Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread boaz

Not so fast...

On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 21:18:13 -0800, Aviram Jenik avi...@jenik.com wrote:
 Tal Kaplan, from pczlaw, was kind enough to give me a detailed
 explanation(*) 
 about this matter.
 
 First, to answer both Dotan and Boaz, it should be a relatively simple
 process 
 to get 1,000 NIS for every incoming hebrew spam. Think about it as a gift

 from a stranger. The process is documented on the isoc site (link was
 given 
 in some other post in this thread). Remember you have to prove very
little
 
 (that you got the spam) while they have to prove a lot (that you gave
them
 
 permission to send you spam. They need to actually PROVE it).
 
 Second, involving a lawyer will not help - you need to sue in small
claims
 
 court, since the 'hashaom' court will look at you strangely if you come 
 claiming such a small sum. Neither hashalom nor small claims court set 
 precedence so it doesn't really matter. The cost (legal and otherwise) in

 small claims is much lower. So for all these reasons small claims is the
 way 
 to go unless you are going to file a TVIA IZUGIT which you probably don't

 want to do unless you have a lot of free time.

I know, I know. I read at the time quite well the internet resources (like
on ISOC) on the 
procedures and implications of the new law.

 
 The only down side is that in small claims you have to file and appear 
 yourself, without a lawyer. This is basically the reason I haven't done
it
 
 yet. I'm saving my gifts^H^H^H^H^Hhebrew spam in a special folder for
when
 I 
 will have a few free hours to put it in the isoc tempate and go to small 
 claims to file it. Spam keeps piling up in it and it gives me the feeling
 of 
 a piggy bank. Oh, how things have turned.

That's exactly the reason why I haven't done it myself as well. The
necessity to appear in court
which means taking a day off or something.

A few complimentary questions:
1) Have anyone heard of successful small claims suits so far? Is it that
easy, straight-forward and 
pretty sure to have a win?
2) Are you NOT allowed to be represented by somebody authorized by you?
(YIPUI KOACH).
3) Anyone know if I can accumulate and coordinate several suits,
administratively, to one court appearance? If the 
answer is yes, then that would make it easy for me to proceed, since 1000
NIS isn't that much when you deduct the day off cost you have in your
standard day time job. 

Boaz.


 
 
 (*) This is the explanation as I remember it. If there are inaccuracies
it
 is 
 probably my bad memory and not Tal's fault.
 
 - Aviram
 
 
 
 On Sunday 08 February 2009 11:16:41 Boaz Rymland wrote:
 Similarly, due to time constraints I'm not currently performing any
 active steps with the several spam emails that I have received lately,
 all from some coaching/spiritual spammer.

 If there's a lawyer or someone with enough spare time on his hands in
 the crowd who wishes to raise the glove please reply privately.


 Boaz.

 Dotan Cohen wrote:
  I have started getting Hebrew spam again, even now that the new
  anti-spam law is in place. Sure, I _could_ just filter it, but I would
  prefer to make life miserable for the spammers, even at my own
  expense. What legal tools do I have?

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Re: [OFFTOPIC] RE: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Omer Zak wrote:

From the contents of a relatively unfiltered mailbox (which fortunately
is not widely advertised and I check it only once each few weeks),
Leiberman indeed uses very much the political exemption.

I got in that mailbox a lot of spam from:
* Israel Beitanu (Leiberman's party) - sends tons of spam.  No wonder he
obtained the exemption, presumably already then he planned on utilizing
this method of getting votes.
* The party of the disabled (מפלגת הנכים) are spammers as well.
* Israel Hazaka (Dr. Ephraim Sneh) are spammers as well.
  

Didn't get the Sneh junk mail, but did get junk mail from the Likud.

Shachar

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Uri Bruck
b...@rymland.com wrote:


You may want to start with this:
http://www.moital.gov.il/NR/exeres/1A0A7AB5-68D4-4739-801D-44390FEE7A39.htm

  That's exactly the reason why I haven't done it myself as well. The
  necessity to appear in court
  which means taking a day off or something.
 
