Hosting Company Sues AOL For Calling Them A Spam Bag
from the interesting... dept
This case might turn out to be more interesting than it seems at first. CI Host, a fairly well known hosting company, is suing AOL for considering them a source of spam and blocking all email from CI Host. A judge has already issued a restraining order telling AOL to let email through, but AOL apparently unblocked some CI Host machines while blocking others. It's a little unclear what the lawsuit is specifically about, however. There are a lot of different legal accusations, including some sort of violation of trademark law - though, I'm not sure how that plays in. It looks like they might have a claim on defamation, as CI Host says that AOL support staff told customers that CI Host was a "spam bag". However, CI Host is also accusing AOL of trying to steal away their customers, which would be difficult to prove. No matter what, the results of this case could become a bigger deal for any ISP that blocks spam. Can one ISP sue another for blocking it? If so, does that mean that ISPs need to let all email through or face lawsuits?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Interesting...
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No Subject Given
This is basically the shotgun approch to killing a housefly. There are certainly cases where it is in a domains best interest to block email from a site, but blocking off an entire network because someone spammed from there (*) a long time ago, is just the sort of hyper response that we would expect from a company that is losing customers.
(*) The ISP in question has a very strong anti-spam policy; the IP addys that they have in those blocks belonged to soemone else as few as 5 months ago, so I suspect that a previous spammer had them, and now the ISP is paying the price thanks to AOL's blocking policy.
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Re: No Subject Given
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Re: AOL-blocked servers
Second, if the problem is a specific block on the IP addresses based on past spamming by a previous holder, you should be able to request that AOL look into it, and/or you can request to be added to their whitelist.
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Re: AOL-blocked servers
AOL doesn't follow the RFC's. Postmaster is not accepted.
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lawsuits
Anyone can sue anyone else for anything. Winning is another matter.
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Should I have a go too?
They're not being very professional about it eh!!!
So do you guy's think I should take this further?
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