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Subject: AEJ 99 ChungH LAW Exploring legal issues regulating junk email
From: [log in to unmask]
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sun, 12 Sep 1999 05:10:42 EDT
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Constitutionality

Running Head : Constitutionality



Ban Spam? : Exploring the Legal Issues and Constitutionality
 of Federal and State Statutes and Bills Regulating Junk Email









By


Hwi-Man, Chung
Ph.D Student
School of Journalism and Mass Communication
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill







Contact : Hwi-Man Chung
                                       700 Bolinwood Dr. APT # 12-B
                        Chapel Hill, NC 27514
                                     email : [log in to unmask]
                        phone : 919-969-1507








Submitted to the Law Division
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications
in New Orleans, LA : August 4-7, 1999


Running Head : Constitutionality


Ban Spam? : Exploring the Legal Issues and Constitutionality
 of Federal and State Statutes and Bills Regulating Junk Email


Abstract

              The purpose of this study is to examine legal issues and the
constitutionality of both federal and state bills and statutes regulating
unsolicited commercial electronic mail via the Internet.  This paper suggests
that in general federal and state bills and statutes can pass the Central Hudson
test if they aim to prevent the 'cost-shifting' from advertisers to consumers,
and this paper shows that Destination Venture case can be a strong precedent for
the constitutionality of those bills and statutes.  However, this paper also
suggests that the privacy protection will not pass the Central Hudson test
because the Supreme Court had different rulings about privacy protection.
Furthermore, this paper also suggests that the Supreme Court's approach to the
new medium - Internet - should be considered to assess the constitutionality of
regulations of unsolicited commercial email because the Supreme Court has said
that the Internet has highest protection from government regulation.  So, this
paper also showed that the blanket ban over unsolicited commercial email via the
Internet might be unconstitutional if the Supreme Court uses the same approach
to commercial speech in the Internet.
























Introduction

              Since its inception, the Internet has undergone tremendous
changes.  The

Internet has become a viable means of communication for people all over the
world.

Because the Internet is a quick and efficient tool to reach millions of people
at the same

time, marketers and advertisers try to use the Internet as an efficient tool for
advertising

and marketing.  According to NUA, one of Europe's leading online consultants and

developers, the number of Internet users worldwide is estimated to be  100.5
million and

by the end of the year 2000, the number will jump to 200 million.[1]1  Business
Week's

1997 survey shows that current U.S. Internet users are 40 million.[2]2  And it
will be

expected to be 75 million by the end of year 1998.[3]3

              One of the forms of advertising which advertisers use through the
Internet is

"e-mail advertising".  Currently anyone with an Internet e-mail account is
familiar with

this type of advertising, but there is still fierce on-line debate over  e-mail
advertising,

especially about unsolicited e-mail advertising, because it often is not wanted
by Internet

users and it usually is posted to multiple news groups or mailing lists.  It is
called

'spam'.[4]4    Typically, the term "spam" is used to denote bulk e-mail
advertisements.

              Spam opponents complain junk messages have overwhelmed many Usenet

newsgroups despite the cancelbot[5]5 software and human despammers.  Spammers
defend
the free market system, saying that commercial speech is protected by the First

Amendment.  They argue that their messages are wanted by many persons and that
they

are entitled to disseminate advertising messages by the cheapest means.[6]6

              A recent survey undertaken by Equifax and Harris Associates,
however,

showed that over two-thirds of Internet consumers considered the spam problem as

one of the most important problems to be solved in cyberspace and that they also
thought

junk emails should be regulated in certain way.[7]7

              On May 12, 1998, a bill known as the Murkowski Amendment[8]8 was

unanimously passed by the U.S. Senate.  It was first federal regulation of junk
email

passed in the Senate.  Its main purpose is to prevent slamming[9]9 - the
practice in which

telephone companies switch users to their long-distance service without the
users'

authorization.  This bill, however, includes the regulations of unsolicited
electronic

mail.[10]10  A slightly different version of the anti-slamming bill[11]11 has
been introduced in the

House, and it is expected to be passed the House by the end of this year.  Also,
there are

several other bills in the Senate and House that aim to regulate electronic
commercial

advertising.[12]12  Many states also are trying to regulate unsolicited
electronic commercial


advertising through the Internet with state statutes.[13]13  These statutes and
proposed statutes

have something in common.  First, they set requirements commercial emailers have
to

follow.  Second, their requirements are basically same - a requirement of
identification, a

requirement for an opt-out service, and fines for electronic commercial
advertisers who

do not follow these requirements.

              There are two different opinions about the statutes regulating
unsolicited

electronic mail.  One is the opinion from the proponents of spam, and another is
from

spam opponents.[14]14   Spam opponents argue that almost all proposed federal
regulations

give unsolicited commercial email legal authorization and thereby make the junk
email

problem worse.  If the spammers meet the requirements of the bills -- authentic

contact information, physical address, email address, telephone number, and
opt-out

instructions -- the spammers can send junk email without any restrictions.

              Spam proponents argue that these bills restrict the free market
system and are

contrary to the Supreme Court's view of free expression rights in the Internet
as a

medium.[15]15

              The U.S. Supreme Court has established different rules for
print,[16]16 broadcast

radio and television,[17]17 and cable television.[18]18   In its decision about
Internet issues, the

Supreme Court gave more protection for speech on the Internet than on the
broadcast



media.[19]19  The Supreme Court, however, has not focused on commercial speech
on the

Internet.

              The purpose of this study is to examine the constitutionality of
federal and

state bills and statutes that regulate sending unsolicited electronic commercial
mail

through the Internet.



Background

              Because this paper seeks to assess the constitutionality of
federal and state

statutes regulating unsolicited commercial electronic mail through the Internet,

a brief discussion of the Internet advertising will provide the background
necessary

for analysis.


Types of Internet Advertising

              The history of online advertising spans a very short period of
time that began

with the commercial online service 'Prodigy'.  'Prodigy' first tested online
advertising in

1990.[20]20  As Prodigy was testing advertising within its subscribe-only
environment, others

were exploring the commercial implications of Internet applications.  One of
them was

the law firm of Canter and Siegel.  In 1994, Canter and Siegel discovered the
silver bullet

for tapping the Internet as a cheap marketing medium and posted an advertisement
for

green card assistance to over 7000 newsgroups.  Although Canter and Siegel
received

requests for green card assistance as a result of its ad, their ads prompted a
host of



imitators and led to an outraged discussion of junk email, named 'spam',[21]21
in the online

community.[22]22   Internet etiquette, known as netiquette,[23]23 dictates that
discussion forums

not be used to post commercial materials that have nothing to do wth the subject
of the

discussion group.  Just before spam wars occurred by Canter and Siegel, 'Wired'

magazine launched 'Hotwired' Internet site with an advertising business
model.[24]24

'Hotwired' signed its first ad contact with AT&T on April 15, 1994, and this
site

launched on October 27, 1994.  These were the first commercial banner ads in the

Internet.   And Canter and Siegel's spam was the first commercial electronic
mail in the

Internet.

