Monday, June 11, 2007

Cane or no cane, singapore spammer?

Quoted from IDA website:

The Spam Control Act 2007 will come into effect on15 June 2007. It aims to address the still-growing and global problem of spam.

The Act will offer a framework to better manage unsolicited commercial electronic messages sent in bulk, otherwise known as "spam". Spam is estimated to make up the bulk of all e-mails sent worldwide.

The legal guidelines are reasonably easy for marketers to follow and for consumers to understand. It will not offer complete respite from spam, but consumers will get a measure of protection from spam.

Under the Act, marketers - particularly those based in Singapore or who have operations here - who continue to spam the "not interested" group face potential financial penalties. The statutory penalty is $25 for each electronic message, up to a total of $1 million.

Globally, similar laws have been introduced for instance in the United States of America, Japan, South Korea and Australia.

Singapore had just passed the Spammer Act, I suppose it is a good thing, and business minded technology venture might start of flood the market with some anti-spamming products for networks.

While I'm reading some tech news, there's this funny article about Why Singapore Spammers Didn't get Canning:
http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/16037

Read it up and don't forget to read the comments as well, let me know your thoughts.

No comments: