WYOMING STATUTES
TITLE 40. TRADE AND
COMMERCE
CHAPTER 12. CONSUMER PROTECTION
ARTICLE 4.
COMMERCIAL ELECTRONIC MAIL
Added by 2003 Wyo. ch. 86
(approved March
3, 2003; effective July 1, 2003)
40-12-401. Definitions.
(a) As used in this article:
(i) "Assist the transmission" means actions taken by a person
to provide substantial assistance or support which enables any person to
formulate, compose, send, originate, initiate or transmit a commercial
electronic mail message when the person providing the assistance knows or
consciously avoids knowing that the initiator of the commercial electronic
mail message is engaged or intends to engage in any practice that violates
this article;
(ii) "Commercial electronic mail message" means an electronic
mail message sent for the purpose of promoting real property, goods or
services for sale or lease. It does not mean an electronic mail message to
which an interactive computer service provider has attached an advertisement
in exchange for free use of an electronic mail account, when the sender has
agreed to such an arrangement;
(iii) "Electronic mail address" means a destination, commonly
expressed as a string of characters, to which electronic mail may be sent or
delivered;
(iv) "Enforcing authority" means the Wyoming attorney
general;
(v) "Initiate the transmission" refers to the action by the
original sender of an electronic mail message, not to the action by any
intervening interactive computer service that may handle or retransmit the
message, unless such intervening interactive computer service assists in the
transmission of an electronic mail message when it knows or consciously avoids
knowing that the person initiating the transmission is engaged or intends to
engage in any act or practice that violates this article;
(vi) "Interactive computer service" means any information
service, system or access software provider that provides or enables computer
access by multiple users to a computer server, including specifically a
service or system that provides access to the internet and such systems
operated or services offered by libraries or educational institutions;
(vii) "Internet domain name" refers to a globally unique,
hierarchical reference to an internet host or service, assigned through
centralized internet naming authorities, comprising a series of character
strings separated by periods, with the right-most string specifying the top of
the hierarchy;
(viii) "Service provider" means an entity offering the
transmission, routing or providing of connections for digital online
communications between or among points specified by a user, of material of the
user's choosing, without modification to the content of the material sent or
received.
40-12-402. Sending unpermitted or misleading electronic mail
prohibited.
(a) No person may initiate the transmission, conspire with
another to initiate the transmission or assist the transmission of a
commercial electronic mail message from a computer located in Wyoming or to an
electronic mail address that the sender knows or has reason to know is held by
a Wyoming resident, or to an address that the sender knows or has reason to
know is located in a state or other jurisdiction with laws similar to this
state's laws regarding commercial electronic mail, that:
(i) Uses a third party's internet domain name without
permission of the third party, or otherwise misrepresents or obscures any
information in identifying the point of origin or the transmission path of a
commercial electronic mail message; or
(ii) Contains false or misleading information in the subject
line.
(b) For purposes of this section, a person knows that the
intended recipient of a commercial electronic mail message is a Wyoming
resident if that information is available, upon request, from the registrant
of the internet domain name contained in the recipient's electronic mail
address.
(c) For purposes of this article, a service provider does not
assist in the transmission of a commercial electronic mail message in
violation of this article if:
(i) The activity which violates this article was not directed
by the service provider or its agent;
(ii) The service provider does not receive a financial
benefit directly attributable to the violation of this article by one (1) of
its customers; and
(iii) The service provider does not provide the equipment or
complete management of systems found to have an open mail relay.
40-12-403. Investigation of complaints; enforcement; attorney's
fees.
(a) The enforcing authority shall investigate any complaints
received concerning violations of this article. If, after investigating any
complaint, the enforcing authority finds that there has been a violation of
this article, the enforcing authority may bring an action to impose a civil
penalty and to seek other relief, including injunctive relief. The civil
penalty imposed shall be as follows:
(i) For the first violation, not to exceed five hundred
dollars ($500.00);
(ii) For the second violation, not to exceed two thousand
five hundred dollars ($2,500.00);
(iii) For the third and subsequent violations, not to exceed
five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) per violation.
(b) An action under this section may be brought in the
district court of the county in which a commercial electronic mail message
that violates this article has been received or in the district court of
Laramie county, Wyoming. The civil penalty provided under this section may be
recovered in any action brought under this article by the enforcing authority,
or the enforcing authority may terminate any investigation or action upon
agreement with the person violating this article to pay a stipulated civil
penalty.
(c) In any civil litigation resulting from a transaction
involving a violation of this article, the prevailing party, after judgment in
the trial court and exhaustion of all appeals, if any, shall receive
reasonable attorney's fees and costs from the nonprevailing party.
(d) The remedies provided by this section are not exclusive
and shall not preclude the imposition of any other relief or criminal
penalties provided by law.
40-12-404. Immunity from liability for blocking of commercial
electronic mail by interactive computer service.
(a) An interactive computer service may, upon its own
initiative, block the receipt or transmission through its service of any
commercial electronic mail that it reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in
violation of this article.
(b) No interactive computer service may be held liable for
any action voluntarily taken in good faith to block the receipt or
transmission through its service of any commercial electronic mail which it
reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in violation of this
article.