              There are many different types of Internet advertising according
to external

types of ads.  It can be a 'web site'[25]25 in the 'world wide web',[26]26 an
e-mail via the Internet,

or a message posted on a Usenet-news group site.[27]27  However, there are only
two

distinguishable types of Internet advertisements according to the way of access.
One is

passive advertising, another one is intrusive advertising.  The common form of
Internet

advertising is passive advertising, which the user voluntarily accesses to the
advertising,

for example web site.  Usually the intrusive Internet advertising is unsolicited

commercial e-mail which the user receives from sender.[28]28



Literature Review

              Legal scholars started exploring spam as a legal issue after the
Cyber Promotion

v. AOL case.[29]29  Several articles explore the legal issues surrounding
Internet and spam.[30]30

These articles are focused on the Supreme Courts' approach to the
Internet,[31]31 the

inefficacy of existing law to regulate spam,[32]32 and new legal approaches to
regulating

spam.[33]33

              Most of the articles reviewed the issue of First Amendment
protection for

commercial speech and suggested a rationale for regulating unsolicited
commercial
electronic mail.  For example, Anne W. Branscomb argued in the Yale Law Journal
that

junk email unlike junk mail requires the recipient to download the message.  She

explained that cost-shifting happens when a message is downloaded because it
takes time

to download the messages from the email depostory.[34]34  Branscomb argued that

"prohibiting sending email advertisements into newsgroups was reasonable,
because such

inundation is disruptive, intrusive, and surely an invasion of the sanctity that
the Supreme

Court purportedly protected in Rowan v. U.S. Post Office".[35]35  Rowan was a
challenge to a

federal statute that prohibits vendors from mailing erotically arousing or
sexually

provocative materials to addressees who have asked not to be sent such
materials.[36]36

In Rowan v. U.S. Post Office Department, the Supreme Court ruled that a mailer's
right to

communicate stopped at the mailbox of an addressee, and every person has
autonomy to

permit and to exercise control over unwanted mail.[37]37  Branscomb concluded
that

prohibiting the delivery of commercial messages to email destinations would be

consistent with the First Amendment's goal of encouraging a diversity of
information

sources without intruding upon the sanctity of personal email.[38]38  She also
argued that the

Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991[39]39 could be a legal frame work for
regulating

junk email.

              Branscomb's article was not focused on junk email issue, main
purpose of her

article was to explore the First Amendment issues surrounding cyberspace.  One
of the

most recent articles that discussed directly about First Amendment and other
legal

issues relating to spam is Joshua A. Marcus' article[40]40 published in Cardozo
Arts &

Entertainment.   Reviewing cases relating to the First Amendment and commercial

speech, he argued that the regulation of spam could be constitutional  and
proposed a

legal frame work for it.[41]41  He argued that the spam could be regulated to
prevent

cost-shifting from advertisers to consumers.  Using the four-part test of
Central

Hudson, he argued that some other purpose like aesthetics or privacy could not
pass the

four-part test.[42]42  He said if the governments' interest is aethethic, the
regulation could not

meet the second prong, that is whether the governmental interest of regulating

commercial speech is substantial or not, of the four-part test because all of
previous cases

whose aims were to promote aesthetics deal with the problems of billboards or
signs, and

arguments in previous cases could not be analogized to the Internet.[43]43
Even though we

agree that the purpose of protecting aethethic pass the second prong, he argued,
it can not

pass the third prong, because the government can not prove in a material way
that the

regulation directly advances its interest.[44]44

              On the contrary, Jonathan Byne in his article "Squeezing Spam Off
the Net"

argued that the bills currently pending in Congress that propose to regulate
unsolicited



commercial electronic mail because of cost-shifting might not pass the fourth-

prong of Central Hudson, that is the regulation must be least restrictive
alternative.[45]45

He argued that even though a few argue that prohibiting spam would advance the
interest

of preventing cost-shifting, whether the federal bill is tailored narrowly
enough is not

certain.  There are various computer programs that can be used to filter the
unsolicited

commercial electronic mail either by the end user or the ISP (Internet Service
Provider),

and the existence of these filters would seem to suggest that the federal
statutes could not

pass the fourth-prong of Central Hudson.[46]46

              Unlike these two articles, David E. Sorkin's article[47]47 in the
Buffalo Law Review

proposed that the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 could be construed
to

prohibit unsolicited commercial electronic mail.  Comparing the unsolicited
commercial

email advertising to unsolicited fax advertising, he argued that because both
fax and

email advertising share many of the same characteristics -- cost shifting,
inconvenience --

and because the primary basis for the prohibition of unsolicited fax advertising
was the

cost shifting, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 could be used to
applied to

regulate unsolicited commercial electronic mail.[48]48

              Though there are several articles exploring the legal issues
surrounding the

Internet and a couple of articles exploring the legal issues about spam, these
articles did

not specifically discuss the state statutes regulating unsolicited commercial
electronic

mail.  Instead, those articles either examined Internet regulation in general or
proposed

a legal frame work for regulating spam.

              In sum, even though some articles relevant to this study discussed
legal

issues regarding spam and the Internet and analyzed federal statutes forbidding

unsolicited commercial electronic mail, they did not offer a detailed analysis
of federal

and state statutes and bills regulating unsolicited commercial electronic mail.
This study

will analyze the all the federal and state statutes and bills regulating
unsolicited

commercial email and explore the constitutionality of those statutes and bills.




Research Questions

              This paper will address the following questions :

1.      What are the differences and similarities among the federal and state
statutes and bills

regulating or proposing to regulate unsolicited commercial email?

What are the legal issues raised by the state and federal bills and statutes?

2.  Can those statutes and bills pass the four-part test of Central Hudson?

3.  What other issues should be considered to test the constitutionality of
state and federal

statutes and bills regulating unsolicited commercial message through the
Internet?














Analysis of Federal and State Statutes and Bills

              The rationales for regulating unsolicited commercial email are to
prevent cost-

shifting from advertisers to consumers, to stop inconvenience, and to protect
privacy.[49]49

First cost-shifting.  Actually the cost of receiving email through the Internet
depends on

the recipient's way of accessing the Internet.  Most users with dial-up
connections pay

either an hourly rate or monthly rate.  The recipients who pay an hourly rate
will be more

sensitive to cost-shifting concerns than the recipients who pay a flat monthly
rate.  The

users need more extra time to download the email messages from the hosts if they
have

many junk emails, and this means the users who pay an hourly rate will pay more
if they

have more messages to be downloaded from the hosts.  The cost-shifting concerns
are

well presented in Representative Smith's (Democrat - New Jersey) introductory

statement :

                   The Internet and email are becoming part of our everyday
lives.  And no
                   one--from the consumer to the small business who run
servers--should be
                   forced to pay for unsolicited advertisements.  The idea of
shifting the
                   financial burden of speech on to an unwilling audience is one
that needs to
                   be addressed.  From the netizen who may incur costs in the
form of charges
                   spent online reading and disposing of the messages to users
who assume the
                   costs of both accessing and storing mail they did not want,
consumers
                   should not be unwilling, and paying, recipients.
Furthermore, junk emailers
                   occupy time and space on an Internet Service Provider's
servers and forces
                   the ISP to make technical improvements.  The cost of these
improvements
                   are passed on to the consumer.  In effect, the consumer is
paying to have
                   their privacy breached and invaded.[50]50

              Second, inconvenience.  Junk email can be inconvenient for
recipients, if the

sender uses a vague or misleading messages to conceal the nature of the
messages.

