Appeals Court Tosses $11M Spamhaus Judgement 134
Panaqqa writes "In a not unexpected move, the US 7th Circuit Court of Appeals threw out the $11 million awarded to e360 Insight and vacated a permanent injunction against Spamhaus requiring them to stop listing e360 Insight as a spammer. However, the ruling (PDF) does not set aside the default judgement, meaning that Spamhaus has still lost its opportunity to argue the case. The original judge could still impose a monetary judgement, after taking evidence from the spammer as to how much Spamhaus's block had cost them. This is unfortunate considering the legal leverage the recent ruling concerning spyware might have provided for Spamhaus."
So It's A Double Negative You Want, Eh? (Score:1, Funny)
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Oh yeah? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Oh yeah? (Score:4, Insightful)
-matthew
Re:Oh yeah? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Oh yeah? (Score:5, Informative)
FWIR, Spamhause showed up in state court & said, 'you have no jurisdiction, the US court system has no jurisdiction & even if it did, it would have to be a Federal court'. The state judge threw it out properly judging that with no presense or assets in his district, he didn't have jurisdiction. 360 then went to a Federal Judge to redo the case & Spamhause's lawyers in the UK rightly asserted that "fuck the US court system, they have no jurisdiction, don't waste your money." or words to that effect. The problem is that the Federal Judge forgot that US law applies in the US not the world and ruled that being in another country doing things that are perfectly legal & not tortable (is that a word?) in that country is no reason that US law shouldn't be applied to them. In accordance with the new ruling on spyware, 360's case isn't actionable in the US anymore either, but that didn't seem to bother the appeals judge at all in denying the appeal of the ruling.
Sort of (Score:5, Informative)
If you don't answer at all, a default is entered. This is what happened.
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Yous don like it? Sos Sue Me!
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Spam the Judge Haus? (Score:2)
Err....
Still don't get it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Still don't get it. (Score:4, Insightful)
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-matthew
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It's up to the people who
So is it OK with you if I put you on the list?
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I'm going to create a list of murderers.
/use/ my list, such as employers, to determine the accuracy of the list, and whether they should use it for their purposes. I give no warranty and I have no liability of the information in the list.
It's up to the people who
So is it OK with you if I put you on the list?
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Most places that do background check pay some third party to do it. If that third party relied in whole or in part on the list in question, perhaps to fill gaps in other records, then, no, the background check would not reveal the list would be wrong, it would return the results of relying on the list.
Now, what would happen in the real world today is that the first person to find out they were flagg
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If it were a list like the first person that replied to me proposed, it would be much more time consuming to check (assuming the potential employer wanted to do as thorough a job as possible), but being as I've not stolen items like pens, paper, and
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But anyway, the Spamhaus list is much more like the list of employees that have stolen pens and pencils. If you are given a list like that, yo
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This will be the last reply from me, to you. The only conclusion I can come to is that you are a spammer that was, in some way, affected by what Spamhaus was
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Your last reply? That was your first reply. I don't understand what you mean by my "replies" and "statements". There has been one. Which you have picked apart cleverly by calling it pathetic and calling me a spammer. I just don't know what to say... I'm going to have to think hard to come up with a reply to that logic!
Now I know you said you wouldn't reply again
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Is it libel we're talking about here? Is that what the spamhaus vs. e360 case is about? If it isn't then your points are moot.
-matthew
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The problem is that there are many different jurisdictions that would be checked, and employers that "do" background investigations do not, for the most part, "do" the investigations themselves, they pay someone else, who uses private databases collected from various public sources.
So, yes, while checking the right sources woul
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-matthew
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You can, as long as that database doesn't infringe on the rights of other companies to do their business. If you listed Microsoft, SCO, and Apple all in a database of "douchebag companies", posted that on your site, and then told everyone to bl
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That said, they're providing a service that their customers ask for. They clearly outline their criteria and let their customers decide if and how to use it. It seems to me that the spammers only have a legitimate complaint against the ISPs that use the Spamhaus data. Even then, it would be a ha
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Re:Still don't get it. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see the problem with keeping a list. If it is a bad list with too many false positives, then nobody would use it. Sheesh.
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Oh please, how many sites out there list "douchebag companies" and tell people not to buy from them? It is called free speech.
-matthew
Re:Still don't get it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Carl Sagan once sued Apple for calling him a "butt-head astronomer." Sagan lost the suit, because according to the judge:
I'm sure "douchebag companies" would fall into the same category.
Spamhaus' Register Of Known Spam Operations (ROKSO) is a list of "known professional spam operations that have been terminated by a minimum of 3 Internet Service Providers for spam offenses." That's a much more serious accusation than "butt-head" or "douchebag." If it's true, of course, then the plaintiffs can burn in hell... but they claim it's not true, and they've been falsely labeled by Spamhaus, which has damaged their reputation and cost them business.
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Wow, it's a good thing that slashdot hasn't been doing exactly that for the last decade then. Oh, wait...
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Spamhaus could have list A, the spammer list. This is what the judge prevented them from putting e360 on.
So then they could have list B, the "list of people we wrongly suspected were spammers and have been ordered not to characterize as such, wink wink".
