> No, it only makes it illegal to use false or misleading information to > send commercial e-mail. That's a rather important distinction.
So, I get non-commercial emails all the time, from topica mailing lists and from people forwarding New York Times articles and such. They come with embedded ads, that the sender cannot turn off. These ads are for the benefit of the helper site (e.g. topica). Are these messages commercial email, or not? Is the sender penalized if their email address or domain name was registered with privacy-protecting circumlocutions (like addresses and cities of "123 Main St, Smallville")? So, I get emails at various times from people I've never met, saying, "I hear that you give money for drug policy reform, would you give some to my nonprofit X for project Y?" Is that a commercial email? It proposes a financial transaction. Are these people subject to the anti-spam bill? Do they have to do anything different in their lives if it passes? I think they will. The larger point is that people in the United States don't generally have to closely examine the content of their daily communications, to censor out any possible mention of commerce, money, business, finance, products, services, etc, to avoid legal liability. We have a First Amendment right to communicate without being penalized for our communications. We also have a right to speak without the government putting words in our mouth (like requiring us to put in keywords, or include a postal return address. That last requirement was deliberatly knocked down by the Supreme Court within the last few years, building on existing precedents that protected anonymous speech.) > Don't take my word for what the bill says, read it yourself. It's not > that long. He's right. Congress should be commended for only spending 55 pages on the details of this important topic. > There's plenty of things wrong with it, but outlawing all > anonymous mail isn't one of them. No, but outlawing anonymizers *is* one of them. Anyone who wants to get an anonymizer shut down can just send a commercial email through it. John --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]