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European Union wants U.S. to ban spam

Otherwise, efforts elsewhere to fight unwanted e-mail could be hindered

July 15, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - European Union attempts to combat spam, the scourge of e-mail users the world over, would be hampered if the U.S. fails to introduce an outright ban, said a senior European Commission official today.
A law banning unsolicited e-mail messages goes into effect in the 15-member EU this fall, and the commission today announced an initiative that aims to go even further. The law prohibits e-mail marketers in the EU from sending promotions to individuals unless those targeted have expressly asked to receive such mailings.
The U.S. government appears to favor an opt-out approach, whereby marketers can flog their wares to anyone by e-mail unless the person targeted asks to be removed from the target list.
Today's initiative by the commission, described as its "second step" in the spam war, seeks to promote international cooperation and to raise public awareness of how individuals can help in tracking down the elusive spammers.
By the end of the third quarter, spam will account for over half of all e-mail traffic globally, the commission said. One-third of all spam is believed to originate from the U.S., and French and Belgian data protection officials estimate that about 85% of all spam in their countries is in English.
Convicted spammers are known to hop from one jurisdiction to another in order to continue their activities, Erkki Liikanen, commissioner for enterprise and the information society, said at a news conference. "There is a growing awareness that you cannot tackle spam alone. We need to work without international partners."
However, cooperation with the U.S. "would be restricted if we end up with an opt-out system in the United States," said Philippe Gerard, an official in Liikanen's department. "The U.S. authorities appear to be focusing only on spam that is deceptive or worse. We, on the other hand, believe that even the harmless spam messages are a serious problem too, because of the enormous volume of them."
The commission estimates that the loss in productivity due to spam cost EU businesses around $2.79 billion in 2002. Lost productivity includes the value of the time wasted clearing out spam from people's in-boxes and the loss of performance of PCs clogged with spam.
"If there was any cooperation with the U.S., it would only be in areas where we both agree action is needed," Gerard said. The deluge of harmless but annoying spam messages would therefore not become a common enemy.
Liikanen refrained from criticizing the U.S.'s approach to combating spam. "The U.S. is seriously working on the issue. The [U.S.] Federal Trade Commission is looking for a solution," he said, but he added that he remains "skeptical" about an opt-out approach. "It will always be less efficient than an opt-in rule," he said.
Stefano Rodota, president of the Italian Data Protection Commission, said that even if the U.S. does choose the opt-out route, U.S. businesses will go further to stamp out spam. "A big part of the business community in the U.S. is moving toward opt-in because firms such as Procter & Gamble view spam as a threat to their abilities to sell their products over the Net," he said.
Europe's Internet service providers welcomed the commission's latest efforts to fight spam. "The new rules on spam are a crucial tool in the ongoing battle of ISPs to limit the damage caused by this incessant and ever-changing problem, both to themselves and to their customers," said a statement issued today by the trade association EuroISPA.





Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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