> On Jun 13, 2016, at 9:59 AM, Jay Hennigan <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 6/13/16 12:45 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
>> Now you’re arguing legal contracts here - that vendor has a legal contract 
>> with whoever this spammer is.  While they can terminate the account in 
>> question, they certainly can’t expose any customer data to you.
> 
> In the US, they aren't under legal obligation to do so, which seems to vary 
> from some laws elsewhere.
> 
> However, if the ESP is claiming to be white-hat and only send mail where 
> permission exists, one would think that they would share it freely and 
> include a clause in their customer terms and conditions that their customer's 
> identity would be released to a recipient on request.

Scenario 3:

Victim to ESP: I got this spam from your IP and have no idea why. It touts some 
product, but all of the links are tracking bugs that point back to you. Where 
did you get my address and on whose behalf did you send it?

ESP to victim: We believe you and we have disconnected the customer. We’re 
unable to share any other information with you.

laura 

-- 
Having an Email Crisis?  800 823-9674 

Laura Atkins
Word to the Wise
[email protected]
(650) 437-0741          

Email Delivery Blog: http://wordtothewise.com/blog      






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