Then Spamhaus sends everyone lists A and B. Then everyone using Spamhaus's list to filter says, "Hey, why not just block A *and* B?" Spamhaus assists in this process by making the default when you sign up to be that you
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Its like slander or liable; just because you say its spam, doesn't make it true. You can't setup any arbitrary rules you like, and say anything that violates them is spam without some kind of proof. Getting an email you didn't want
One step ahead of the shoe-shine... (Score:1)
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at YOUR site you can choose to drop any IP datagram you want. any. you are NOT required by law (ianal) to HAVE to receive (let alone read) any or all data that hits your site.
freedom means you have the right to allow or disallow anyone into your 'home' unless they have a warrant and are an official gov rep (eg, police).
in this case, spamhaus makes 'recommendations' (not unlike MS in yesterday's article letting the religious nutjobs tell
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The only issue is the way their first legal team handled the case, by first submitting to jurisdiction, then second, claiming the courts don't have jurisdiction and withdrawing.
Either answer would have been fine. Both isn't.
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Listing a domain or IP in a database is making a claim about it. Should anyone be able to claim anything about you, regardless of truth or falsity, regardless of the resulting harm, with the responsibility only on the listener to decide if it is true or false? Perhaps they should be, but it is pretty well established that there are boundaries to this in general, hence laws regarding slander, libel, etc., and I don't see any reason that an
Spamhaus? (Score:2, Interesting)
I can see it now: SPAMwurst, mit Kraut
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Also, I hear that doesn't have much Spamwurst in it.
Wouldn't work. (Score:3, Funny)
Spam, I suspect, would fall under the category of "cheese".
So, the next logical step is (Score:3, Funny)
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Reading the opinion, the judge seemed to recognize that Spamhaus availed itself of the U.S. court systems and then, in a really stupid move, wanted out and gave up its rights in the process. Unsurprisingly, it lost at the district court, a
Woe be gone (Score:3, Insightful)
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As for "herbal" viagra, well there such a wide definition, it could literally be anything, and anything from anywhere.
Also a lot of the spam for porn sites is actually known about by the companies who own the porn sites. Plausable deniability.
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Lets assume that these spammers actually have some kind of product (whether it works/does what is claimed or not is irrelevant, what matters is that they have a product) and are actually sending it out to people who buy from their crappy
If the place where the pills are coming from is located outside of the US, the drugs can be stopped in the mail (I believe mailing drugs into the US from outside of the US is illegal). If the place where the
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This is only a wild guess, but I'd imagine someone that's too embarrassed to ask their doctor for viagra is hardly going to write a letter of complaint to (or, indeed, telephone) a total stranger and say "Dear Sir, I can't get it up".
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Lets assume that these spammers actually have some kind of product (whether it works/does what is claimed or not is irrelevant, what matters is that they have a product) and are actually sending it out to people who buy from their crappy .biz website.
If the place where the pills are coming from is located outside of the US, the drugs can be stopped in the mail (I believe mailing drugs into the US from outside of the US is illegal). If the place where the pills are coming from is located inside the US then the places they are being sent from could be shut down for not having a license or something. If enough people bought these "generic drugs" and didnt actually get them, they might care enough to complain to the supplier.
The spam sites don't have a real product - they simply collect the credit card information from users for use in further criminal activity (e.g. ident theft, child porn, etc.) For at least one of these sites, the process is described in great detail: http://spamtrackers.eu/wiki/index.php?title=My_Can adian_Pharmacy [spamtrackers.eu]
In my opinion, placing orders using randomly generated contact/CC info would do more damage, as they would have to filter through these false orders. If done to enough of a degree, it makes ope
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Seeing as Viagra is still very much under patent protection, I think it's safe to say that any "generic" alternative on general sale in the Western world is likely not an alternative at all, and may contain pretty much anything.
Now I think of it, I'm pretty certain rat poison (at least as sold in the UK) has a distinct blue colour. I wonder....
I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)
In reverse, is the do-not-call list something that will be targeted next?
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)
Because Spamhaus didn't show up in court to explain it. From Wikipedia:
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and DoubleClick (Score:2, Interesting)
I can't remember the original source but it was a few years ago I read an article about spam. Very interesting, most of the cost of advertising went to the advertiser (as it should) with paper media. Not so with spam, almost all the cost of spam goes to the recipient and hardly any to the
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I think corporations that get spammed, including ISP's should be able to go to companys like DoubleClick and e360 and bill them for the aggregiate costs. "You sent 2 million emails through our network last month, here is your bill for 200k for bandwidth + costs for the end users"
unfortunately that same logic could be applied to other sites that the ISPs want to extort
"Hello Google, you sent x Gigabytes of data through our network to our customers, here's the bill for the bandwidth used..."
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Yet, I'm not.
Try using Firefox with heavy blockers. Even a tailored hosts file on your router would help, assuming you are running bind or something similar on your router.
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Good work.