  A few complimentary questions:
  1) Have anyone heard of successful small claims suits so far? Is it that
  easy, straight-forward and 
  pretty sure to have a win?

   
Generally or specifically on spam?


  2) Are you NOT allowed to be represented by somebody authorized by you?
  (YIPUI KOACH).

   
See (4) in the above URL.

  3) Anyone know if I can accumulate and coordinate several suits,
  administratively, to one court appearance? 
   
If each claim is against a separate entity then they are separate
claims, and you don't get to set the court dates.

  If the 
  answer is yes, then that would make it easy for me to proceed, since 1000
  NIS isn't that much when you deduct the day off cost you have in your
  standard day time job. 
 
  Boaz.
 
 

 
   


-- Thanks, Uri http://translation.israel.net
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.



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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Shachar Shemesh

b...@rymland.com wrote:


That's exactly the reason why I haven't done it myself as well. The
necessity to appear in court
which means taking a day off or something.
  

You can add that cost to the claim.

A few complimentary questions:
1) Have anyone heard of successful small claims suits so far? Is it that
easy, straight-forward and 
pretty sure to have a win?

2) Are you NOT allowed to be represented by somebody authorized by you?
(YIPUI KOACH).
  
If memory serves me right, you are allowed to send someone. Just not a 
lawyer. You need special permission to be represented by a lawyer in 
small claims, and as far as I can understand it, it is rarely given.

3) Anyone know if I can accumulate and coordinate several suits,
administratively, to one court appearance?
Probably no. Small claims is somewhat unofficial, so it is hard to 
represent someone else. Also, you will soon run against the small claims 
ceiling (~19K NIS).
 If the 
answer is yes, then that would make it easy for me to proceed, since 1000

NIS isn't that much when you deduct the day off cost you have in your
standard day time job. 
  

Just accumulate several spams from the same spammer.

Boaz.

  

Shachar

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:


Well, I find that hard to believe. You will eventually have to prove
that you received the SPAM from them. and that you did not alter it in
any way.
The law is very specific that having your name appearing on the spam as 
the one being advertised is sufficient evidence that you are the 
presumed spammer. I imagine that, should the spammer want to claim they 
are not, the burden of proof is on them, not you.


In any case, it should be fairly easy to prove. Just call the number and 
appear to be an interested customer.


Shachar

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Geoffrey S. Mendelson

On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 11:24:34AM +0200, Shachar Shemesh wrote:

The law is very specific that having your name appearing on the spam as 
the one being advertised is sufficient evidence that you are the 
presumed spammer. I imagine that, should the spammer want to claim they 
are not, the burden of proof is on them, not you.


Oh, so I could send out email for Fred's Open Source Consulting,
munge the headers to look like him and put him out of business. 

In any case, it should be fairly easy to prove. Just call the number and 
appear to be an interested customer.


How do you present that in court? Does Israel allow recorded phone 
converstations without the other side being aware of it?


What would you say? I got your email and want to buy ? Would anyone
in their right mind say we did not send you an email, it must have
been someone else and possibly lose the sale?

Geoff.



--
Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel g...@mendelson.com  N3OWJ/4X1GM

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:

On Mon, Feb 09, 2009 at 11:24:34AM +0200, Shachar Shemesh wrote:

The law is very specific that having your name appearing on the spam 
as the one being advertised is sufficient evidence that you are the 
presumed spammer. I imagine that, should the spammer want to claim 
they are not, the burden of proof is on them, not you.


Oh, so I could send out email for Fred's Open Source Consulting,
munge the headers to look like him and put him out of business.
Well, put him into hardship, certainly. Yes, this is one of the 
drawbacks of the law.
In any case, it should be fairly easy to prove. Just call the number 
and appear to be an interested customer.


