. Also, some people spend less than 5 seconds deleting spam emails and some people spend more.
Re:I would rather that... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I would rather that... (Score:2)
it's a double sided axe effect
Re:Send him to "pound me in the ass federal prison (Score:2)
It's a big number but it is purely symbolic. They would have collected more if the fine had been $200, I doubt he'll pay that much of this.
Re:About right, I guess (Score:2)
Putting aside the obvious joke about holy men in boiling oil, the McDonald's frier is not a "computer". It's a electronic device. In the case of Mitnick, he wasn't allowed any electronic devices (including a telephone!) due to his proven ability to misuse them. In this case, he probably can't use anything that we would reasonably consider a PC,
Re:About right, I guess (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:About right, I guess (Score:2)
A better question is can he use an ATM or Cellphone given how much computers have permiated our life.
RICO/IOCCA = 3x statuatory damages (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Through the ISP? (Score:3, Informative)
Was the illegal act the fact that the emails went through the network or that the spam had cis.net in the return address?
In other words was the issue that the spam was tying up CIS' network, or that the spammer was making them look bad by pretending to be one of their users?
Any thoughts?
I think neither, it's simily that the spam law, as written, forbids sending bulk commercial e