On Tue, 2 Dec 1997, Hogland, Thomas E. wrote: > The word from the US Postal Service is: According to 18 USC sec 1302 > (the Postal Lottery Laws always quoted in these letters) , if the letter > asks you to send money someplace and says that you'll make a big return > on it by forwarding the letter, it's illegal. Doesn't matter if there's > a product for sale or not - if it asks you to send money and promises > you'll get money back it'll illegal. Also, if it's a "send a postcard > and you'll get back a thousand postcards" it's legal (no $$$ changing > hands and a postcard has no real value according to law). 18 USC 1341 > (or 1342 - I can't remember) says that causing this mail to be sent is > illegal - you don't have to send it yourself... Fines range from $1000 > to $1,000,000 and jail time from 30 days to 30 years. > the problem is the postal service laws have no sway on electronic mail and this kind of message is currently totally legal :(
there are moves to make the junk-fax law cover e-mail as well but the companies that use spam-email (like Cyberpromo.com) are fighting against it with lobbyists, trying to pass other laws that would only curb spam-email at the cost of the ISP and therefore the users who want ot be protected from it. G'razel the shifty kitty Tapestries FurryMUCK SPR Furtoonia [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.aye.net/~kestrel To err is human, To purr feline. -- Robert Byrne -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .