Yahoo awarded $610 million
The Federal district court in New York awarded Yahoo $610 million dollars in a suit they filed in 2008.
The Federal district court in New York awarded Yahoo $610 million dollars in a suit they filed in 2008.
This is a post I’ve put off for a while as the definition of spam is a sticky subject. There are online fora where the definition of spam has been debated for more than 10 years, and if there isn’t a working definition after all that time, it’s unlikely there will ever be a definition the participants can agree on.
This came up again recently because one of the comments on my “Reputation is not permission” post took me to task for daring to call the mail “spam.” I’m going to assert here that the mail was unsolicited bulk email. I did not ask for it and I know at least 4 other people that received it.
The commenter, and a few marketers, argue that if the mail is sent without any forgery and the mail contains an opt-out link then it is not spam. It is a definition I have only seen folks who want to send unsolicited bulk email use, however. What they are really arguing is their mail isn’t spam because they provide a valid return address and a way to opt-out. Few people actually agree with this definition.
Here are 10 of the many definitions of spam that I’ve seen.
I was recently taken to task for claiming that unsolicited bulk email was spam.
Read MoreOne of the comments on my Spamtraps post claims that audit trails should be maintained by recipients, not senders.
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