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ISIPP News: ISIPP Offers Utah and Michigan Child Protection Registry Teleseminar
AS JULY 1st LOOMS, ISIPP OFFERS TELESEMINAR TO HELP EMAIL SENDERS
COMPLY WITH NEW CHILD PROTECTION EMAIL ADDRESS REGISTRY LAWS
"Email Senders Need to Realize That These New Laws Apply to All
Commercial Email Senders, and All Commercial Email, Solicited and Otherwise"
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - June 29, 2005 - The Institute for Spam and
Internet Public Policy (ISIPP) is offering a teleseminar to help email
senders, and email marketers and email service providers in
particular, understand what they need to do in order to comply with
the new child protection email address registry laws which go into
effect on Friday, July 1.
"Email senders are starting to realize that these new laws take affect
on Friday," explained Anne P. Mitchell, President and CEO of the
Institute and a Professor of Internet Law at Lincoln Law School of San
Jose, "but many of them don't believe that the laws apply to them, and
none of them understand what they need to do in order to comply. It's
mass confusion out there."
The "Child Protection Registry" laws go into affect on Friday, July
1st, and apply to all senders of commercial email, whether solicited
or not, said Mitchell. And while the registries are in Michigan and
Utah, they apply to any sender inside the United States or even who
just has a presence in the United States, she explained. Starting on
Friday, individuals may place on the registries any email address "to
which a minor may have access". Organizations which primarily provide
services for children, such as schools, may also register entire
Internet domains. Once an email address is on the registry,
commercial emailers are prohibited from sending it anything containing
advertising, or even just linking to advertising, for a product or
service that a minor is otherwise legally prohibited from accessing,
such as alcohol, tobacco, gambling, prescription drugs, or adult-rated material.
The new laws apply to any email which may market products or services
which are forbidden for children, explained Senator Mike Bishop,
sponsor of the Michigan legislation. "While no law will conclusively
solve the problem of spam or replace parents as the primary resource
for teaching children right from wrong, Michigan's Child Protection
Registry helps extend to the 'digital world' the same level of
protection and comfort afforded to children and parents in the real
world," Bishop said. "Any vendor who markets a product, be it
tobacco, alcohol, pornography or any other item that a minor cannot
legally purchase, is now required by law to check their email lists
against the registry."
Penalties for sending such email to an email address on the registry
include "imprisonment for not more than 3 years or a fine of not more
than $30,000.00, or both." Internet service providers and individuals
are empowered to sue under the new laws. To avoid incurring such
penalties, email senders must match their mailing lists against the
registries on a monthly basis.
In order to help email senders to understand the new laws and what
they must do, ISIPP is offering a teleseminar on the new laws on
Thursday, July 7th. Registration is limited and is on a first-come
first-served basis.
In addition to offering the teleseminar, ISIPP's IADB Email Sender
Accreditation Service is the only accreditation, or "reputation",
service for email senders which identifies those email senders that
are complying with the new Michigan and Utah laws. ISIPP's IADB
allows receiving email systems to check on an email sender's
credentials in real time including, now, whether they are complying
with the new Child Protection Registry laws.
Email senders interested in ISIPP's July 7th teleseminar on "Child
Protection Email Address Registry Compliance" can register at http://www.isipp.com/events.php
Information about ISIPP's IADB Email Senders Accreditation Program,
which includes Child Protection Registry compliance notification, is
available at http://www.isipp.com/iadb.php
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