Everything Has Changed
See how Intel developed the cure for deskside help visits in this video directed by Christopher Guest of Spinal Tap fame. Click here.
 
Cross-client Centrino® and  Core™2 processor with vPro™ Processor Technology Technical White Paper
A deeper technical dive on how vPro usage models work on both desktop and notebook PCs. Click here.
 
Intel® vPro Technology ROI Estimator
Intel® Core2™ Duo and Centrino® with vPro™ Processor technology cross-client ROI estimator. Click here.
 
WiPro Intel® Centrino® Pro with vPro™ Processor Technology
The Benefits of Intel® Centrino® Pro Processor Technology in the Enterprise. Click here.
 
Workstations Products Platforms Brief
Intel’s family of workstation platforms gives you the tools to move from serial to parallel workflows and enables you to iterate through alternatives faster and innovate more. Click here.
 
Itanium Solutions
Learn how Itanium®-based solutions are changing the way enterprises do business. Click here.


Select a newsletter and click Join to sign up!
Internet Daily
InternetNews

Business Report

Boston News
DC News
NY News
SiliconValley News




Sybase Whitepaper: What's New in Advantage Database Server 9? Its low per-seat cost, ease of deployment & low maintenance requirements makes it well suited for vertical market applications. Learn more.





'Lonely Housewives' Reach FTC Settlement

Agency claims e-mail scam violated virtual aspect of CAN SPAM Act.

September 14, 2006
By Roy Mark: More stories by this author:

A spam scam promising dates with lonely, if not quite desperate, housewives is among the latest unsolicited bulk e-mail schemes halted today by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

According to the FTC, Cleverlink Trading's lonely housewives spam violated almost every provision of the 2003 CAN SPAM Act and the operators agreed to forfeit $400,000 in profits.

The FTC complaint states that the spam contained misleading headers, deceptive subject lines, did not contain a valid physical postal address and did not disclose that the e-mail was sexually explicit.

It also included sexual materials in the initially viewable area of the e-mail, a violation of the FTC's Adult Labeling Rule.

Thursday's settlement also bars future violations of the CAN-SPAM Act and the Adult Labeling Rule in addition to extensive monitoring of Cleverlink Trading's affiliates for future violations.

In other cases announced Thursday, the FTC reached settlements with three other spammers.

The FTC charged Zachary Kinion with sending spam promoting adult sites, mortgage rates and privacy software while hiding his true originating address by routing his spam through the computers of innocent third parties.

He also paid other spammers to send spam messages for him.

The settlement bars Kinion from sending e-mails that contain false or misleading headers, misrepresent the subject matter of the message, fail to include an opt-out option, fail to include a postal address or fail to disclose the spam is an advertisement.

The FTC also imposed a judgment of $151,000 but suspended it because of Kinion's inability to pay.

William Dugger, Angelina Johnson and John Vitale also settled CAN SPAM charges with the FTC by agreeing to forfeit $8,000 in ill-gotten gains for concealing the source of sexually explicit spam and using spam zombies.

Finally, the FCT reached a settlement with Brian McMullen, who was charged with using spam to drive traffic to Web sites run by third parties. The FTC judgment of $24,193 was also suspended because of McMullen's inability to pay.

In addition, McMullen pleaded guilty to criminal charges related to spam and unauthorized possession of credit cards. He currently is awaiting sentencing.





Business Archives | 7 Day InternetNews Summary | Contact Roy Mark | Back to top

Add internetnews.com
to your browser search box.

IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x
Receive news
via our XML/RSS:
feed