In this case, the recipient is forced to examine the text of the message to
figure out if it is

advertising, and as the result it takes more time to figure out than clear
advertising

messages.  Anti-spammers argue that the time for evaluating the junk message
should be

included in the cost.  Because the junk emails usually look like a ordinary
message, and it

takes more time to figure out if it is advertising message or not.  Therefore,
the users have

to pay more than they usually pay if the message is clear.

              Third, privacy concerns.  The Electronic Mailbox Protection
Act[51]51 says

that "because of recipients of unsolicited electronic mail are unable to avoid
the receipt of

such mail through reasonable means, such mail may threaten the privacy of
recipients.

This privacy threat is enhanced for recipients whose electronic mail software or
server

alerts them to new mail as it arrives, as unsolicited electronic mail thereby
disrupts the

normal operation of the recipient's computer."  This privacy concerns more
likely happen

in a transaction through the Internet than usually in receiving the junk emails
from

advertisers.  Anti-spammers, however, argue that their email addresses are
personal

information and email addresses should be protected as personal privacy.



Federal Statutes and Bills

              So far, there were seven federal bills that aim to regulate
unsolicited commercial

email via the Internet.  One of them was enacted in 1998.[52]52   First, the
bill which was
sponsored by Senator Frank H. Murkowski (Republic - Alaska) was introduced on
May

21, 1997.[53]53  This bill, the 'Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Choice
Act'[54]54 aimed

to regulate the transmission of unsolicited commercial electronic mail. This
bill does not

prohibit the unsolicited commercial email, instead require the emailers to
follow

requirements :

                   a person who transmits an electronic mail message as part of
the
                   transmission of unsolicited commercial electronic mail should
include the
                   term 'advertisement', name, physical address, electronic mail
address, and
                   telephone number of the person who initiates transmission of
the message.[55]55

It also requires the FCC to seek injunctions and fines up to $ 11,000 against
commercial

emailers who disregard law.[56]56  And part of this bill was accepted in
'Anti-Slamming

Amendments Act'[57]57 which was also introduced by Senator Murkowski and was
passed in

Senate on May 12, 1998.

              Also in 1997, the Netizens Protection Act[58]58 was introduced by
Representative

Christopher H. Smith (Democratic - New Jersey).  This bill would amend the

Communications Act of 1934 to ban unsolicited commercial electronic mail.  This
bill

makes it unlawful for any person within the United States to use any computer or
the

electronic mail address of an individual with whom the sender lacks a
pre-existing and

ongoing business or personal relationship unless such individual provides
express

invitation or permission.[59]59

Thus, this bill prohibits an unsolicited commercial email.  Because no one can
send

the commercial email unless there is an personal relationship.

              Soon after the Netizens Protection Act, the Electronic Mailbox
Protect Act

was introduced in Congress by Senator Robert Torricelli (Democratic - New
Jersey).[60]60

Its main purpose is to promote online commerce and communications, and to
protect

consumers and service providers from the misuse of computer facilities by junk

emailers.[61]61  It would not prohibit the unsolicited electronic mail, but
rather purported to

promote online commerce.[62]62  In this bill, whoever ...

                   1) initiates the transmission of an unsolicited electronic
mail message from
                       an unregistered or fictitious Internet domain
                   2) uses a computer program or other technical mechanism or
procedure to
                       disguise the source of unsolicited electronic mail
messages for the
                       purpose of preventing recipients
                   3) initiates the transmission of an unsolicited electronic
mail message and
                       fails to comply with the request of the recipient of the
message to cease
                       sending messages in the future
                   4) distributes a collection or list of electronic mail
addresses, having been
                       given prior notice that one or more of the recipients
identified by such
                       address does not wish to receive unsolicited electronic
mail[63]63

shall be subject to a civil penalty of $5,000 per individual violation.[64]64
This bill unlike the

'Netizens Protection Act' which prohibit all spam, would regulate only certain
spamming

activities.[65]65

              The bill Data Privacy Act[66]66 was introduced by Representative
William Tauzin

(Republican - Louisiana) on July, 1997.  Data Privacy Act aims to provide
self-regulation


for a computer interactive services industry and to protect the privacy of
interactive

computer service users.[67]67   It requires an emailer to reveal his trade name,
physical

address, email address, and phone number,[68]68 and it also requires commercial
emailers to

offer opt-out options for recipients.[69]69  Actually, this bill focuses on
protecting privacy

concerns which might be happened when people use the interactive computer
services.

              Email User Protection Act and Digital Jamming Act were introduced
in 1998.

Email User Protection Act was introduced to amend the Communications Act of 1934
in

order to prohibit any person from intentionally sending the transmission of
unsolicited

commercial email from an unregistered or fictitious Internet domain, from
directing an

unsolicited commercial email message to subscribers of an interactive computer
service,

and from accessing the server of a service and using a computer program to
collect email

addresses of service subscribers.[70]70

              The Digital Jamming Act[71]71 was also introduced to amend the
Communications

Act of 1934 to protect consumers against 'spamming', 'slamming', and 'cramming'.
This

bill makes it unlawful for any person to initiate spam messages, unless a
message

contains specified information - the name, street address, email address, and
telephone

number, unless a message contains Internet routing information that is accurate,
valid,

and correctly reflects the actual message routing.[72]72


State Statutes and Bills

              Currently 16 states - Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
Kentucky,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North

Carolina, Rhode Island, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin - have statutes and
bills

which was enacted already or pending in state congress.[73]73  Out of 16 states,
five states -

Colorado, Maryland, Nevada, Virginia, and Washington - have enacted their own
statutes

for regulating unsolicited commercial message through the Internet.

Alaska : A bill requires commercial emailers to clearly identify that the
message

advertisement, to identify their business name and email address, and to include
opt-out

instructions.[74]74

California : The Internet Consumer Protection Act,[75]75 which was enacted in
August in

1998, prohibits sending an unsolicited advertisement to an electronic mail
address unless

commercial emailer has a preexisting and ongoing business or personal
relationship with

the recipient, and even if emailers can send the electronic advertisement,
emailers should

clearly provide, at the beginning of the unsolicited advertisement, the date and
time the

message was sent, the identity of the person sending the message, and the return
email

address.

