[Politech] Michael Geist on Canadian law and punishing spammers [sp]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Tue May 04 2004 - 21:43:21 PDT

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    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Untouchable? How Canadian Law Can Tackle Spam
    Date: Mon, 3 May 2004 08:22:53 -0400
    From: Michael Geist <mgeist@private>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declan@private>
    References: <Pine.GSO.4.21.0308051908480.15857-100000@private>
    
    Declan,
    
    Of possible interest to Politech -- my regular Toronto Star Law Bytes
    column highlights my new study on the state of anti-spam legislative
    measures in Canada. Despite absence of specific anti-spam
    legislation, the paper argues that when viewed in combination, the
    current Canadian legal options allow for enforcement actions against
    virtually all of the conduct identified by most global anti-spam
    legislation including the use of deceptive headers, failure to honor
    opt-out requests, limitations on email address harvesting and sales,
    and the unauthorized use of computing equipment to send spam.
    
    The problem, the paper argues, rests primarily with the lack of
    aggressive enforcement initiatives by the responsible government
    departments including the Competition Bureau, Privacy Commissioner,
    Ministry of Justice, and CRTC.
    
    Full study at http://www.michaelgeist.ca/geistspam.pdf
    
    Column (posted below) at <http://shorl.com/gisatystabrope>
    
    MG
    
    A RECIPE FOR BATTLING SPAM IN CANADA
    Existing laws and regulations could do the job - if they were enforced
    
    Michael Geist
    LawBytes
    
    Over the past ten years, spam has grown from a minor annoyance to a
    global concern, threatening the reliability of electronic
    communication and the adoption of electronic commerce. Despite
    developing anti-spam technological tools, promoting greater consumer
    awareness, and the introduction of anti-spam legislation in many
    countries, the spam problem continues unabated.
    
       The United States, European Union, South Korea, Australia, and Japan
    have taken legislative steps to combat spam. Their statutes feature a
    wide range of anti-spam measures including labeling requirements
    (such as "ADV" tags in the subject lines of e-mails), prohibitions on
    deceptive practices such as false header information, bans on e-mail
    address harvesting, the creation of do-not-spam lists, penalties for
    commissioning spam, and immunity for Internet service providers that
    take good faith steps to stop spamming organizations.
    
    The most contentious anti-spam provisions have revolved around
    whether to force consumers to ask to be removed from receiving
    commercial marketing (an "opt-out" approach) or to compel businesses
    to obtain consumers' positive consent before sending commercial
    marketing (an "opt-in" approach). While the United States has adopted
    for an opt-out approach, the European Union has opted for the
    stricter opt-in framework.
    
    Layered on top of most anti-spam legislation are significant civil
    and criminal sanctions including sizable fines and possible
    imprisonment for repeat offenders. The civil penalties found in
    anti-spam legislation are particularly noteworthy since they
    frequently provide parties such as ISPs the right to bring private
    actions to obtain statutory damages.
    
    While Canada has yet to enact anti-spam legislation, it would be a
    mistake to think that Canadian enforcement agencies are powerless to
    combat spam. In fact, current Canadian law features similar powers as
    those found in anti-spam legislation elsewhere. Noteworthy Canadian
    laws include private sector privacy legislation, deceptive practices
    legislation administered by the Competition Bureau's Fair Business
    Practices Branch, the application of the Criminal Code, and
    enforcement of section 41 of the Telecommunications Act.
    
    The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act
    (PIPEDA), Canada's private-sector privacy legislation, could be a
    powerful legal tools to challenge a Canadian spammer on privacy
    grounds. PIPEDA covers personally identifiable information, which
    could include e-mail addresses, where an address can be identified to
    a specific individual.
    
    Once caught within the PIPEDA framework, the statute could be used to
    prohibit the collection of personally identifiable e-mail addresses
    through harvesting techniques, to require opt-in consent in certain
    circumstances, and to ensure that organizations honour opt-out
    requests.
    
    Although the Competition Bureau has yet to commence an anti-spam
    action, the Competition Act clearly empowers it to seek orders
    against Canadian-based spamming organizations on at least two
    grounds. First, spamming organizations who use deceptive or false
    headers, a practice specifically captured by many anti-spam statutes,
    could be targeted for a reviewable conduct order. Second, the Bureau
    could also consider the content of some spam such as the ubiquitous
    Nigerian net scam or offers to sell suspect health products, which
    might meet the deceptive or materially false claim standard
    established by the Act.
    
