- Related Stories
-
Zombie tool makes use of Windows, antivirus flaws
November 29, 2006 -
'Tis the season to send spam
November 20, 2006 -
Zombies continue to chase Windows PCs
October 24, 2006 -
Microsoft sets Sender ID free
October 23, 2006 -
Microsoft wins record amount from spammer
September 13, 2006 -
U.K. spammer gets two-month curfew
August 23, 2006 -
Microsoft looks to foil Web spammers
July 13, 2006 -
Microsoft allies with antispam group
March 14, 2006 -
Microsoft takes on spam zombies
October 27, 2005
The technology giant took to court Paul Martin McDonald, who through his company Bizads sold e-mail addresses that were then used as spam lists. Microsoft sought and was granted a summary judgment against McDonald, arguing that his actions had caused Microsoft to suffer loss and damage to the goodwill it enjoyed as owner of the Web-based e-mail service Hotmail.
The judge agreed with Microsoft that Bizads had breached the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR), a U.K. law that includes regulations designed to halt the sending of unsolicited e-mail.
"The evidence plainly established that the business of Bizads was supplying e-mail lists of persons who had not consented to receive direct marketing mail and that it had encouraged purchasers of the lists to send e-mails to those people," the judge said.
The judge ruled that Microsoft had suffered a loss as a result of the breach of the PECR and was entitled to compensation and an injunction restraining McDonald from instigating the transmission of commercial e-mails to Hotmail accounts.
IT law expert Struan Robertson called the ruling a "good result in the battle against spam." Robertson, who is a senior associate at Pinsent Masons solicitors, said the result is interesting as it is one of the first times PECR has been used to stop someone selling lists for spam.
According to Robertson, the court rejected a claim that the people on the lists had consented to receiving spam, due to their complaints.
"People making complaints indicates they hadn't consented," said Robertson. PECR covers unsolicited e-mail.
"It's interesting that Paul McDonald didn't send the spam himself; he just sold the lists," Robertson said. "But the court was able to characterize selling the lists as instigation of spam."
Tom Espiner of ZDNet UK reported from London.
See more CNET content tagged:
MSN Hotmail, spam, Judge, U.K., e-mail address





And Microsoft needs to safeguard its email databases!
Will
Fil
Would the judge have come up with the same conclusion even if Microsoft had not pushed the case?
Walt
- Good, but not good enough
- by cathleen_44 December 19, 2006 2:34 PM PST
- This is great, I just wish more people would do the same...I get so much spam, I feel like I spend most of my time just deleting crap in my inbox. I try and be careful, but you never know where the spam is coming from...it seems like everytime I buy something or do ANYTHING online, I'm just giving my email address to thousands of people...I just started using this thing called Nyms, and it doesn't really stop the spam, but it does let me know where it's coming from and it will stop any future spam from that one source...pretty cool...
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(6 Comments)