Connecticut : A state bill clearly prohibits any unsolicited advertisement by
electronic

mail unless the recipient concede to receive that advertisement.[76]76

Kentucky : A bill requires emailers to identify their legal name, street
address,

email address, phone number, and to include opt-out instructions.[77]77

Maryland : The statute prohibits a person from intentionally using an electronic

mail device for the purpose of commercial solicitation.[78]78
Massachusetts : A bill introduced to amend 'General Law' would prohibit a person
from

sending or causing to be sent unsolicited electronic mail to solicit the
purchase of real

property, goods, or services.[79]79

Nevada : A bill was introduced to make it a crime to send unsolicited commercial

email absent a preexisting business relationships, however, it was enacted to
permit

unsolicited commercial email if it includes the sender's name, address, email
address,

and opt-out instructions.[80]80

New Hampshire : Unsolicited commercial electronic mail is prohibited unless the

recipient wishes to receive unsolicited commercial electronic mail.[81]81

Especially, New Hampshire State bill defines the unsolicited commercial
electronic mail

very broadly including any material requesting donations as commercial
electronic

mail.[82]82

New Jersey : State statute prohibits sending an unsolicited electronic mail
unless the

recipient has consented to receive or unless the person sending a commercial
message has

preexisting and ongoing business relationship with the recipient.[83]83

New York[84]84 and North Carolina[85]85 regulate the unsolicited email
advertisements through

requiring emailers to provide legal name, street address, email address, phone
number,

and opt-out instructions.  But both states do not prohibit unsolicited email
advertisements.

Rhode Island : A bill was introduced to prohibit unsolicited electronic
advertising which

electronically transmits information in any form through connection with a
telephone or

computer network.[86]86

Virginia : A bill requires the ISP(Internet Service Provider) to determine the
types or

categories of unsolicited electronic mail or messages that subscribers do not
wish to

receive.[87]87  So, in Virginia the providers should be responsible for
unsolicited electronic

mail.  And this bill was enacted in late February, 1999.

Wisconsin : A bill prohibits a person from making an electronic mail
solicitation without

the consent of the person solicited.[88]88



Comparison between federal and state statutes and bills

Definition of unsolicited electronic mail advertisement

              Usually federal and state statutes define unsolicited electronic
mail advertising

as "any electronic mail message that advertise/solicit the purchase or rental
of, or

investment in, property, goods or services."[89]89  E-Mail User Protection Act
uses a

broader definition than other statutes, that is, "unsolicited commercial email
message

means any electronic mail other than - a) electronic mail sent by persons to
recipients

with whom they have a direct or indirect relationship, including a prior
business

relationship, or  b) mail sent by a source to a recipient where such recipient,
or someone

authorized by him, has at any time affirmatively requested communications from
that

source."[90]90  Some states define more broadly than federal bills and statute.

New Hampshire's[91]91 bill defines the unsolicited commercial electronic mail
more broadly

than any other state statutes and bills by including donation requests into
commercial

solicitation.

              Neither federal nor state statutes and bills clearly stated how
many recipients

unsolicited electronic commercial electronic mail must have in it to be junk
email.  Only

Electronic Mailbox Protection Act[92]92 defines unsolicited commercial email
that is sent to

25 or more recipients as junk email.


Level of Regulation

              The remarkable difference between federal and state statutes is
the level of

regulation.  All federal bills and statute except 'Netizens Protection
Act'[93]93 permit junk

email if the sender follows the bills' and statute's requirements.  Usually, the
federal bills

and statute require the junk emailers to provide certain informations -- legal
business

name, business address, return address, phone number, and opt-out instructions.
Anti-

spammers severely argue that these requirements could give legal authorization
to junk

emails, because junk emailers can send if they follow the requirements.  Thus
they argue

that junk email problem would be more serious than before.

              State statutes, however, have more strict restrictions on sending
junk emails, and

over the half of the states prohibit sending junk emails.  10 states out of 17
states,[94]94

which have bills and statutes regulating unsolicited commercial electronic mail,
prohibit a

person from sending junk email unless a person has a preexisting and ongoing
business

relationship, or unless the recipients concede to receive junk email.



Constitutionality Analysis

              Before analyzing the constitutionality of federal and state
statutes regulating

unsolicited commercial electronic mail, it is necessary to review the Supreme
Court's

commercial speech doctrine -- its views on First Amendment protection for
commercial

speech -- because this paper will use the Central Hudson four-part test as a
tool for

analyzing the constitutionality of federal and state statutes.

              In the Central Hudson case, the Supreme Court set the standards
for determining

if the regulation of commercial speech is constitutional.[95]95   The Supreme
Court said that

in commercial speech cases, to determine whether the expression is protected by
the First

Amendment, a four-part test should be applied.[96]96   First, does it involve
lawful activity

and is it truthful and not mislead the audience?  Second, does the government
have a

substantial interest in restricting the commercial speech?  Third, does the
regulation

directly advances the governmental interest?  Fourth, is the regulation more
extensive

than necessary to serve that interest?[97]97

              In this case, the Court said, applying the fourth prong, that
there has not been

any proof that a more limited restriction on the content of promotional
advertising

would not serve adequately the state's interest.[98]98
Trend in current cases

              The four-part test of Central Hudson case was again applied in
Rubin v.

Coors Brewing Co.[99]99  The Court ruled that a federal ban on disclosure of the

alcohol content of beer on labels failed to pass the third and fourth prongs.
The Supreme

Court said that although the government's interest was substantial, the federal
ban

could not directly and materially advance its interest because of the overall
irrationality

of the government's regulatory scheme.[100]100   Also, the ban was more
extensive than

necessary since available alternatives to the labeling ban - including directly
limiting

the alcohol content of beers, prohibiting marketing efforts emphasizing high
alcohol

strength, limiting the ban to molt liquors - could prove less intrusive to the
First

Amendment's protections for commercial speech.[101]101

              After Rubin, commercial speech protection was reaffirmed in 44
Liquormart Inc.

v. Rhode Island.[102]102   The Supreme Court reversed the First Circuit's
decision, stating that

the state bore the burden of proof to show that its regulation would advance its
interest to

a material degree.[103]103  The Supreme Court said Rhode Island failed to show
that ban on

price advertising could significantly reduce alcohol consumption.[104]104
Furthermore, the

Court said that the ban on price advertising is more extensive than necessary to
serve

its stated interest.[105]105

              Rubin and 44 Liquormart have special meaning for commercial speech
protection.  In both cases, the Supreme Court required the government to show
that its

ban on advertising would further its interest in a material way.  Especially, in
44

Liquormart, the Court rejected the assumption of Posadas that "the greater power
to

ban casino gambling necessarily includes lesser power to ban advertising casino

gambling".[106]106  The Court in 44 Liquormart rejected the assumption that
"words are

necessarily less vital to freedom than actions, or the logic that the power to
prohibit an

activity is necessarily greater than the power to suppress speech about
it."[107]107  Therefore,

the Court concluded that speech restrictions could not be treated as simply
another

means that the government might use to achieve its ends because the First
Amendment

directs that government may not suppress speech as easily as it may suppress
conduct.[108]108


( Does the speech concern lawful activity and not mislead ?