How do you present that in court? Does Israel allow recorded phone 
converstations without the other side being aware of it?

Yes (IANAL)


What would you say? I got your email and want to buy ? Would anyone
in their right mind say we did not send you an email, it must have
been someone else and possibly lose the sale?

I would.


Geoff.




Shachar

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Nadav Har'El
On Mon, Feb 09, 2009, Shachar Shemesh wrote about Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew 
spam: what to do about it?:
 Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
 
 Well, I find that hard to believe. You will eventually have to prove
 that you received the SPAM from them. and that you did not alter it in
 any way.
...
 In any case, it should be fairly easy to prove. Just call the number and 
 appear to be an interested customer.

I don't think it is so easy to *prove* who sent you the spam.
If you can be assumed not to lie, and that the email you are showing the
court is authentic, and advertising the sued company, it still says nothing
about who sent the ad.

A few years ago, I got to my personal mail a spam from my employer. This
really pissed me off, and I went to discuss this with the CEO. It turns out
that our company had a bunch of resellers selling our products, and (at
least, according to him) one of these resellers decide to be industrious
and advertise using spam. What do you do in such a case? What do you
if the spamvertiser just pretends that this is the case when in fact he was
very much aware of what was going on? What do you do if the spamvertiser
claims he himself paid somebody for advertising, but didn't know that
other person would spam? What do you do if the spamvertiser claims he has
nothing to do with the spam, but rather his competitor sent out this spam
to tarnish his reputation and entangle him in lawsuites?

Frankly I don't see at all how this would be easy to prove, without any
ISPs or law enforcement agencies to be involved. I personally don't think
this civil law (as opposed to criminal law) approach to spam would work,
especially when the sums involved are around 1000 shekels.
But I'll be happy to be proved wrong. Has anybody every heard of anyone
actually winning a court case like this?



-- 
Nadav Har'El|  Monday, Feb  9 2009, 15 Shevat 5769
n...@math.technion.ac.il |-
Phone +972-523-790466, ICQ 13349191 |Vote, n.: A person's right to make a fool
http://nadav.harel.org.il   |of himself and a wreck of his country.

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Nadav Har'El wrote:


What do you do in such a case?

Sue.

The law specifically says that the person in charge of marketing must 
make a personal effort to make sure that the company is spam free, or 
face PERSONAL consequences.


In any case, like I said before, it's up to the spammer to prove they 
didn't.


Shachar

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Aviram Jenik
On Sunday 08 February 2009 23:42:54 b...@rymland.com wrote:
  The only down side is that in small claims you have to file and appear
  yourself, without a lawyer. This is basically the reason I haven't done

 it

  yet.

 That's exactly the reason why I haven't done it myself as well. The
 necessity to appear in court
 which means taking a day off or something.


Agreed. The only reason I wrote what I did is to let you know the legal 
opinion that I've heard: You can't 'outsource' it.

For many people, though, 1,000 NIS is worth a day off from work (not to 
mention the satisfaction).


 Boaz.


- Aviram

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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Amit Aronovitch
According to a couple of recent Hebrew spams that I got, there's a loophole
allowing ONE spam message per spammer per email address. They say that the
law allows sending one message if it is an offer for registration to a
publicity list (they can't send you more if you do not respond), so
basically if the message contains some link saying go here to get more such
offers, you'd have to collect at least two different spams from the same
publisher in order to sue.

I did not read the law so I do not know if this is true or not (I did read
the spams, because they had an angry/offended tone, which was amusing).

- Amit
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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Moish

Amit Aronovitch wrote:
According to a couple of recent Hebrew spams that I got, there's a 
loophole allowing ONE spam message per spammer per email address. They 
say that the law allows sending one message if it is an offer for 
registration to a publicity list (they can't send you more if you do not 
respond), so basically if the message contains some link saying go here 
to get more such offers, you'd have to collect at least two different 
spams from the same publisher in order to sue.


