Aquawheel.com Aquawheel.com Aquawheel.com
Index Page >> About Us >> Place Your Link >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 
 

Drink & Food

 

People & Society

 

Events & News

 

Shopping Online

 

Home & Garden

 

Entertainment

 

Realty & Property

 

Science & Research

 

Art & Culture

 

Self Enhancement

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Tour & Travel

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Investment & Finance

 

Politics & Government

 

Online & Board Games

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Education & Reference

 

Medical Care

 

Software & Networking

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Companies & Business

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Children & Teens

 

Index Page › Software & Networking › Handling Spam
 

What Exactly is Spam?

 

Spam, as defined in the context of computers, the Internet and electronic messaging, is a term used to designate unsolicited bulk electronic messaging and communication. In particular, spam is unsolicited bulk mailings that are commercially oriented. It is most commonly used in advertising, but it is also used to perpetrate religious, political or other types of messages. Spam is, often times, considered the electronic equivalent of junk postal mail, telemarketing or broadcast faxing. Spam got its bad name and reputation from the advertisement of ill reputable and questionable products, such as pornography, pyramid schemes, fad products, pump-and-dump stocks, etc.

Spam is delivered via several mediums, to include:

E-mail messages

Search engines

Instant messaging

Web blogs

Usenet newsgroups

Text messaging mobile phones

Internet telephony

The growth of spam is a result of the cost benefit to initiators, who need only devise and develop distribution lists. The other associated costs of spam, such as bandwidth, message management and loss of productivity, become the responsibility of recipients of the messages, ISPs or other public and private entities.

In 2003, the US passed the Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing (CAN-SPAM) Act of 2003, which establishes standards for sending commercial e-mail. More specifically, the act is intended to regulate interstate commerce by imposing limitations and penalties on the transmission of unsolicited, commercial electronic mail via the Internet. The act establishes the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) as the overseer of its provisions.

The act establishes electronic mail as extremely important in communication since it provides an opportunity for the development and growth of frictionless commerce, which is being threatened by unsolicited commercial email. The act establishes the following as criminal behaviors when used in connection with foreign or interstate electronic mail:

Knowingly accessing a protected computer without authorization

Intentionally deceiving or misleading the origin of messages

Falsifying header information

Falsifying registration information for 5 or more e-mail accounts or 2 or more domain names

Falsely representing one's self as the registrant of 5 or more IP addresses

Obtaining e-mail addresses through improper means

Perpetrating fraud, identity theft, child pornography, obscenity and the sexual exploitation of children.

Criminal penalties include a fine and/or imprisonment for up to 5 years dependent upon:

The volume of electronic transmissions

The amount of falsified information

Losses incurred by others

Monetary gains from the act

Whether the act was committed in furtherance of an felony

Prior offenses.

Civil penalties are dependent upon the jurisdiction placing the charges and may range from hundreds of dollars to millions of dollars, dependent upon the severity of the crimes and losses involved. Also, property traceable to proceeds from monetary gains and equipment used to commit an offense may be forfeited to the US government.

As critics of the law argue, the legislation fails to dictate to marketers and advertisers, not to spam. In fact, the act does not make reference to the term, spam, except as used in the name, CAN-SPAM. The act makes reference to the phrase, commercial electronic mail message, and defines it to be any electronic mail message, the primary purpose of which is the commercial advertisement or promotion of a commercial product or service (including content on an Internet website operated for a commercial purpose).

Legislation is intended to curb practices inherent in spamming, such as e-mail harvesting, dictionary attacks and using viruses and Trojans to perpetrate messages. The act establishes the following with respect to commercial electronic mail messages:

A message must contain a legitimate return address.

A message must include and specify a method to opt-out of receiving further messages. The ability to opt-out must be available for 30 days.

The sender may not initiate messages after 10 days of receipt of an opt-out.

The sender may not sell, lease, exchange or transfer the opt-out e-mail address to an affiliate.

The sender may offer a menu of options that allow the recipient to either opt-out or opt-in to future messages*.

A message must include an identifier that specifies the message as an advertisement or solicitation.

Messages containing sexually oriented material must contain clearly identifiable markings or notices

A message must include a valid, physical, postal address by which the sender may be contacted.

The sender may not send messages to addresses that were knowingly acquired from proprietary websites and ISPs, through automated methods. Particularly, when the site or ISP provides notice of their refusal to give, sell or transfer addresses for the purpose of initiating electronic mail messages.

The sender may not create automated scripting and other means to gain multiple email addresses for the purpose of transmitting illegal messages.

The sender may not transmit messages from a computer or email address obtained without authorization.

*Unlike opt-out advertising, which allows the recipients of advertisement to discontinue any unwanted advertisements from the sender, opt-in advertising allows the advertiser to request to have specific advertisement sent. The recipient may allow or deny permission to have further advertisement sent. If allowed, the advertiser immediately includes that e-mail address to its distribution list. Another option is, double opt-in advertising, which is similar to opt-in advertising except that once the recipient grants permission to send advertisements, a confirmation request is sent to the recipient to verify that they did, indeed, allow the permission. The e-mail address is added to the distribution list only after the recipient has positively responded to the confirmation request.

CAN-SPAM is not intended to provide cause for the general public to sue spammers, individually or in class action suits. It is designed to allow enforcement by the FTC and other federal agencies for the benefit of the general public. Individuals remain privy to the state laws and regulations of their particular jurisdictions.

Author: Matt Bacak
 
Author Bio:
Matt Bacak is a eminent columnist. Matt likes to write articles about this subject.
This article can be searched using: the best spam blockers, free spam blockers, spam blocking software, block spam, spam block software
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Quality Recovery and Rework - When It All Goes Wrong
 
Inflatable Palm Trees
 
7 Ways to Increase the Value of Your Website
 
Poker Affiliate Programs: Generate Online Poker Income Without Risking Your Capital
 
Your Domain -- Just the Facts!
 
Is Your Laptop or Home Computer Wireless Enabled?
 
How to Find an Affordable and Reliable Web Hosting Provider
 
Noise Cancelling Headphones and iPods
 
10 Benefits Of Having Your Own Home-Based Internet Business
 
Setting Up Your Business Website...
 
 
 
 

Wireless Access Points: Thin vs Fat

Learn how to save 60% on your total cost of ownership on your wireless LAN. After reading this artic ... - Eric Meyer
 

Cell Phone Records - So Who Have You Been Calling...?

Keep track of who you have been calling and who has been calling you by ordering your cell phone rec ... - Amit Mehta
 

How to Get Search Engines to Notice Your Site

Article marketing is now considered the method of choice for web marketing. It is the best way to ge ... - Alexis Dey
 
 

Your Home Business Site's "Usability" Can Increase Your Buyers by 40% and Boost Each Order By 10%!

If you don't test your site, your visitors and customers will ""test"" it every day! The problem is, ... - Larry Potter
 

The Real Secrets Behind The Internet Marketing Hype

Here are a few points that will save you from getting caught and losing a lot of money due to common ... - Christopher Thomas Robinson
 

Blog Make Money Fast Idea

People are able to sense fairly fast what is genuine and useful information and what is generally li ... - Christopher Kyalo
 

Turn One-Time "Hits" Into Repeat Visitors

Every website owner faces the same challenge: How to get more traffic to their website. "Build it an ... - Jim Edwards
 

Microsoft SQL 2000 Disaster Recovery with SANRAD V-Switch - Planning Guide

Designing a disaster recovery system requires planning and consideration of the available options th ... - Efrat Aharoni-Levi
 
 
Index Page >> Privacy >> Terms of Service
© 2008 www.aquawheel.com All Rights Reserved.