              Since this paper focuses on the constitutionality of regulation of
unsolicited

commercial electronic mail, this paper uses the 'cost-shifting' and 'privacy
protection'

issues relating to regulating junk email as testing the constitutionality.
Because almost all

federal and state statutes stated that their purposes are to protect consumers
from having

to bear the costs of third-party advertising and protect consumer's privacy.
Even though

legal scholars argue that inconvenience should be included as a rationale for
regulating

junk email,[109]109 it was not clearly stated in the purpose of regulation.


              The determinant of whether expression is eligible in the First
Amendment

protection is that the speech 'must concern lawful and truthful activity and not
be

misleading'.[110]110  Under the first part of the Central Hudson test,
commercial expression

entitled to constitutional protection must promote products and services that
are lawful.

Therefore, commercial message for fraud and deceptive product, or commercial
message

for obscene materials are outside constitutional consideration because they
promote

illegal products or services.

              In this first part of test, several statutes that have broad
definition of unsolicited

commercial electronic mail - -for example, the E-Mail User Protection Act and
New

Hampshire -- have some problems.  New Hampshire bill includes any material
requesting

donations as commercial electronic mail.  In New York Times v. Sullivan, the
Supreme

Court said the ad which communicate information, express opinion, recite
grievances,

protest claimed abuses, and seek financial support was protected political
speech, even

though it is paid by the advertiser.[111]111  So, what if material requesting
donations is related

to political matters?  In that case, New Hampshire's statute is regulating the
content of

political expression, and strict scrutiny must be applied to that case.[112]112

              The first part of tests will be easily passed if the junk emailers
promote legal

products or services and if they do not use false or misleading advertising
message.



Cost-Shifting Issue

( Substantial government interest and direct advance

              Under the Central Hudson, the second and third criteria of the
test are whether a

regulations serve a substantial government interest and the regulations directly
advance

that interest.[113]113  The asserted government interest is important in order
to justify the need

for regulation, and also plays a crucial role in determining the third and
fourth prongs of

test.

              The cost-shifting issue arose from Destination Ventures LTD. v.
FCC.[114]114

Destination was a challenge to the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991
(TCPA)

that prohibits using a telephone facsimile machine, computer, or other device to
send an

unsolicited advertisement to a telephone facsimile machine.  In Destination
Ventures, the

U.S. District Court in Oregon said that 'Congressional efforts to protect
consumers from

harm -- economic and otherwise -- and its interest in the relationship between
advertiser

and consumer is well-established'.[115]115  The court also said that 'these
costs are borne by the

recipient of the fax advertisement regardless of their interest in the product
or service

being advertised'.[116]116   The District Court ruled that Congress' interest in
protecting

consumers from the economic harm resulting from the unfair shifting of the cost
of

advertising from the advertiser to the unwitting customer is substantial
government

interest, and that subsequently banning of those unsolicited faxes directly
advances its

interest.[117]117   Also, the District Court ruled that the regulation was
sufficiently tailored to

advance its interest and not more extensive than necessary.[118]118

              An appeals court upheld the decision, ruling that advertisers had
no right to shift

the cost of their marketing onto consumers by using the consumers' fax
paper.[119]119
On appeal, Destination argued that advertising messages were no more costly to

consumers than non-commercial messages and therefore should not be singled out.
The

court, however, ruled that unsolicited fax advertisements were responsible for
most of the

cost shifting and that congress had a substantial interest in reducing the
amount.[120]120  Even

though this case did not reach the Supreme Court, it is clear that the purpose
of regulating

unsolicited commercial electronic mail is a substantial government interest and
therefore

can satisfy the second and third prongs of Central Hudson test.


Privacy Protection Issue

              The other major purpose of regulating unsolicited commercial email
is privacy

protection.

( Substantial government interest and direct advance

              The legal concept of a right of privacy developed only after the
mass media,

corporations, and government agencies became powerful enough to threaten
individual

privacy. [121]121   The first case related to privacy protection from commercial
speech was

Rowan v. U.S. Post Office Department.[122]122   Rowan, who is in the mail order
business,

filed the suit to challenge the constitutionality of the Postal Revenue and
Federal Salary

Act of 1967 that requires the sender to remove the addressee's name from his
mailing lists

and stop all future mailings to the householder when the addressee request.
Rowan

argued that this section violated his right of free speech and due process
guaranteed by

the First and Fifth Amendments.  Rowan also argued that this section was

unconstitutionally vague and ambiguous.[123]123
              The Supreme Court said that "the right of every person to be left
alone must be

placed in the scales with the right of others to communicate."[124]124  The
Court said that even

though people are inescapably captive audiences for many purposes these days, a

sufficient measure of individual autonomy must survive to permit every
householder to

exercise control over unwanted mail.[125]125  The Court ruled that a mailer's
right to

communicate must stop at the mailbox of an unreceptive addressee, and the
mailer's right

to communicate is circumscribed only by an affirmative act of the addressee
giving

notice that he wishes no further mailings from that mailer.[126]126  Also, the
Court said that

"nothing in the constitution compels us to listen to or view any unwanted
communication,

whatever its merit."[127]127

              However, in Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products Corp., the Supreme
Court upheld

a District Court's decision that a federal law[128]128 that prohibits the
mailing of unsolicited

advertisements for contraceptives was more extensive than necessary to advance
the

interests asserted by the government.[129]129  The Court said that Young's
advertising for

contraceptives not only implicated substantial individual and societal interests
in the free

flow of commercial information, but also related to activity that was protected
from

unwanted governmental interference.[130]130  With regard to appellant's
assertion that the

statute shields recipient of mail from material that they are likely to find
offensive, the

Supreme Court said that offensiveness was classically not justification
validating the

suppression of expression protected by the First Amendment.[131]131  Also, the
Court said that

recipients might effectively avoid the unwanted mail simply by averting their
eyes,

therefore the "short journey from mailbox to trash can is an acceptable burden
so far as

the constitution is concerned".[132]132

              So, in Bolger, the Court ruled that the governmental interest was
not substantial.

This suggests that the purpose of regulating unsolicited commercial electronic
mail to

protect privacy from intrusive unwanted commercial email is not a substantial

government interest.  If the advertisers send commercial email which contains
substantial

individual and societal interests in the free flow of commercial information,
the

government interest of privacy protection can not pass the second prong.  That
is, it can

not be said that it is substantial enough to allow the restrictions on the
speech.  The

Supreme Court clearly declared that informational ad can not be characterized
merely as

proposals to engage in commercial transaction, and the reference to a specific
product

does not by itself render the advertisement commercial speech.[133]133
Therefore, the same

restrictions on commercial speech can not be applied to informational
advertisement.