I did not read the law so I do not know if this is true or not (I did 
read the spams, because they had an angry/offended tone, which was amusing).


- Amit



IAMNAL

1. Go to http://www.isoc.org.il/spam and read the law
2. The relevant source here is the Spammer, not the address
   nor the technology.
3. The content matters only to determine if it will promote commercial
   goals of the spammers. So if a link in a message does that by
   refering to a downstream site, it doesn't matter.
4. If the receipient is not a business, then any number of messages
   greater than zero is spam, otherwise greater than one.

--
Moish


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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-09 Thread Ira Abramov
Quoting Aviram Jenik, from the post of Mon, 09 Feb:
 On Sunday 08 February 2009 23:42:54 b...@rymland.com wrote:
   The only down side is that in small claims you have to file and appear
   yourself, without a lawyer. This is basically the reason I haven't done
 
 Agreed. The only reason I wrote what I did is to let you know the legal 
 opinion that I've heard: You can't 'outsource' it.
 
 For many people, though, 1,000 NIS is worth a day off from work (not to 
 mention the satisfaction).

I'm sure there's something we can do to centralize the filings and get
all the money donated for a good cause. We just need an unemployed
volunteer who would do it for a 15% cut :-) We may be crappy Jews who
give away knowledge and software, but if we dig back in our genes, I'm
sure we can find a solution :-)

That's an interesting project for ISOC+Hamakor to collaborate on, and
for all the new unemployed software people to tackle... getting payed
for fighting Email annoyances? Super... I can supply you with proof and
logs about how my server is keeling over, and spamassassin taking
precious CPU cycles from Apache each time there's a spam attack. this is
measurable damage that can even raise the claims. plus if enough people
join a lawsuit, it can be taken to a higher court, and save us the
personal presence in court. Anyone here got an unemployed law graduate
friend who will work for a cut of the winnings? It's a win-win situation
:)

-- 
Your I-ching reading
Ira Abramov
http://ira.abramov.org/email/

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Tzafrir Cohen
On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 09:25:51AM +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:

  Slightly off-topic: I got annoyed by political spam that was sent to my
  work address (at least 4 messages, with a considerable size) Result:
  blacklisted mailing list messages from their provider (and notified them
  as well).
 
  While it might be legal, I personally find this behaviour unacceptable.
 
 
 The spam I got was political spam as well. This is legal? The message
 said at the bottom that it is legal, but I doubt it. What is special
 about political spam that it is excepted from the law?

It needs to be commercial to be illegal.

-- 
Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is
http://tzafrir.org.il || a Mutt's
tzaf...@cohens.org.il ||  best
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RE: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread ronys
 
Indeed it's legal. When the anti-spam law was passed, a special exemption was 
put in to allow politicians to send spam.

IIRC, this was Leiberman's initiative.

Rony

-Original Message-
From: linux-il-boun...@cs.huji.ac.il [mailto:linux-il-boun...@cs.huji.ac.il] On 
Behalf Of Dotan Cohen
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 9:26 AM
To: linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il
Subject: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

 Shachar seems to suggest that this might be used for a small claims
 court case in which the spammer may be sued for up to 1000 NIS per
 email.


I'll donate the 1000 NIS right back into anti-spam efforts or to KDE
or something.

 Slightly off-topic: I got annoyed by political spam that was sent to my
 work address (at least 4 messages, with a considerable size) Result:
 blacklisted mailing list messages from their provider (and notified them
 as well).

 While it might be legal, I personally find this behaviour unacceptable.


The spam I got was political spam as well. This is legal? The message
said at the bottom that it is legal, but I doubt it. What is special
about political spam that it is excepted from the law?

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת
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?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?
?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?-?
?-?-?-?-?-?-?
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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Dotan Cohen
 It needs to be commercial to be illegal.


