Return to Virginia Business - June 2003

Around the Old Dominion

Virginia takes lead role in canning spam

by Virginia Business Staff
June 2003

Spam may be dead meat in Virginia under the state’s tough new laws against bulk e-mailers, but it could be overridden by federal legislation. Gov. Mark Warner in April signed legislation allowing criminal penalties against the biggest spammers including prison terms of up to five years. But The Washington Post reports that lobbyists for industries that use e-mail marketing are trying to get Congress to enact laws that would supercede stronger state laws.

About two dozen states have anti-spam laws that allow civil penalties against spammers. At a signing ceremony at AOL’s Dulles headquarters, Warner predicted the Virginia law would be “a model not only for the nation, but, in my hopes, also for the world.”

A draft bill that would reportedly be co-sponsored by Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, would ban consumers from suing spammers and only require commercial e-mail senders to let people “opt out” of future mailings.
Virginia officials claim half the world’s Internet traffic flows through the state via networks of companies such as America Online and UUNet. Some estimates put spam at up to 70 percent of all e-mail traffic, costing U.S. businesses more than $10 billion a year.

Virginia Business - June 2003