Other issues that should be considered to assess the constitutionality of
regulating

unsolicited commercial electronic mail


(  Blanket Ban Issue

             There are problems with statutes which have blanket bans on
unsolicited

commercial email.  Most of federal and state statutes define unsolicited
commercial

electronic advertising as "any unsolicited electronic mail message that is sent
for the

purpose of encouraging the purchase or rental of, or investment in, property,
goods, or

service."[134]134  However, some statutes define unsolicited commercial
electronic advertising

more broadly as "any electronic mail over than electronic mail sent by persons
to other

with whom they have a prior relationship, including a prior business
relationship, or mail

sent by a source to recipients where such recipients, or someone authorized by
them, have

an any time affirmatively requested to receive communications from that
source."[135]135

              In Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products Corp., Youngs argued that its
proposed

mailings constitute fully protected speech because it contained the useful
information

about protecting consumers from venereal disease.[136]136  And the Supreme
Court, citing the

commercial speech definition of Virginia Board of Pharmacy, said that even
though

Youngs' pamphlets are conceded to be advertisement and Youngs referred its
products in

that pamphlets, Youngs' informational pamphlets can not be characterized merely
as

proposals to engage in commercial transactions.[137]137  Moreover, the Court
said that

economic motivation for mailing the pamphlets was not sufficient by itself to
turn the

materials into commercial speech.[138]138

              Therefore, the broad definition of unsolicited commercial
electronic mail could

be problematic in this sense because it could be non-commercial speech according
to its

information content.

              In Virginia Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer
Council, Inc., the

Supreme Court held that the state's blanket ban on advertising prices of
prescription drugs
violated the First Amendment.[139]139  The Supreme Court said that both the
individual

consumer and society in general might have strong interests in the free flow of

commercial information.[140]140  The Court said :

                   Advertising, however tasteless and excessive it sometimes may
seem,
                     is nonetheless dissemination of information as to who is
producing and
                     selling what product, for what reason, and at what price.
So long as we
                     preserve a predominantly free enterprise economy, the
allocation of our
                     resources in large measure will be made through numerous
private econo-
                     mic decisions.  It is a matter of public interest that
those decisions, in the
                     aggregate, be intelligent and well informed.  To this end,
the free flow of
                     commercial information is indispensable.[141]141



(  New Media Issue

              Another major issue surrounding the Internet is new medium issue.
Because it is

new and it has fundamental differences from traditional media, some argue that
the media

differences should be considered in determining whether or how it can be
regulated.

              The landmark case relating to the Internet, which also reached the
Supreme

Court, is Reno v. ACLU.[142]142   ACLU filed suit challenging the
constitutionality of

provisions of the Communications Decency Act (CDA), which sought to protect
minors

from harmful material on the Internet.  In trial, a U.S. District Court in
Pennsylvania held

that provisions of the CDA violated the First Amendment.[143]143   Especially,
the District

Court's analyses of the Internet was applied to Shea v. Reno[144]144 case, and
to the Supreme

Court's decision of Reno v. ACLU.[145]145  Judge Dalzell, in his "medium
specific analysis",

said that because the Internet is very different from other media --
broadcasting and print
-- different approach should be applied to the Internet.[146]146  Judge Dalzell
said that the

Internet has four different characteristics from other media.  First the
Internet presents

very low barriers to entry.  Second, these barriers to entry are identical for
both speakers

and listeners.  Third, as a result of these low barriers, astoundingly diverse
content is

available.  Fourth, the Internet provides significant access to all who wish to
speak in the

medium and even creates a relative parity among speakers.[147]147  Dalzell
concluded that "the

Internet may fairly be regarded as a never-ending worldwide conversation.  The

government may not interrupt that conversation.  As the most participatory form
of mass

speech yet developed, the Internet deserves the highest protection from
governmental

intrusion."[148]148

              The Supreme Court, in a 7-2 decision, ruled the CDA
unconstitutional.

Justice Stevens said in his conclusion that "the government apparently assumes
that the

unregulated availability of indecent and patently offensive material on the
Internet is

driving countless citizens away from the medium because of the risk of exposing

themselves or their children to harmful material.  We find this argument
singularly

unpersuasive.  The dramatic expansion of this new marketplace of ideas
contradicts the

factual basis of this contention.  The record demonstrates that the growth of
the Internet

has been and continues to be phenomenal.  As a matter of constitutional
tradition, in the

absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that governmental regulation of
the

content of speech is more likely to interfere with the free exchange of ideas
than to

encourage it.  The interest in encouraging freedom of expression in a democratic
society

outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship."[149]149
Conclusion and Discussion

              This paper examined the characteristics and rationales of both
federal and state

statutes and bills that aim to regulate and to prohibit unsolicited commercial
electronic

mail via the Internet.  Findings show that most of bills and statutes have
"cost-shifting

prevention" and "privacy protection" as rationales for regulating unsolicited
commercial

email.  Also, findings show that there are some differences between federal and
state

statutes and bills regarding to the definition of unsolicited commercial email
and level of

regulation.  According to findings, federal statute and bills are more generous
to

commercial message through the Internet than state statutes and bills.
Furthermore, this

paper examined whether the rationales and legal issues proposed by both federal
and state

bills and statutes regulating unsolicited commercial electronic mail via the
Internet can

pass the Central Hudson test.  The result shows that the purpose of
cost-shifting

prevention from advertisers to consumers can pass the Central Hudson test.  As
discussed

above, the Destination Ventures LTD. v. FCC[150]150 case can be a strong
precedent for the

constitutionality of those bills and statutes regulating unsolicited commercial
electronic

mail via the Internet.  In Destination Ventures, court ruled that Congress'
interest of

protecting consumers from the economic harm inflicted by advertisers is
substantial

government interest, and banning of those unsolicited commercial message through
fax

machine can directly advance its interest.  On the contrary, the result show
that privacy

protection issue can not pass the four-part test because of court's split
decision about this

issue.  In Rowan, the Supreme Court ruled that privacy protection can be a
substantial

government interest, but in Bolger, the Supreme Court ruled that prohibiting the
mailing

of unsolicited advertisements for contraceptives was more extensive than
necessary.

             Furthermore, this paper shows that the bills and statutes that have
blanket ban

over unsolicited commercial electronic mail would be a problematic in cases in
which

advertisers send the informational type of commercial email to recipients.  This
is

according to the Supreme Court's decision in Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products
Corp.

              Also, the Supreme Court's approach to the Internet shows that the
Supreme

Court would give highest protection to the Internet.  Because in Reno, the U.S.
Supreme

Court declared that the Internet deserved the highest protection from the
governmental

intrusion.






