Really? If I have a website that I don't make money off of, like
gibberish.co.il then can I send spam? I'll do it too, not in order to
promote the site but in order to get the law changed.

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת
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а-б-в-г-д-е-ё-ж-з-и-й-к-л-м-н-о-п-р-с-т-у-ф-х-ц-ч-ш-щ-ъ-ы-ь-э-ю-я
ä-ö-ü-ß-Ä-Ö-Ü
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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:

On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 07:11:59AM +, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:


Shachar seems to suggest that this might be used for a small claims
court case in which the spammer may be sued for up to 1000 NIS per
email.


Does this only cover email from Israel, or can it be SPAM from Israeli
companies sent from outside of Israeli?
It covers any spam received in Israel, but if the company is not Israel 
there may be no one to sue.


It follows that if the spammer is Israeli, it does not matter what 
language the email is in, nor how it was sent.


Shachar

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Herouth Maoz

Quoting Dotan Cohen dotanco...@gmail.com:


It needs to be commercial to be illegal.



Really? If I have a website that I don't make money off of, like
gibberish.co.il then can I send spam? I'll do it too, not in order to
promote the site but in order to get the law changed.


‎There is no chance that the law will be changed. First, politicians  
are the ones who are supposed to change it - and they have a vested  
interest in allowing political spam. Second, disallowing  
non-commercial spam may be regarded as an act against freedom of  
speech, and such an act may not pass Bagatz.


The way the current law defines spam is as a message that induces you  
to spend money. So spam calling for donations is also illegal.  
Promoting causes, such as asking for signatures for Gilad Shalit, or  
banning silicon from dairy products, is legal.


Herouth

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Tzafrir Cohen
On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 10:25:53AM +0200, ronys wrote:
  
 Indeed it's legal. When the anti-spam law was passed, a special 
 exemption was put in to allow politicians to send spam.

Not only politicians. 

Here's a conspiracy theory for you:

We all know that ISOC is an NPO, and as such in a good position to
still send spam. ISOC has been one of the main promoters of the law.
This suggests that ISOC was interested to reserve itself the option
to spam innocent Israely Internet users.

The fact that this is completely unsupported by other facts (the
declared position of ISOC, the opinions of ISOC board members as we know
them, and the simple fact that ISOC has never (IIRC) resorted to sending
spam before does not disprove that conspiracy theory (because it's
impossible to disprove a conspiracy theory).

 
 IIRC, this was Leiberman's initiative.

Before calling such names, please support your claim with facts.

I'm no supprter of that MK you mentioned, however I expect my opinion to
be based on solid facts.

-- 
Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is
http://tzafrir.org.il || a Mutt's
tzaf...@cohens.org.il ||  best
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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Dotan Cohen
 The way the current law defines spam is as a message that induces you to
 spend money. So spam calling for donations is also illegal. Promoting
 causes, such as asking for signatures for Gilad Shalit, or banning silicon
 from dairy products, is legal.


So a spam campaign abnout getting the spam law changed is valid?
That's great! If you see such a campaign in the coming weeks, I invite
you all to complain to me personally! I hate spam (I get over 2000
spam messages a day to my personal domain) but fire you fight with
fire.

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת
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[OFFTOPIC] RE: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Omer Zak
From the contents of a relatively unfiltered mailbox (which fortunately
is not widely advertised and I check it only once each few weeks),
Leiberman indeed uses very much the political exemption.

I got in that mailbox a lot of spam from:
* Israel Beitanu (Leiberman's party) - sends tons of spam.  No wonder he
obtained the exemption, presumably already then he planned on utilizing
this method of getting votes.
* The party of the disabled (מפלגת הנכים) are spammers as well.
* Israel Hazaka (Dr. Ephraim Sneh) are spammers as well.

I already blogged about my annoyance at a party which I'd support
otherwise but are now taboo because they are spammers (the party of the
disabled).

