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Is spamming a constitutional right?

Virginia Supreme Court decision imposes on others the obligation to listen
Unified Communications Alert By Michael Osterman , Network World , 09/23/2008
Michael Osterman
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Unified messaging and communications analysis by consultant Michael Osterman.

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In 2004, Jeremy Jaynes was sentenced to nine years in prison for violating Virginia's fairly restrictive antispam law. Earlier this year, he appealed to Virginia's Supreme Court and his conviction was upheld. He appealed again and week before last his conviction was overturned. The Court ruled that the Virginia law was too broad because it did not provide an exemption for religious and political spam messages. The Court, in rendering its decision, agreed that spammers have the right to express their political or religious beliefs even if they forge their identity.

I believe that this ruling will have relatively little impact on spamming in the short term, since few spammers adhere to antispam (Compare antispam products) laws anyway and most of the antispam laws on the books have, at best, been fairly ineffective. However, I believe that the Virginia ruling will have significant long-term impacts on users of messaging and unified communications.

The U.S. Constitution guarantees the right of free speech. What it does not guarantee, however, is the right of speakers to be heard, nor does it impose on others the obligation to listen. However, what the Virginia Supreme Court did, in essence, is to bind the right of free speech with the obligation to listen to or otherwise actively deal with that speech. The Court, by ruling that a spammer has a right to send non-commercial e-mails to anyone, has also ruled implicitly that receivers of those communications have an obligation to receive them or otherwise deal with them actively by deleting the messages, spend money on spam filters and the like.

The purpose of the Constitutional guarantee to the right of free speech was to obligate government to protect that right, not to obligate all of us to listen to it.

I’d like to get your take on this issue – please let me know your thoughts.

Michael Osterman is principal analyst of Osterman Research.

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Comments (14)
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Littering laws?By jimmaclachlan on September 23, 2008, 11:03 amThey should have charged him with littering & charge him $1000 per piece. That's what he's really doing - throwing his trash on my lawn. Unlike junk snail mail,...

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Gee why not just post a linkBy Anon on September 23, 2008, 2:27 pmGee why not just post a link to your products too. Talk about spam...

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The Virginia court was correctBy stk on September 23, 2008, 3:19 pmI don't see how anyone could disagree with the Virginia Supreme Court ruling; the law is pretty straightforward that overbroad laws are illegal. They should have...

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Someone finally gets itBy Anonymous on September 23, 2008, 3:23 pmI'm still very surprised that the court ruled in this way, precisely for the reasons that you state: the right to freedom of speech does not create in anyone else...

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I believe you are misreading the rulingBy Anonymous on September 23, 2008, 5:19 pmMy understanding is that the ruling does not say that spammers have a right to send their spam. It does not say that spammers have the right to have their commercial...

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SpammersBy Anonymous on September 23, 2008, 7:52 pmSpam equivalents are telemarketers, and snail mail solicitations. Spam filters are like the "do not call" list. Too bad the post office doesn't have an equivalent...

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