[1] 1 See deatils at "http://www.nua.ie/surveys/how_many_online/index.html".
[2] 2 See details at "http://www.businessweek.com". The number of the Internet
users in U.S. is different from each survey, but it usually is estimated to be
from 40 million to 47 million.
[3] 3 See details at "http://www.findsvp.com/timeline/trends.html".
[4] 4 In Internet parlance, "spam" refers to send unsolicited commercial email
to large groups of people, or post messages on large number of newsgroups or
discussion lists. See Jill H. Ellsworth & Matthew V. Ellsworth, Marketing On the
Internet, Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997 ; A word
"Spam" was finally defined by New Oxford Dictionary of English as "irrelevant
Internet messages sent to a large number of people", see New York Times, Aug.
20, 1998 at 3.
[5] 5 A cancel-bot is a program that sends out cancel messages, see details at
"http://www.cybernothing.org/faqs/net-abuse-faqs.html#2.1".
[6] 6 Ed Foster, The Gripe Line, Infoworld, June 22, 1998, vol. 20, n25, p72.
[7] 7 J.S. Kakalik & M.A. Wright, Responding to Privacy : Concerns of Consumers,
Review of Business, Fall 1996, 15-18.
[8] 8 1998, S. 1618 ; 105 S. 1618.
[9] 9 A word "slamming" means that the telephone company switch the users to
their long distance service without users' permission or authorization.
[10] 10 1998, S. 1618 ; 105 S. 1618, Sections 301 and 302.
[11] 11 HR 3888 ; 105th Congress.
[12] 12 For example, "Netizens Protection Act", H.R. 1748 ; "Data Privacy Act",
H.R. 2368 ; "Email User Protection Act", H.R. 4124 ; "Unsolicited Commercial
Mail Choice Act", S. 771 ; "Electronic Mailbox Protection Act", S. 875 etc. See
details at "http://www.jmls.edu/cyber/statutes/email/federal.html".
[13] 13 See 'http://www.jmls.edu/cyber/statutes/email/state.html'.
[14] 14 Ed Foster, The Gripe Line, Infoworld, June 22, 1998, V. 20, n25, p72.
[15] 15 See Reno v. ACLU, 117. S. Ct. 2329 (1997) ; see also 929 F. Supp. 824
(E.D. Pa. 1996).  In this case, the Supreme Court said that the Internet as a
new medium has highest protection from government regulation under the First
Amendment.
[16] 16 Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241 (1974).
[17] 17 Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367 (1969).
[18] 18 Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622 (1994).
[19] 19 Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. 2329 (1997).
[20] 20 Robin Zeff & Brad Aronson, Advertising on the Internet, Wiley Computer
Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997.
[21] 21 In Internet parlance, "spam" refers to send unsolicited commercial email
to large groups of people, or post messages on large number of newsgroups or
discussion lists. See Robin Zeff & Brad Aronson, Advertising on the Internet,
Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997.
[22] 22 Id. at 16-21.
[23] 23 Id.
[24] 24 Id.
[25] 25 "Web site" is an Internet address that permits users to exchange
information with a particular host. In Internet parlance, the "Host" is referred
to the Internet access provider's computer. See Robin Zeff & Brad Aronson,
Advertising on the Internet, Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
1997.
[26] 26 "World Wide Web" is a client/server system designed to use hypertext and
hypermedia documents via Internet. See Robin Zeff & Brad Aronson, Advertising on
the Internet, Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997.
[27] 27 "Usenet" groups refers to thousands of discussion groups based on public
postings of message.  Newsreader software interacts with Usenet servers and
allows messages to be read by topic and discussion thread, and provides
provisions for responding to particular messages. See Robin Zeff & Brad Aronson,
Advertising on the Internet, Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
1997.
[28] 28 See Joshua A. Marcus, Commercial Speech On The Internet : Spam and the
First Amendment, 16 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment 245 (1998).
[29] 29 948 F.Supp. 456 (E.D.Pa. 1996).
[30] 30 Joshua A. Marcus, Commercial Speech On The Internet : Spam and the First
Amendment,  16 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment 245 (1998) ; Jonathan Byrne,
Squeezing Spam Off the Net : Federal Regulation of Unsolicited Commercial
E-mail, 2W. Va. J. L. & Tech. 4 (1998) ; David E. Sorkin, Unsolicited Commercial
E-Mail and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991, 45 Buffalo L. Rev.
1001 (1997) ; Anne Wells Branscomb, Anonymity, autonomy, and accountability :
challenges to the First Amendment in cyberspace, 104 Yale L. J. 1639 (1995) ;
Mark S. Kende, The Supreme Court's approach to the First Amendment in cyberspace
: free speech as technology's hand-maiden, 14 Constitutional Commentary 465
(1997) ; Maureen S. Dorney, Privacy and the Internet, 19 Hastings Comm/Ent L.J.
635 (1997) ; Gene Barton, Taking a byte out of crime : E-mail harassment and the
inefficacy of existing law, 70 Washington L.Rev. 465 (1995).
[31] 31 Mark S. Kende, The Supreme Court's approach to the First Amendment in
cyberspace : free speech as technology's hand-maiden, 14 Constitutional
Commentary 465 (1997).
[32] 32 Gene Barton, Taking a byte out of crime : E-mail harassment and the
inefficacy of existing law, 70 Washington L.Rev. 465 (1995).
[33] 33 Joshua A. Marcus, Commercial Speech On The Internet : Spam and the First
Amendment,  16 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment 245 (1998) ; Jonathan Byrne,
Squeezing Spam Off the Net : Federal Regulation of Unsolicited Commercial
E-mail, 2W. Va. J. L. & Tech. 4 (1998) ; David E. Sorkin, Unsolicited Commercial
E-Mail and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991, 45 Buffalo L. Rev.
1001 (1997) ; Anne Wells Branscomb, Anonymity, autonomy, and accountability :
challenges to the First Amendment in cyberspace, 104 Yale L. J. 1639 (1995).
[34] 34 Anne Wells Branscomb, Anonymity, autonomy, and accountability :
challenges to the First Amendment in cyberspace, 104 Yale L. J. 1639 (1995).
[35] 35 Id.; See also, Rowan v. U.S. Post Office Department, 397 U.S. 728
(1969). The Supreme Court said in this case that the right of a person privacy
must be placed in the scales with the right of others to communicate.  Even
though people are inescapably captive audiences for many purposes, a sufficient
measure of individual autonomy must survive to permit every householder to
exercise control over unwanted mail.
[36] 36 397 U.S. 728 (1969).
[37] 37 Id. at 736-737 (1969).
[38] 38 Branscomb, supra note 34.
