Spam Trial - PlanetSide Universe
PSU Social Facebook Twitter Twitter YouTube Steam TwitchTV
PlanetSide Universe
PSU: Your highway to PIMPTASTIC information
Home Forum Chat Wiki Social AGN PS2 Stats
Notices
Go Back   PlanetSide Universe > General Forums > The Lounge

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 2004-10-26, 06:18 PM   [Ignore Me] #1
Red October
Second Lieutenant
 
Red October's Avatar
 
Spam Trial


I hope they hang'em high!

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp..._te/spam_trial

LEESBURG, Va. - Three people who allegedly sent America Online customers millions of junk e-mail messages touting penny stocks and other Internet gimmicks went on trial Tuesday in the nation's first such felony case.


The defendants are being tried under a 2003 Virginia anti-spam law that prosecutors say is the harshest of its kind in the nation.


The three face up to 15 years in prison if convicted on all three counts.


Assistant Attorney General Russell McGuire told jurors that on one day alone in July 2003, defendant Jeremy Jaynes sent or attempted to send 7.7 million e-mail messages to AOL customers using false identities or bogus company names. The goal of the messages was to sell software that would allow a person to work from home as a "FedEx refund processor" or that would help them pick the right penny stocks.


He said the suspects used false identities to evade AOL's spam filters.


"When you masquerade your identity, that's when you have a problem," McGuire said.


Defense lawyers countered that sending spam is not illegal under Virginia law unless prosecutors can prove that the defendants intentionally masked its origin and can prove that the junk e-mail was unsolicited. They said prosecutors will be unable to meet that burden.


"Marketing via the Internet is not a crime," said Thomas Mulrine, attorney for defendant Jessica DeGroot. "It may be annoying to you, but it's not a crime to market on the Internet."


Jaynes and DeGroot, who are siblings, and the third defendant, Richard Rutkowski, are all from the Raleigh, N.C., area, but are on trial in Virginia because they allegedly sent their spam to customers of AOL, which has its servers at its Virginia headquarters.


While other states have passed spam laws in recent years, Virginia authorities say theirs goes further than others because it gives prosecutors the power to seize assets from those sending bulk e-mail while imposing up to five years in prison.
Red October is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old 2004-10-26, 06:23 PM   [Ignore Me] #2
EineBeBoP
Contributor
Pns Ndabut
 
EineBeBoP's Avatar
 
Misc Info


then again, they WERE AOL memebers.... they deserve some of it for being that stupid.

But yeah, hope they get the full 15 yrs
__________________
EineBeBoP is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old 2004-10-26, 06:43 PM   [Ignore Me] #3
EarlyDawn
Major General
 
EarlyDawn's Avatar
 


Fucking awesome.

Spending time does seem a little bit harsh for a non-malicious (albiet annoying) online activity, though. I think I'd rather see a huge, epic, massive fine.

[Edit: Didn't realize they impersonated people too. Comment revoked.]
__________________
<Doop>
EarlyDawn is offline  
Reply With Quote
Reply
  PlanetSide Universe > General Forums > The Lounge

Bookmarks

Discord

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:56 AM.

Content © 2002-2013, PlanetSide-Universe.com, All rights reserved.
PlanetSide and the SOE logo are registered trademarks of Sony Online Entertainment Inc. © 2004 Sony Online Entertainment Inc. All rights reserved.
All other trademarks or tradenames are properties of their respective owners.
Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.