On TV.com: Who?ll Replace OPRAH as Our Life Coach?
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

June 8th, 2007

SPY Acts vs. CAN-SPAM: No difference

Posted by Maurene Caplan Grey @ 9:55 am

Categories: Legislation, Phishing, Scams, Security, Spam, Spyware

Tags: CAN-SPAM Act, Bill, Spam, Spyware, Maurene Caplan Grey

Yesterday I wrote about cyber crime — particularly as promulgated through email messages. This morning I read House Approves Second Anti-Spyware Bill. The bill is officially called H.R. 1525: Internet Spyware  Prevention Act of 2007 and commonly known as the I-SPY Act. It follows H.R. 29 [109th]: Securely Protect Yourself Against Cyber Trespass Act, commonly known as the SPY Act. Both bills have been passed multiple times by the U.S. House of Representatives. Each bill takes a different approach at curbing spyware. The lobbyists and House sponsors of each will be happy to tell you why their bill should be passed into law. However, neither have yet to be passed by the Senate.

Let’s fast forward and say that one or both bills become law. The likelihood is that they will be as effective at curbing spyware as has been the CAN-SPAM legislation in curbing spam. Highly publicized, one-off convictions of spam cyber crooks is not a benchmark by which to judge the overall success of a piece of legislation.  As pointed out in CAN-SPAM Act: The 2005 “Report Card”:

Anti-spam legislation is ineffectual unless it is universally agreed upon and equally enforced across global country boundaries – an unrealistic expectation over the next ten years.

To the naive, legislating spam and spyware as illegal is a good thing. For the winning lobbyists and politicians, it is a good thing. 

Bush Signs CAN-SPAM Act into Law

President Bush Signs Anti-Spam Law

Cyber criminals are not law-abiding Internet citizens, and the SPY Acts, like CAN-SPAM, will have little impact. 

———

June 13, 2007 Update:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is a nonprofit advocate for public interest ”freedoms of the networked world.” The EFF has requested consumers to write to their Congressional representatives to Stop the Spyware Act.

[The Act] leaves enforcement exclusively in the hands of federal bureaucrats, specifically barring private citizens and organizations like EFF working on their behalf from using the new law to fight back in the courts.

Influential blog, BoingBoing, has declared support of the EFF’s actions: 

The SPY Act, a new anti-spyware law, makes it impossible for consumer rights groups to sue DRM companies for putting spyware in their DRM (like Sony did last year, with its rootkit DRM). The irony is that spyware is already illegal, so all that this act does is immunize big media companies that sneak spyware onto your computer.

As I mentioned in my original post, the SPY Acts are politically motivated and will do little to protect the consumer.

Maurene Caplan Grey is the founder and principal analyst of Grey Consulting -- an independent research, advisory and consulting firm in the messaging, collaboration and new media markets. For disclosures on Maurene's industry affiliations, click here.
  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)
Not "legitimate ANTI-spyware"
Unless I'm misunderstanding your statement... my point (and the point of the EFF) is that the consumer should have the right of protection. The legitimate anti-spyware vendors are not the problem.<... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Yagotta B. Kidding Posted on: 06/21/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
On the contrary  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/08/07
Legit sw vendors are not always forthright  maurene.grey@... | 06/13/07
Not "legitimate ANTI-spyware"  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/21/07

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

Top Rated

    advertisement

    Archives

    ZDNet Blogs

    White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

    SmartPlanet

    • Thought-provoking progressive ideas on diverse topics that intersect with technology, business, and life, and matter to the world at large. Visit SmartPlanet
    • More from IBM
    • Innovate your business' process model, play against the market, compete against others on our scoreboards and WIN! Try INNOV8 2.0: A BPM Simulator
    • Enabling Real-World Business Transformation through IBM Service Management Read the EMA Analyst Report
    Click Here