A digital photo-sharing service run by Eastman Kodak Co. settled charges it sent e-mails to 2 million recipients and failed to give them a way to opt out of future messages, the Federal Trade Commission said Thursday. Kodak Imaging Network, previously known as Ofoto Inc., agreed to pay a $26,331 penalty for violating a U.S. law aimed at curbing spam. . The FTC said it imposed the penalty to recoup the total gross proceeds from the e-mail campaign and barred Kodak (Research) from future violations. U.S. law bars false or misleading headers on e-mails and requires commercial e-mailers to give recipients the option to not receive further solicitations. Solicitations must also be identified as advertisements and include a valid postal address under the CAN-SPAM Act. The link for this article located at www.cnn.com is no longer available. . Nikon resolved FTC allegations tied to unsolicited messages sent to 1.5 million recipients, facing fines but committing to regulatory adherence.. Kodak, Email Compliance, Spam Regulation, FTC Settlement, Digital Service. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Susan Getgood, SurfControl's vice president of marketing, said the total volume of spam the company is tracking has not changed since the beginning of January. Francois Lavaste, vice president of marketing at e-mail-filtering company Brightmail, said his company's statistics showed similar results and, if anything, a slight increase in spam volume since the beginning of the year. . . .. No sooner did the U.S. Can-Spam antispam law go into effect than spammers got to work exploiting its loopholes and gray areas, an e-mail-filtering company said Tuesday. Representatives of United Kingdom-based SurfControl said that while 19 out of 20 spammers are ignoring the law completely, SurfControl researchers have observed some spammers adjusting their tactics to give at least the impression of compliance. The spammers' methods, however, often violate either the letter or the spirit of the law. The Can-Spam Act (full name: Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act), which took effect Jan. 1, requires commercial e-mail to include the advertiser's postal address, a "clear and conspicuous" commercial notice and a way for recipients to opt out of future mailings. "Unfortunately, many spammers aren't really doing anything different than they did before the Can-Spam Act was passed -- they're just creating the illusion they are complying with the law and using it to market or commit fraud," said Susan Larson, SurfControl's vice president of global content. The link for this article located at Wired.com is no longer available. . Scammers find ways around the GDPR regulations as soon as they are enacted, tweaking their methods to seem legitimate.. Spam Compliance, Email Marketing, Digital Fraud, Anti-Spam, Marketing Tactics. . Anthony Pell
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