 --- Omer




On Sun, 2009-02-08 at 10:25 +0200, ronys wrote:
  Indeed it's legal. When the anti-spam law was passed, a special exemption 
 was put in to allow politicians to send spam.
 
 IIRC, this was Leiberman's initiative.
 
 Rony

-- 
Not voting in an election is like voting for the candidate, whom you
hate the most.
My own blog is at http://www.zak.co.il/tddpirate/

My opinions, as expressed in this E-mail message, are mine alone.
They do not represent the official policy of any organization with which
I may be affiliated in any way.
WARNING TO SPAMMERS:  at http://www.zak.co.il/spamwarning.html



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OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Boaz Rymland
Similarly, due to time constraints I'm not currently performing any 
active steps with the several spam emails that I have received lately, 
all from some coaching/spiritual spammer.


If there's a lawyer or someone with enough spare time on his hands in 
the crowd who wishes to raise the glove please reply privately.



Boaz.


Dotan Cohen wrote:


I have started getting Hebrew spam again, even now that the new
anti-spam law is in place. Sure, I _could_ just filter it, but I would
prefer to make life miserable for the spammers, even at my own
expense. What legal tools do I have?

  


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Re: OFFTOPIC: Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-08 Thread Aviram Jenik
Tal Kaplan, from pczlaw, was kind enough to give me a detailed explanation(*) 
about this matter.

First, to answer both Dotan and Boaz, it should be a relatively simple process 
to get 1,000 NIS for every incoming hebrew spam. Think about it as a gift 
from a stranger. The process is documented on the isoc site (link was given 
in some other post in this thread). Remember you have to prove very little 
(that you got the spam) while they have to prove a lot (that you gave them 
permission to send you spam. They need to actually PROVE it).

Second, involving a lawyer will not help - you need to sue in small claims 
court, since the 'hashaom' court will look at you strangely if you come 
claiming such a small sum. Neither hashalom nor small claims court set 
precedence so it doesn't really matter. The cost (legal and otherwise) in 
small claims is much lower. So for all these reasons small claims is the way 
to go unless you are going to file a TVIA IZUGIT which you probably don't 
want to do unless you have a lot of free time.

The only down side is that in small claims you have to file and appear 
yourself, without a lawyer. This is basically the reason I haven't done it 
yet. I'm saving my gifts^H^H^H^H^Hhebrew spam in a special folder for when I 
will have a few free hours to put it in the isoc tempate and go to small 
claims to file it. Spam keeps piling up in it and it gives me the feeling of 
a piggy bank. Oh, how things have turned.


(*) This is the explanation as I remember it. If there are inaccuracies it is 
probably my bad memory and not Tal's fault.

- Aviram



On Sunday 08 February 2009 11:16:41 Boaz Rymland wrote:
 Similarly, due to time constraints I'm not currently performing any
 active steps with the several spam emails that I have received lately,
 all from some coaching/spiritual spammer.

 If there's a lawyer or someone with enough spare time on his hands in
 the crowd who wishes to raise the glove please reply privately.


 Boaz.

 Dotan Cohen wrote:
  I have started getting Hebrew spam again, even now that the new
  anti-spam law is in place. Sure, I _could_ just filter it, but I would
  prefer to make life miserable for the spammers, even at my own
  expense. What legal tools do I have?

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Yedidyah Bar-David
On Sat, Feb 07, 2009 at 10:35:19PM +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
 I have started getting Hebrew spam again, even now that the new
 anti-spam law is in place. Sure, I _could_ just filter it, but I would
 prefer to make life miserable for the spammers, even at my own
 expense. What legal tools do I have?

You might want to have a look here:
http://www.isoc.org.il/spam/
-- 
Didi


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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Dotan Cohen
2009/2/7 sara fink sara.f...@gmail.com:
 I have a booklet from emun hatzibur with the law. They also have an example
 how to file a law suit against spammers (see the last pages) of the
 attachment.  Sorry for the hebrew mismatch in the name of the file.