    Canada's Criminal Code could also be used to commence actions against
    certain spamming activity. First, section 380 of the Code, which
    covers fraudulent conduct, could be interpreted to cover spam that
    contains fraudulent or false content. Second, the Code could also be
    applied to spamming organizations that access computer servers
    without permission, as is typically the case when spamming
    organizations make unauthorized use of e-mail servers to send spam.
    In fact, the relevant provision could include not only the
    unauthorized use of e-mail servers, but potentially e-mail harvesting
    as well.
    
    Canada's Telecommunications Act, administered by the Canadian
    Radio-television and Telecommunications Commissioner, features an
    untested provision that might be used in the battle against spam. It
    gives the CRTC the right to "prohibit or regulate the use by any
    person of the telecommunications facilities of a Canadian carrier for
    the provision of unsolicited telecommunications to the extent that
    the Commission considers it necessary to prevent undue inconvenience
    or nuisance, giving due regard to freedom of expression."
    
    Viewed in combination, the Canadian legal options would allow for
    enforcement actions against virtually all of the conduct identified
    by current global anti-spam legislation including the use of
    deceptive headers, failure to honour opt-out requests, limitations on
    e-mail address harvesting and sales, and the unauthorized use of
    computing equipment to send spam.
    
    As illustrated by a recent Yahoo! lawsuit against a Canadian-based
    spamming organization, as well as a UK study that reported that
    Canada is the world's second largest source of spam, the true
    challenge of anti-spam enforcement does not revolve around finding
    the spammers nor does it require additional laws. Rather, sufficient
    resources are needed such that enforcement actions generate genuine
    deterrence to stop the spamming activities perpetrated by the worst
    offenders.
    
    A Canadian anti-spam strategy must look to the Office of the Privacy
    Commissioner of Canada, the Competition Bureau's Fair Business
    Practices Branch, the Ministry of Justice, and the CRTC, the
    government departments responsible for administering the laws that
    could be applied to spam, to proactively enforce those laws
    consistent with their statutory mandates.
    
    Moreover, the Internet community must reconcile itself with the
    reality that private sector leadership has failed to stem the spam
    tide. Serious spam enforcement requires law enforcement to assume the
    lead role. While the private sector remains an essential part of any
    anti-spam initiative through private sector suits, investigative
    assistance, implementation of technological innovations, as well as
    business and consumer education, it must be government that leads on
    the enforcement of the current anti-spam legal frameworks.
    
    In the 1987 hit film The Untouchables, federal agent Eliot Ness
    battled the seemingly untouchable Al Capone during the Prohibition.
    The movie features a memorable scene in which Jim Malone, a veteran
    police officer played by Sean Connery, confronts Ness over whether he
    is serious about taking on the Chicago mobster. Malone challenges
    Ness by asking "What are you prepared to do?".
    
    When Ness affirms he is committed to bringing down Capone, Malone
    leads Ness across the street, where the presence of alcohol is
    apparently an open secret. As they prepare to enter the building,
    Malone notes that since everyone knows where the booze is located,
    the question is whether they are prepared to do something about it.
    
    Although Canada's battle against spam is not as simple as Hollywood's
    portrayal of the battle against Al Capone, the challenge similarly
    rests not with finding the spamming organizations nor with
    instituting fundamental legal reforms.
    
    We know the location of leading Canadian-based spamming
    organizations. The Canadian legal framework features many of the
    tools needed to launch anti-spam legal actions, despite the absence
    of specific anti-spam legislation. Rather, the challenge rests with
    our willingness to enforce the existing laws by engaging in
    aggressive anti-spam national enforcement as well as cooperating with
    global anti-spam enforcement initiatives. It is time for Canada to
    get serious about spam. What are we prepared to do?
    
    -- 
    **********************************************************************
    Professor Michael A. Geist
    Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law
    University of Ottawa Law School, Common Law Section
    Technology Counsel, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP
    57 Louis Pasteur St., P.O. Box 450, Stn. A, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5
    Tel: 613-562-5800, x3319     Fax: 613-562-5124
    mgeist@private              http://www.michaelgeist.ca
    
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