[39] 39 Telephone Consumer Protection Act, 47 USC   227 (1991), TCPA was enacted
to prohibit the use of recorded sales calls unless the recording is preceded by
a live operator who obtained the receiver's consent, and also TCPA prohibits
sending unsolicited advertisement via fax machine.
[40] 40 Joshua A. Marcus, Commercial Speech On The Internet : Spam and the First
Amendment,  16 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment 245 (1998).
[41] 41 Id.
[42] 42 Id. at 298-302.
[43] 43 Id. at 298-299.
[44] 44 Id.
[45] 45 Jonathan Byrne, Squeezing Spam Off the Net : Federal Regulation of
Unsolicited Commercial E-mail, 2W. Va. J. L. & Tech. 4 (1998).
[46] 46 Id.
[47] 47 David E. Sorkin, Unsolicited Commercial E-Mail and the Telephone
Consumer Protection Act of 1991, 45 Buffalo L. Rev. 1001 (1997).
[48] 48 Id.
[49] 49 David E. Sorkin, Unsolicited Commercial E-Mail and the Telephone
Consumer Protection Act of 1991, 45 Buffalo L. Rev. 1001 (1997) ; and see also
Maureen S. Dorney, Privacy and the Internet, 19 Hastings Comm/Ent L.J. 635
(1997) ; also Gene Banton discussed the email Harassment in "Taking A Byte out
of Crime : Email Harassment and the Inefficacy of Existing Law". Banton argued
that the regulation of email should include the email harassment.  According to
Banton, harassment includes "massive mailing of vituperative" especially
targeted to women, and mail bomb or letter bomb.  Banton argued that this email
harassment should be handled criminally, not in a civil.
[50] 50 H.R.1748 ; 105th Congress 1st Session.
[51] 51 S. 875 ; 105th Congress 1st Session, Sec. 2.
[52] 52 The bills pending in Congress are ; "Netizens Protection Act of 1997",
"Electronic Mailbox Protection Act of 1997", "Data Privacy Act of 1997", "E-Mail
User Protection Act of 1998", "Digital Jamming Act of 1998", and "Unsolicited
Commercial Electronic Mail Choice Act of 1997".  Part of "Unsolicited Commercial
Electronic Mail Choice Act" was accepted in "Anti-Slamming Amendments Act" and
Anti-Slamming Act was passed in Senate on May 12, 1998.
[53] 53 S. 771 ; 105th Congress.
[54] 54 Id.
[55] 55 Id. at Sec. 3 (a) (1).
[56] 56 Id. at Sec. 4 (a) (1).
[57] 57 S. 1618 ; 105th Congress.
[58] 58 H.R. 1748 ; 105th Congress.
[59] 59 Id.
[60] 60 S. 875 ; 105th Congress.
[61] 61 Id.
[62] 62 Id.
[63] 63 Id. at Sec. 3.
[64] 64 Id.
[65] 65 Id.
[66] 66 H.R. 2368 ; 105th Congress.
[67] 67 Id.
[68] 68 Id. at Sec. 2.
[69] 69 Id.
[70] 70 H.R. 4124 ; 105th Congress and H.R. 4176 ; 105th Congress.
[71] 71 H.R. 4176 ; 105th Congress.
[72] 72 Id. at Sec. (e).
[73] 73 See details at "http://www.jmls.edu/cyber/statutes/email/state.html".
[74] 74 Alaska House Bill 491.
[75] 75 California Assembly Bill 1629 "Internet Consumer Protection Act".
[76] 76 Connecticut House Bill 6558.
[77] 77 Kentucky Bill Resolution No. 337.
[78] 78 Maryland House Bill 140.
[79] 79 Massachusetts House Bill 4581.
[80] 80 Nevada Senate Bill No. 13.
[81] 81 New Hampshire House Bill 1633.
[82] 82 Id. at Chapter 359-G:3.
[83] 83 New Jersey Assembly No. 295.
[84] 84 New York Senate Bill 3524.
[85] 85 North Carolina House Bill 1744.
[86] 86 Rhode Island Senate Bill 1073.
[87] 87 Virginia House Bill No. 1325.
[88] 88 Wisconsin Senate Bill 283.
[89] 89 For example, 'Digital Jamming Act', H.R. 4176 ; 105th Congress, Sec.
101. (6).
[90] 90 H.R. 4124 ; 105th Congress, Sec. 3. (9) (A) (B).
[91] 91 New Hampshire House Bill 1633, Chapter-G:3.
[92] 92 S. 875 ; 105th Congress, Sec. 7.
[93] 93 H.R. 1748 ; 105th Congress.
[94] 94 Alaska, California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.
[95] 95 447 U.S. 557 (1979).
[96] 96 Id.
[97] 97 Id.
[98] 98 Id. ; After the Central Hudson case, the four-part test was used to
determine whether a Puerto Rican statute prohibiting casinos from advertising
gambling in Puerto Rico is constitutional.  The Supreme Court ruled that
advertising of casino gambling could be banned because casino gambling itself
could be banned.  And the Supreme Court said that it was up to the legislature
to choose suppression over a less speech-restrictive policy.   The results of
Posadas substantially reduced the First Amendment protection for commercial
speech, because the Supreme Court uphold the government authority for regulation
of truthful advertising.
[99] 99 115 S.Ct. 1585 (1995).
[100] 100 Id.
[101] 101 Id.
[102] 102 116 S.Ct. 1495 (1996).
[103] 103 Id.
[104] 104 Id.
[105] 105 Id.
[106] 106 106 S.Ct. at 2979 (1986).
[107] 107 116 S.Ct. at 1512 (1996).
[108] 108 Id.
[109] 109 David E. Sorkin, Unsolicited Commercial Email and the Telephone
Consumer Protection Act of 1991, 45 Buffalo L.Rev. 1001 (1997).  Sorkin argued
that like junk fax, junk email could make consumers be inconvenient because junk
email usually uses a vague or misleading subject to conceal the nature of the
message.  And this forces the recipient to examine the text of the message in
order to determine its relevance and this cause inconvenience.
[110] 110 447 U.S. at 566 (1980).
[111] 111 376 U.S. at 266 (1964) ; 1 Media L.Rep. 1527 (1964).
[112] 112 Kent R. Middleton, Bill F. Chamberlin & Matthew D. Bunker, The Law of
Public Communication, Fourth Edition, Longman, 1996.
[113] 113 447 U.S. at 566 (1980).
[114] 114 844 F.Supp. 632 (D.Or. 1994).
[115] 115 Id. at 635.
[116] 116 Id. at 636.
[117] 117 Id. at 637.
[118] 118 Id. at 637.
[119] 119 Destination Ventures, Ltd. v. FCC, 46 F. 3d 54 (9th Cir. 1995).
[120] 120 Id. at 56.
[121] 121 Wayne Overbeck, 'Major Principles of Medial Law', Harcourt Brace
College Publishers, 1998, 158-194.
[122] 122 397 U.S. 728 (1970).
[123] 123 Id. at 731.
[124] 124 Id. at 736.
[125] 125 Id. at 736.
[126] 126 Id. at 737.
[127] 127 Id. at 737.
[128] 128 39 U.S.C   3001 (e) (2).
[129] 129 463 U.S. 60 (1982).
[130] 130 Id. at 69.
[131] 131 Id. at 71.
[132] 132 Id. at 72.
[133] 133 Id. at 66.
[134] 134 For example, 'Netizens Protection Act', H.R. 1748 ; 105th Congress.
[135] 135 For example, 'E-Mail User Protection Act', H.R. 4124 ; 105th Congress.
[136] 136 463 U.S. 62, at 65-66 (1982).
[137] 137 Id. at 66.
[138] 138 Id. at 67.
[139] 139 425 U.S. 748 (1976).
[140] 140 Id. at 762-765.
[141] 141 Id. at 765.
[142] 142 929 F.Supp. 824 (E.D.Pa. 1996) ; and 117 S.Ct. 2329 (1997).
[143] 143 929 F.Supp. 824 (E.D.Pa. 1996).
[144] 144 930 F.Supp. 916 (S.D.N.Y. 1996).
[145] 145 117 S.Ct. 2329 (1997).
[146] 146 Id. at 872-78.
[147] 147 Id. at 877.
[148] 148 Id. at 883.
[149] 149 Reno v. ACLU, 117 S.Ct. at 2351 (1997).
[150] 150 844 F.Supp. 632 (D.Or. 1994).

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