CAUCE joins in anti-spyware amicus brief
In a friend-of-the-court brief filed today, CAUCE joins the Center for Democracy and Technology to argue that anti-spyware vendors should be protected by the liability protections afforded other filtering companies under the Communications Decency Act. CAUCE joined a broad spectrum of Internet and technology industry groups, public interest organizations, civil liberties groups and individual companies that are all committed to the proposition that users should be empowered to control their own Internet experiences. The brief urges the court to protect anti-spyware vendors from liability in cases brought to intimidate anti-spyware vendors into ignoring spyware.
Amicus Brief [PDF].
Colorado has a new spam law
CAUCE director John Levine notes:
The governor of Colorado recently signed a new anti-spam law into effect. Since CAN SPAM draws a tight line around what states can do, this law is mostly interesting for the way that it pushes as firmly against that line as it can.
Read the rest of his comments on his blog.
Megaspammer Robert Soloway pleads guilty
Large scale spammer Robert Soloway, whose criminal trial was scheduled to
start next week, pled guilty to most of the criminal charges against him
CAUCE board member John Levine comments on the case in his blog.
Spamhaus makes progress in court
Spamhaus, the well-known anti-spam organization has been in court, sued by Chicago area bulk mailer E360. A year ago E360 got a default judgement against Spamhaus for $11 million, which Spamhaus later appealed. The appeals court has ruled, and it looks promising for Spamhaus.
CAUCE board member John Levine comments on the latest decision.
Famous spammer Sanford Wallace is sued yet again
Sanford Wallace, a famous spammer from the 1990s is back, in a legal tangle with MySpace, for sending a whole lot of spam to MySpace users.
CAUCE board member John Levine writes about it in his blog.

