Court Says Porn Company Not Responsible For Spam Sent By Affiliates
from the no-inducement dept
A court has now ruled that Impulse Media is not guilty of spamming because some of its affiliates spammed people. The company, which provides "adult content" has an affiliate program to drive traffic to its site. Some of the people in the affiliate program (not surprisingly) sent out a bunch of spam using their affiliate codes. The government charged that this was Impulse Media's fault. Impulse Media's response was that it forbade spamming in its terms of service and kicked anyone caught spamming out of the program. The government responded that affiliates weren't required to read the terms and anyone kicked out could quickly sign right back up again. However, that wasn't enough to convince the government who found no clear liability for the company. This is a bit of a fine line, but it seems like the correct decision. The government absolutely could have (and probably should have) gone after the affiliates who did spam -- but chose to focus on the wrong company here.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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Filed Under: affiliates, spam
Companies: impulse media
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Disappointed by this decision to be honest,it doesn't advance the web one bit. This ruling just enlarges the market for bots and bot runners giving the destination the option to cut payments once the scam is uncovered.
Remember, when the marginal cost of driving traffic is Zero using spam methods, if the financial benefit isgreater than zero then the activity will go ahead.
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Hey!
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Re #1
I believe this is a good decision as I am all for people suing those Actually responsible, and not just whoever the easiest target it. I do not care what the case, be it on the side of spammers, a poster in a forum posting allegedly defamatory comments, or anything of that ilk. If you are going to charge somebody, charge the one actually doing it, not whoever is the easiest target along the chain.
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Sorry there is more
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Yeah... sure... that makes sense.
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What matters in this is whether or not Impulse Media knew there were spammers and/or who they were on the network and did nothing to try and stop them. It's impossible to catch everyone and stop everything, but letting them do it and feigning ignorance is something else, especially when you then make a little extra money from such actions.
Problem is, how do you prove they knew? How do you prove one actually hired the other when they can exert tight control over their data, and what happens in circumstances where no actual hiring takes place but they're simply "left alone"?
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OK - I understand that its impossible to vet every source of traffic (supplier) in detail. But still, this judgment is bad for the net.
And if you you start chasing spammers then you'll soon realise that they are smarter and faster and less bureaucratic than the average government agent.
If there was no financial gain from spamming, there would be no spam, believe me. Allowing web sites to employ spammers until they are caught doing so is totally responsible and I hope that EU law is tougher than this.
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I leave a loaded gun on my front lawn and someone takes it and shoots my neighbor, who gets charged?
Seems to me they could have went after the porn site for negligence.
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They have to make it painful enough for the company profiting from it that they take greater steps to prevent it.
Otherwise, everyone involved has a big incentive to turn a blind eye to it.
It's also not unknown for companies to set up "affiliates" to have an arms length relationship so they can do practices that the company would burn for if they got caught (think of all the viruses that magically give you suggestions on an antivirus solution to remove them).
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Do any of you read your own posts?
All of you are guilty of stealing intelligent posts. READ YOUR OWN STUFF BEFORE POSTING. Please, for the love of God, show a bit of intelligence.
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My cousin worked for a dating site which did this. He thought it was sooo clever, even though I told him this was ill moral -- he liked the idea soo much he spun off his own company and is no doubt doing the same thing. 3 months after going into business, he is making $15,000.00 a day
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If I was Impulse, I would include in the terms this clause: "payments will be not be sent until the following month, anyone found violating these terms will forfeit all monies not sent." This gives Impulse 30 days to locate violaters, it may sound like a great way for Impulse to be able to "steal" money earned by affiliates, but if they try that people will stop signing up.
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Hopefully you remember this if you're ever prosecuted and the jury decides that, while you may not actually have broken the law, convicting you would be a benefit to society. 'Cause that's how you seem to be suggesting the legal system should operate.
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Affiliates == spamming
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Spam is a global network issue, nothing to do with what OS accesses it...
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I don't know where some of y'all are from...
Yeah, I think that they probably did know, but if you start convicting and sentencing on gut feelings instead of law and evidence, then poof! Good-bye, America, in one fell swoop. Hi, Gestapo!
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Why? Affiliate programs are common. As I read it, company A specifically forbade Spam as part of its TOS. It doesn't matter that company A is a porn company, what matters is whether or not they specifically hired others to do SPAM, which in this case it does not appear they did.
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Interesting Case
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spammers must die!
How many people think it is OK to go after the companies that hire illegal immigrants, and fine them, think that letting this company off the hook is a good idea?
The illegals only come here knowing that some company will pay them starvation wages to work, fine theheck out of those companies and no more illegal immigrants, same with spammers, they don't just spam for fun, they make money from it, start prosecuting the companies that hire spammers, then when the money goes away, so does the spam.
Same deal, If you fine a company for having shoddy business practices, then they will have to stay within legal limits, if you look the other way, then don't cry about the spam.
Being a coward and letting people walk all over you doesn't always work in your favor.
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mlmaffiliate
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