US judgement meaningless, says UK anti-spam project.
An Illinois court has passed a judgement demanding UK-based spam advisory organisation
Spamhaus
pay $11.7 million in damages to a spammer it labelled a spammer.
Spamhaus
has laughed in the face of the charges, insisting that not only is the claimant a spammer, but that the court has no jurisdiction over them.
Illinois-based company
e360 Insight
, and its head David Linhardt, sued
Spamhaus
after the organisation included information on them in its ‘Register of Known Spam Operations’ (ROKSO) (see their entry in the database
here
).
Spamhaus
mounted no defence of the claims, and a default judgement was granted to the claimants without counter-arguments.
In several strongly-worded statements,
Spamhaus
described the laughable nature in the case, saying that not only are many of the charges without foundation, but that under British law the case would be impossible and illegal, as spamming is banned in Britain. Other claims, including the charge that
Spamhaus
prevented
e360
from sending out its spam, are also derided. The project is ignoring not only the fines but also demands that the ROKSO entry be removed and that a public statement of Linhardt and
e360
‘s innocence be released.
‘This is an example of litigious culture gone wild,’ said John Hawes, Technical Consultant at Virus Bulletin. ‘That someone can waste a court’s time with a case that is not only baseless, but impossible to enforce, makes it all the more ridiculous. Kudos to
Spamhaus
for taking a strong stance and paying no heed to the court’s demands.’
Spamhaus
‘s responses to the case can be seen
here
and
here
.
Find out more about the spam problem at the
Virus Bulletin conference
(11-13 October, Montréal), where Jay Goldin and Amir Lev (
Commtouch Software
) will present
their paper
‘Containing spam – the local challenge’.
See the full programme
here
or click
here to register now
.
Posted on 15 September 2006 by
Virus Bulletin
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