The Spam Report

You are here: silicon.com > Research > Special Reports > The Spam Report

The Spam Report

AOL UK to take on overseas spammers

No hiding place, warns ISP...

By Graeme Wearden

Published: 10 December 2003 17:10 GMT

AOL UK is gearing up to take legal action against overseas spammers who are flooding UK users with a tide of junk email.

The internet service provider has decided that there are few judicial steps it can take in Britain to prevent its customers being bombarded by unsolicited commercial email, so its legal team is concentrating on bringing a case against a major spammer in another country.

"It's clear that there isn’t a large-scale spammer operating in the UK that we can sue, so we took the decision last week to consider suing elsewhere on behalf of AOL UK members," Jonathan Lambeth, head of corporate media relations at AOL UK, said on Wednesday.

According to anti-spam campaigners such as Spamhaus, around 200 spammers are responsible for the vast majority of the junk email received by email users. Many of these are said to be based in the US, where AOL could well decide to bring its first legal action.

"It could be that AOL US brings a lawsuit against an American spammer for sending junk mail to AOL UK customers," Lambeth said. He explained that a charge of trespassing on AOL's proprietary network could potentially be brought.

AOL already has a track record of bring legal action against alleged spammers. In April this year, it filed five lawsuits against individuals and companies that it claimed were sending bulk unsolicited email to its members.

On 11 December, the British government's anti-spam law will come into effect. This makes it an offence for a UK company to send unsolicited mail to consumers with whom they don't have an existing business relationship. Opponents of the legislation claim it won't make a significant difference to the problem, because business email addresses aren't covered.

AOL says it is too early to give a verdict on the law, but suggested that the maximum fine - of £5,000 - might not be enough to deter a serious offender.

Graeme Wearden writes for ZDNet UK

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure
The Spam Report News

Spammers switching on to YouTube?
Video spam and PowerPoint slides next on the menu, warns MessageLabs...

Spam surge emanating from the Far East
Made in China...

US court upholds anti-spam law
Junks convicted spammer's appeal...

Spammers dust off their botnet passports
Targeting pastures new...

Spammers now own email's dirty reputation
So say email reputation services firms... But they would say that wouldn't they?

The Spam Report Extra

Stories from around the web...

Beware: You have mail Times Online

The economies of spam Global Politician

Special report: Fighting spam and cyberscams CNET News.com

Spam ain't dead yet PC Magazine

Slaying Spam-Spewing Zombie PCs PC World

RELATED RESEARCH

Make your voice heard

silicon.com and the Bathwick Group have created an opportunity for business and IT executives to share their experience with each other and thus enhance their knowledge of the IT marketplace.

Join our research panel, and you'll be asked to participate in short surveys - and then will be privy to the answers of all your colleagues, as we send you tailored versions of the results.

Extras include complementary passes to silicon.com events and survey prizes such as iPods. Plus, there are the obvious networking opportunities with your fellow panellists.

For more about the Research Panel and how to join, click here



Quick Sitemap Links: