Ведущий раздела
М. Шабрашин
Unenacted bills:
Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 (H.R. 718)
H.R. 718 was introduced in February 2001 as the Unsolicited Commercial
Electronic Mail Act of 2001, by Rep. Heather Wilson (R-NM),
with 67 co-sponsors. As introduced the bill was identical to H.R. 95. The bill
was amended on several occasions during 2001; the version that emerged from
the Judiciary Committee in June 2001 bears little resemblance to the
original.
The current version of H.R. 718 would prohibit false headers in unsolicited bulk commercial e-mail messages,
and would require labels on sexually oriented
commercial e-mail messages.
Anti-Spamming Act of 2001 (H.R. 1017)
H.R. 1017 was introduced by Rep.
Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) in March 2001. It would amend federal computer crime
laws to make it illegal to send unsolicited bulk e-mail messages containing a
false sender
address or header,
or to distribute software designed for this purpose.
Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing
(CAN SPAM) Act of 2001/2002 (S. 630)
S. 630 was introduced by Sen. Conrad R.
Burns (R-MT) in March 2001. It would require unsolicited commercial e-mail messages to
be labelled and to
include opt-out
instructions, and would prohibit deceptive subject lines and false headers in such
messages.
S. 630 was amended in the Senate Commerce Committee in May 2002 to include
a provision prohibiting the use of e-mail addresses harvested from web sites in
violation of posted restrictions.
Netizens Protection Act of 2001 (H.R. 3146)
H.R. 3146 was introduced by Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-NJ) in October 2001; it is
identical to the Netizens Protection Act of
1999, which was introduced by Rep. Smith in the 106th Congress. H.R. 3146
would require all unsolicited e-mail messages
to contain the sender's name, physical address, and e-mail address, along with
opt-out
instructions. False or misleading subject lines would be
prohibited on unsolicited bulk e-mail messages. These
requirements would not pre-empt state laws governing unsolicited commercial
e-mail. Internet providers would be required to
notify their customers of their policies on unsolicited e-mail,
and would be able to sue customers for violations.
Who Is E-Mailing Our Kids Act
(H.R. 1846)
H.R. 1846 would require schools and libraries that receive universal
service assistance funds to adopt policies that prohibit users from sending
e-mail anonymously.
Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act of 2001
(H.R. 95)
H.R. 95 would require unsolicited commercial e-mail messages to
be labelled and to
include opt-out
instructions, and would prohibit false headers in such messages. It
would prohibit the use of a provider's facilities to send
unsolicited commercial e-mail in violation of the provider's policies, if the policies are
clearly posted on a web site at the domain name included in the recipient's
e-mail address or are made available by an FTC-approved standard method
(presumably, via the provider's SMTP server).
H.R. 95, as introduced in January 2001, is identical to
H.R. 3113 from
the 106th Congress, in the form that bill was passed by the House of
Representatives. The House Committee on Commerce published a report
on H.R. 3113 in June 2000. H.R. 95 was introduced by Rep. Gene Green (D-TX), who
subsequently co-sponsored another identical bill, H.R.
718.
Wireless Telephone Spam Protection Act (H.R. 113)
H.R. 113 addresses cellular phone spam. Introduced in January 2001, the
bill would prohibit the use of wireless messaging systems to send unsolicited
advertisements.