Question:
spam email: actionable in court?
Looking Forjob
2011-09-14 05:04:43 UTC
I read an article where this guy in california sues people or companies who send him spam emails. So if I post on an internet site an item for sale or say a service I offer and I receive spam emails is that actionable in court? just curious how spam works and what laws are in place to keep it in check. thanks
Four answers:
Nuff Sed
2011-09-14 07:34:32 UTC
Yes, you can sue people who send you spam. The CAN-SPAM Act is not a license to send spam and the FTC cannot prevent you from using the state courts to protect yourself from damages caused by others.
anonymous
2011-09-14 05:17:51 UTC
I have no idea what you're talking about. You can sue anybody for anything. That's not the same as actually winning. There was a guy in Hawai'I who sued the US government in an attempt to prevent the Large Hadron Collider from starting operations. He thought it would blow up the Earth. Only problem is that the LHC is located in Switzerland and the US has no control over it. His case was soon thrown out of court. Likewise most spam comes from outside the US.
guaman
2016-10-14 04:37:45 UTC
My pal Alan, who's the community pc Maven, gave me a tip approximately unsolicited mail. aside from the 'putting's and staining unsolicited mail heavily, so it gets directed to the unsolicited mail container, He mentioned, "by no potential deliver an e mail with greater effective than one handle in the 'deliver' line. continually use the BCC line for added addresses." He mentioned the reason you do this it because of the fact there are companies and people who make money by potential of doing something noted as 'records mining.' They hack the internet on a universal foundation and that they seem for letters that the two have a protracted record of non-public addresses or letters that save getting forwarded and get an accumulation of addresses, because of the fact each and each sender would not difficulty to wipe out the previous addresses till now sending. If i'm getting an e mail and that i'm requested to 'deliver it on' the 1st element I do, while the 'compose new web site' comes up, is test down and delete all previous addresses.
David S
2011-09-14 05:17:40 UTC
It's not something you can sue for and win without financial damages, but it is regulated by the FCC. Check out the Can Spam Act. http://www.fcc.gov/guides/spam-unwanted-text-messages-and-email


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