Thank you Sara, I will read that tomorrow.

 BTW, send me the details where to send the fax for rashut hateufa.


פקס: 039752387

Don't forget to mention that going to the iaa.gov.il website just to
look for the fax number gave this error:

דפדפן לא מתאים
האתר מיועד לדפדפנים מסוג אינטרנט אקפלורר 5.5 ומעלה


-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Shachar Shemesh

Dotan Cohen wrote:

I have started getting Hebrew spam again, even now that the new
anti-spam law is in place. Sure, I _could_ just filter it, but I would
prefer to make life miserable for the spammers, even at my own
expense. What legal tools do I have?

  
Anyone who got spam from Rinat Zoref and kept it is welcome to email 
me in private.


Also, anyone who got spam from divur.lasakim, likewise.

And, whatever you do, KEEP THOSE EMAILS. I keep all of the Hebrew (and 
Israeli) spam I get.


Shachar

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread sammy ominsky

On 08/02/2009, at 08:23, Shachar Shemesh wrote:

Anyone who got spam from Rinat Zoref and kept it is welcome to  
email me in private.

Also, anyone who got spam from divur.lasakim, likewise.
And, whatever you do, KEEP THOSE EMAILS. I keep all of the Hebrew  
(and Israeli) spam I get.


Why keep them?  Is there really any way to benefit from this, or is it  
a terrible waste of time.  Should I stop filtering out Hebrew/Israeli  
spam?  I get a LOT of it, because my company runs public mailing lists  
for many, many yeshivot and their divrei torah programs.


--sambo

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Tzafrir Cohen
On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 08:57:06AM +0200, sammy ominsky wrote:
 On 08/02/2009, at 08:23, Shachar Shemesh wrote:

 Anyone who got spam from Rinat Zoref and kept it is welcome to email 
 me in private.
 Also, anyone who got spam from divur.lasakim, likewise.
 And, whatever you do, KEEP THOSE EMAILS. I keep all of the Hebrew (and 
 Israeli) spam I get.

 Why keep them?  Is there really any way to benefit from this, or is it a 
 terrible waste of time.  Should I stop filtering out Hebrew/Israeli  
 spam?  I get a LOT of it, because my company runs public mailing lists  
 for many, many yeshivot and their divrei torah programs.

Shachar seems to suggest that this might be used for a small claims
court case in which the spammer may be sued for up to 1000 NIS per
email.

Slightly off-topic: I got annoyed by political spam that was sent to my
work address (at least 4 messages, with a considerable size) Result: 
blacklisted mailing list messages from their provider (and notified them 
as well).

While it might be legal, I personally find this behaviour unacceptable.

-- 
Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is
http://tzafrir.org.il || a Mutt's
tzaf...@cohens.org.il ||  best
ICQ# 16849754 || friend

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Dotan Cohen
 Shachar seems to suggest that this might be used for a small claims
 court case in which the spammer may be sued for up to 1000 NIS per
 email.


I'll donate the 1000 NIS right back into anti-spam efforts or to KDE
or something.

 Slightly off-topic: I got annoyed by political spam that was sent to my
 work address (at least 4 messages, with a considerable size) Result:
 blacklisted mailing list messages from their provider (and notified them
 as well).

 While it might be legal, I personally find this behaviour unacceptable.


The spam I got was political spam as well. This is legal? The message
said at the bottom that it is legal, but I doubt it. What is special
about political spam that it is excepted from the law?

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

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Re: Hebrew spam: what to do about it?

2009-02-07 Thread Geoffrey S. Mendelson

On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 07:11:59AM +, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:


Shachar seems to suggest that this might be used for a small claims
court case in which the spammer may be sued for up to 1000 NIS per
email.


Does this only cover email from Israel, or can it be SPAM from Israeli
companies sent from outside of Israeli?

Geoff.
--
Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel g...@mendelson.com  N3OWJ/4X1GM

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