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The CAN-SPAM Act:
Requirements for E-mailers
The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (Controlling the
Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act)
establishes requirements for those who send commercial email,
spells out penalties for spammers and companies whose products
are advertised in spam if they violate the law, and gives
consumers the right to ask e-mailers to stop spamming them.
The law, which became effective January 1,
2004, covers email whose primary purpose is advertising or
promoting a commercial product or service, including content on
a Web site. A "transactional or relationship message"
email that facilitates an agreed-upon transaction or updates
a customer in an existing business relationship may not
contain false or misleading routing information, but otherwise
is exempt from most provisions of the CAN-SPAM Act.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the
nation's consumer protection agency, is authorized to enforce
the CAN-SPAM Act. CAN-SPAM also gives the Department of Justice
(DOJ) the authority to enforce its criminal sanctions. Other
federal and state agencies can enforce the law against
organizations under their jurisdiction, and companies that
provide Internet access may sue violators, as well.
What the Law Requires
Here's a rundown of the law's main
provisions:
- It bans false or misleading header information.
Your e-mail's "From," "To," and routing
information including the originating domain name and
email address must be accurate and identify the person
who initiated the email.
- It prohibits deceptive subject lines. The
subject line cannot mislead the recipient about the contents
or subject matter of the message.
- It requires that your email give recipients an
opt-out method. You must provide a return email
address or another Internet-based response mechanism that
allows a recipient to ask you not to send future email
messages to that email address, and you must honor the
requests. You may create a "menu" of choices to
allow a recipient to opt out of certain types of messages,
but you must include the option to end any commercial
messages from the sender.
Any opt-out mechanism you offer must be able to process
opt-out requests for at least 30 days after you send your
commercial email. When you receive an opt-out request, the
law gives you 10 business days to stop sending email to the
requestor's email address. You cannot help another entity
send email to that address, or have another entity send
email on your behalf to that address. Finally, it's illegal
for you to sell or transfer the email addresses of people
who choose not to receive your email, even in the form of a
mailing list, unless you transfer the addresses so another
entity can comply with the law.
- It requires that commercial email be identified as
an advertisement and include the sender's valid physical
postal address. Your message must contain clear and
conspicuous notice that the message is an advertisement or
solicitation and that the recipient can opt out of receiving
more commercial email from you. It also must include your
valid physical postal address.
Penalties
Each violation of the above provisions is
subject to fines of up to $11,000. Deceptive commercial email
also is subject to laws banning false or misleading advertising.
Additional fines are provided for commercial
e-mailers who not only violate the rules described above, but
also:
- "harvest" email addresses from Web sites or Web
services that have published a notice prohibiting the
transfer of email addresses for the purpose of sending email
- generate email addresses using a "dictionary
attack" combining names, letters, or numbers into
multiple permutations
- use scripts or other automated ways to register for
multiple email or user accounts to send commercial email
- relay emails through a computer or network without
permission for example, by taking advantage of open
relays or open proxies without authorization.
The law allows the DOJ to seek criminal
penalties, including imprisonment, for commercial e-mailers who
do or conspire to:
- use another computer without authorization and send
commercial email from or through it
- use a computer to relay or retransmit multiple commercial
email messages to deceive or mislead recipients or an
Internet access service about the origin of the message
- falsify header information in multiple email messages and
initiate the transmission of such messages
- register for multiple email accounts or domain names using
information that falsifies the identity of the actual
registrant
- falsely represent themselves as owners of multiple
Internet Protocol addresses that are used to send commercial
email messages.
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