The New York Times A.P. Index  

NYTimes: Home - Site Index - Archive - Help

Welcome, adenevens - Member Center - Log Out
Quotes:
Site Search:  


Advertisement




NYT Store
Photo: Pilgrimage in D.C., 1957Photo: Pilgrimage in D.C., 1957
Learn More.






Pound Ridge, NY
This 1860's Hiram Halle restoration offers antebellum porches overlooking a tranquil pond as well as a 2-bedroom guest cottage.

View this and many other dream homes in Westchester on realestate.nytimes.com.


Internet Providers Sue Hundreds for Unsolicited E-mail

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: March 10, 2004

ARTICLE TOOLS
Email This Article E-Mail This Article
Printer Friendly Format Printer-Friendly Format
Most E-mailed Articles Most E-Mailed Articles


RELATED SITES

. Can-SPAM Act Lawsuits

TIMES NEWS TRACKER

  Topics

Alerts
Suits and Litigation



Filed at 1:44 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Some of the nation's largest Internet providers, in an unusual joint effort, said Wednesday they filed six lawsuits against hundreds of people who were accused of sending millions of unwanted e-mails in violation of the new U.S. law against ``spam.''

The legal actions by Microsoft Corp., America Online Inc., Earthlink Inc. and Yahoo! Inc., represent the first major industry actions under the ``can spam'' legislation that went into effect Jan. 1. The lawsuits, filed in federal courts in California, Georgia, Virginia and Washington state, were announced at a news conference.

The companies said the defendants include some of the nation's most notorious large-scale spammers. The Internet providers -- collectively with tens of millions of subscribers -- said they shared information, resources and investigative information to identify some of the defendants.

``Congress gave us the necessary tools to pursue spammers with stiff penalties, and we in the industry didn't waste a moment moving with speed and resolve to take advantage of the new law,'' said Randall Boe, AOL's top lawyer and executive vice president.

Dozens of those named in the lawsuits, however, were identified only as ``John Doe'' defendants who were accused of e-mailing unwanted pitches for prescription drugs, herbal potions and weight loss plans.

Among the named defendants were Davis Wolfgang Hawke of Medfield, Mass., whom AOL lawyers said also is known as Dave Bridger, and Braden Bournival of Manchester, N.H. They and others were accused of sending millions of e-mails offering weight loss supplements, handheld devices called ``personal lie detectors'' and other products.

The ``can spam'' legislation requires unsolicited e-mails to include a mechanism so recipients could indicate they did not want future mass mailings.

The law also prohibits senders of unsolicited commercial e-mail from disguising their identity by using a false return address or misleading subject line, and it prohibits senders from harvesting addresses off Web sites.


Get home delivery of The Times from $2.90/week




TOP NYTIMES.COM ARTICLES
. Political Groups Spend Millions to Take on Bush in Ad Campaign
. Scientists Find Indications That Ovaries May Be Replenished
. Internet Providers Sue Hundreds for Unsolicited E-mail
. Dam Building Threatens China's 'Grand Canyon'
Go to NYTimes.com Home

TOP TECHNOLOGY ARTICLES
. Internet Providers Sue Hundreds for Unsolicited E-mail
. Robot Vehicle Successfully Navigates Test Course
. Kodak Accuses Sony of Patent Violations on Digital Imaging
. TV Review | 'Game Over': Video Game Heroes: Just Folks
Go to Technology

OUR ADVERTISERS
Get IBM quality at low prices on eBay.

MSN Video. See the world from your PC.