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Outlaw Spam?Not yet in the federal legislatureITinfo SponsorERROR: Random File UnopenableThe file was not found on your file system. This means that it has either not been created or the path you have specified in $trrandom_file is incorrect.
U.S. Lawmakers Averse to Outlawing Spamby Dave MurphyISSN 1535-3613
No Representative or Senator appears to strongly support any of the anti-spam provisions before the 107th Congress--despite popular demand for federal protections. "If a bill does pass, it would be over the objections of virtually every interested group," said Ray Everett Church, co-founder and board member of The Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-Mail (CAUCE). The bill that's got the most attention on Capitol Hill is the Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act of 2001, or HR 718, sponsored by Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M. The bill reiterates legislation that nearly passed in Congress last year, but it's been modified this year--much to the chagrin of consumer advocates. The legislative problem is partially caused by disagreements over how to define spam and the rights associated with opt-in and opt-out subscription lists. I know that with this list, ITinfo, we cut a generous swath around the issue and rarely, if ever any more, subscribe any email address to the list ourselves. All subscriptions are strictly opt-in; we want subscribers to use our web-based or email-based subscription forms, so the list remains absolutely opt-in. Not all e-zine publishers follow the same standards. For example, I receive up to 600 spam messages a day, many are recurring articles from junk e-zines to which I was "opt-out" subscribed. I don't want the responsibility to opt-out. Leave me out, if I want to opt-in, I'll ask. Here's a rundown of the anti-spam bills before the 107th Congress.
Wireless Telephone Spam Protection Act (HR 113)Introduced in January 2001 by Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., the bill would block unwanted ads sent to wireless devices. Status: Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act of 2001 (HR 718)Introduced in February 2001 by Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., and identical to a bill passed by the House in 2000. The bill requires unsolicited commercial e-mail to be labeled and to include opt-out instructions; it also prohibits false headers. As amended in committee March 2001, the bill prevents ISPs from legal action against a spammer unless the provider had already asked to opt out of further communication. It gives ISPs the right to enforce violations up to $500 per illegal spam. Status: Pending review in House Judiciary Committee until June 5, 2001.
Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 (HR 1017)Introduced by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., in March 2001. Amends federal computer crime laws to make it illegal to send unsolicited bulk e-mail messages containing a false sender address or header, or to distribute software designed for this purpose. Status: House committee hearings held May 5.
The "Can Spam" Act of 2001 (S. 630)Introduced by Sen. Conrad R. Burns, R-Mont., in March 2001. Requires junk messages to be labeled and to include opt-out instructions; it also prohibits deceptive subject lines and false headers. It gives ISPs the right to enforce violations up to $10 per illegal spam. The FTC and state attorneys general also have right of enforcement. Status: Senate hearing could happen as early as next week.
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ReferencesU.S House of RepresentativesU.S. Senate Message Center
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