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That's the logic that the big ISPs and telcos are using for their arguments in the net neutrality debate: "If you send a lot of traffic through my network, I'm going to bill you for it." And all (or a lot of) the end users (including, to some extent, me) got up in arms about that, effectively saying "I'm already footing the bill f
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e360 Insight should sue an ISP... (Score:3, Interesting)
They can't. (Score:2)
If an ISP was sued, both CAN-SPAM and the CDA gives immunity to the ISP for filtering and blocking. See White Buffalo Ventu
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Obviously you don't run a mail server, and have no idea how much spam is being blocked for you. If your e-mail wasn't being filtered, you would either stop using it, or desperately try to find a way to filter it.
I have an unfiltered account that I manage Spambayes to filter it. Using that, I have full access to its results, can tune it as I like and can recover any messages that have been misfiltered. So far it has not yet misidentified legit email as spam, and I only get a couple of spam messages a da
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Repeat after me, ISPs are not common carriers. They are data services. They don't want to be common carriers.
There are many reasons they don't want to be common carriers, but the most often stated is because they would have to share the lines with the competition. Cable companies don't want to share and neither do the telcos(but the telcos are stuck with i
Huge gift (Score:2)
This is a HUGE gift from the appeals court.
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Linhardt is in trouble now. (Score:5, Interesting)
The reason for this is my case against him, at http://www.barbieslapp.com/spam/e360/timeline.htm [barbieslapp.com] , because in my case, I argued (and lost) personal juridiction of Linhardt, in part because he said (and the court believed it) that he had no business in California. I pointed out in his affadavit in the Spamhaus where he said "e360 and I lost contracts..." and "e60 and I lost business opportunities.." and that of the 7 companies listed, 4 are in California, he explained it away by saying that he really meant that when he said, e360 and I he meant e360 and I in my role as president. If you don't suffer harm personally, you have no standing to bring a lawsuit. I filed a motion for reconsideration, on Linhardt's personal jurisdiction, in part based on this.
Spamhaus's lawyers are aware of this.
Would this be evil/wrong? (Score:2, Funny)
1) Send a massive spam campaign selling pharmaceuticals (viagra, weight loss, zoloft, hair regrowth, you name it)
2) When the orders come in, send out authentic-looking prescription medication, but instead of medicine the pills are made of fast-acting poison.
3) Thousands of people who are stupid enough to actually respond to spam, buy medication from spammers, and ingest said medication, are killed.
4) Massive media coverage of the event makes spamming seem "dangerous" to t
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This is unfortunately already happening:
Vancouver Sun: Online drugs can prove deadly: coroner [canada.com]
Not a joke: real people are dying from these scumbags.
There are also several mentions of death via overdose or fake prescriptions containing harmful particles in the recent court documents released on the Chris "Rizler" Smith conviction as well:
http://spamsuite.com/node/195 [spamsuite.com]
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Your post advocates a
( ) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based (x) vigilante
approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)
( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
( ) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
( ) No o
Gotta love this judge (Score:2, Interesting)
He really had to work hard to "do the right thing".
Satisfied customer (Score:2)
I think Spamhaus could have avoided the issues they are dealing with now by not labeling spammers as spammers, and came up with a more politically correct term that is legally bulletproof.
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David Linhardt, DBA e360, is a complete out-and-out spammer -- Spamhaus and others have copious documented proof of this fact. This is not a marketer suing over an erroneous listing, this is a clear-cut "sue to spam" tactic. If we're looking for other terms to describe Linhardt, feel free to pick one or more of these:
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Spamhaus are not in any trouble because of what name they used, or even what they listed. They're in "trouble" on a technicality, they messed up their claim that this court has no jurisdiction over them (which it doesn't; they are not a US company and have no holdings or business in the US, so a US court can't do a damn th
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Re:Satisfied customer (Score:4, Informative)
As a donation-funded non-profit organisation based in the UK and Switzerland, they don't do business in the US at present, never have, and are not particularly likely to do so in the future. They don't even have a tax-exempt status in the US. A US court cannot prohibit US citizens from donating to them, nor can they confiscate those donations. There really isn't anything that a US court can do to them.
So what? (Score:2)
You can expect Spamhaus to keep listing Lindtard's e360 spam-sewer ad vitam æternam.
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Spamhaus's lawyers screwed up, bad. They could have made the jurisdiction argument up front, and this would all have gone away. Perhaps they should sue their lawyers, but that doesn't mean that they are not subject to the judgement of the court that those lawyers acknowledged had jurisdiction (although in
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IANAL, but I'm pretty sure that where you're named as the defendant in a civil case taking place in another country, you can pretty much decide to do what you like with the judgement, including wipe your bottom with it.
Problems only start if you wish to travel to that country at a later date.
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Well, no, if you have assets or business dealings in the country, you certainly stand financial risk from ignoring the case even if you never wish to visit personally, and, IIRC, several countries have agreeements allow
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Yes, but my argument is "if they have no business within the US, no intention of visiting, and there is no US/UK agreement whereby civil cases brought in the US may be followed up in the UK, who or what is going to stop them voluntarily un-subjecting themselves to federal jurisdiction?"
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The UK courts are a lot more fun though, as it's a loser-pays system, so you can't just go randomly suing people unless you're prepared to pay both sides of the battle -- If you want to sue, you either have to be rich, or right.