This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0626bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Further codifying
spam
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 06/26/00
On
June 14, the U.S. House of Representatives' Commerce Committee approved a bill
that further legalizes and somewhat restricts spam e-mail. The bill is very
much a mixed blessing, and a few small additions would make a big
difference.
The bill, H.R. 3113
(http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c106:H.R. 3113:), bears the grand title
"Unsolicited Electronic Mail Act of 1999" and aims to "protect
individuals, families and Internet service providers from unsolicited and
unwanted electronic mail."
While the bill's ostensible purpose
is to protect people from junk e-mail, the biggest effect would unequivocally
make such e-mail legal. The bill does not even give ISPs the right to ban this
type of e-mail outright; it only gives them the right to demand compensation
from a sender of unsolicited e-mail for the cost of delivering the mail. It is
far from clear if an ISP could set a high value on its spam delivery services
under this proposed law.
The task for anyone who actually would like
to control unsolicited e-mail is that so far the U.S. courts have decided the
free speech clause in the U.S. Constitution enables spammers to inundate our
mailboxes with all sorts of textual and visual garbage. Thus, the bill limits
itself to "unsolicited commercial electronic mail and unsolicited
pandering electronic e-mail," but does not address unsolicited
noncommercial e-mail. For example, someone could send a copy of the Unabomber's
manifesto to his 10 million closest friends and this bill would provide no way
to block that.
This bill may be about as good as we are going to get,
but there are a few things missing.
Basically, the bill tells the
Federal Communications Commission to maintain a list of people who do not want
to get spam and tells people who send spam not to send any to people on the
list. But the bill should target people who sell lists of e-mail addresses as
well as those who use such lists.
It also should include some way that
the operator of an e-mail list, such as the Internet Engineering Task Force's,
can get the list name onto the FCC list.
The bill requires a
"conspicuously displayed" e-mail address to ask to get off but should
require that this address be the return address on the spam.
The bill
also requires that notice be given to a spammer through "registered or
certified mail" but does not require a working postal address in the spam
- it should. The bill should permit ISPs to "just say no."
The
bill should especially enable class action lawsuits against spammers. The way
it is now, you can sue if you got e-mail after saying no, but who is going to
bother for the $500 to $2,500 you might get?
We are doomed to be
inundated with more spam, but a good law might help some.
Disclaimer:
I'm sure Harvard Business and Law Schools have people profiting on all sides of
this issue, but I did not ask them, and the above advice is my own.
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