> Bollocks. AOL has no particular legal requirement to deliver email to > anyone, and does so to any extent, only because they wish to. Email > is not paper mail and so is not subject to the normal legalities that > relate to interfering with or impeding the delivery of mail. > > Look at your ToS and service agreement. > > > Maybe we should get into legal action. Any lawyers on this list?
I'm a lawyer (but please don't hold it against me), and JC is right. At least, from the *sender's* perspective. AOL is under no obligation to the *sender* to deliver their email. If there is a cause of action at all, it would lay with the AOL users - the intended recipients - they may have a cause based on AOL's failure to transit and deliver email which they requested. That would depend in large part on whether AOL has anywhere stated that user services include delivery of email, but there *could* be an "industry standard/expectation" tort in there, as well. Anne (So much for sitting on my hands, eh?)
