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| 1 | A bill to be entitled | ||
| 2 | An act relating to electronic messages; providing | ||
| 3 | definitions; prohibiting a person from transmitting, | ||
| 4 | conspiring to transmit, or assisting in transmitting a | ||
| 5 | commercial electronic mail message from a computer within | ||
| 6 | the state to a resident of the state if that message uses | ||
| 7 | an Internet domain name without permission, misrepresents | ||
| 8 | the point of origin of the message, or contains false or | ||
| 9 | misleading information; specifying circumstances under | ||
| 10 | which a person has knowledge that the intended recipient | ||
| 11 | of a message is a resident of this state; providing for | ||
| 12 | injunctive or other equitable relief for a violation of | ||
| 13 | the act; authorizing the court to award damages; | ||
| 14 | authorizing a computer service to block the receipt or | ||
| 15 | transmission of a message upon reasonable belief that the | ||
| 16 | message is or will be sent in violation of the act; | ||
| 17 | providing immunity from liability for such action; | ||
| 18 | providing an effective date. | ||
| 19 | |||
| 20 | WHEREAS, the Legislature finds that the volume of | ||
| 21 | unsolicited electronic mail has grown exponentially in the past | ||
| 22 | year as individuals and organizations have discovered that they | ||
| 23 | are able to send electronic advertisements to hundreds of | ||
| 24 | thousands of Internet users at virtually no cost, and | ||
| 25 | WHEREAS, unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages | ||
| 26 | constitute the majority of unsolicited electronic mail, and | ||
| 27 | unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages often impose an | ||
| 28 | out-of-pocket monetary cost on recipients who cannot refuse such | ||
| 29 | messages and who incur incremental fees for time spent accessing | ||
| 30 | and reviewing each message, and | ||
| 31 | WHEREAS, to the recipient, an unsolicited commercial | ||
| 32 | electronic mail message is often indistinguishable from other | ||
| 33 | electronic mail messages and the unsolicited messages thus | ||
| 34 | diminish the utility of the electronic mail service because | ||
| 35 | users must sort through unwanted advertisements to obtain those | ||
| 36 | messages they wish to receive, and | ||
| 37 | WHEREAS, unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages | ||
| 38 | cannot be effectively blocked and thus, invade the privacy of | ||
| 39 | recipients, and this invasion of privacy is exacerbated for | ||
| 40 | recipients whose electronic mail service issues an alert for | ||
| 41 | each message received, resulting in repeated disruption of | ||
| 42 | computer use, and | ||
| 43 | WHEREAS, advertisers may reach electronic mail users by | ||
| 44 | less-intrusive means that do not impose the cost of unwanted | ||
| 45 | advertisements on recipients and that do not interfere with | ||
| 46 | recipients' ability to use electronic mail service, and | ||
| 47 | advertisers may also continue to use electronic mail as a low- | ||
| 48 | cost method of reaching a wide audience if their mailings are | ||
| 49 | solicited, and | ||
| 50 | WHEREAS, unsolicited electronic mail sent in bulk often | ||
| 51 | imposes significant monetary costs on interactive computer | ||
| 52 | services, businesses, and educational and nonprofit | ||
| 53 | organizations because they must divert a significant portion of | ||
| 54 | limited computing resources to processing and storing these | ||
| 55 | messages and to responding to complaints by recipients, and | ||
| 56 | WHEREAS, unsolicited electronic mail is increasingly | ||
| 57 | diminishing the quality of service provided to customers of | ||
| 58 | interactive computer services and is harming the business | ||
| 59 | operations of interactive computer services, NOW, THEREFORE, | ||
| 60 | |||
| 61 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: | ||
| 62 | |||
| 63 | Section 1. Electronic mail containing unauthorized domain | ||
| 64 | name or false or misleading information prohibited; penalties.-- | ||
| 65 | (1) As used in this section, the term: | ||
| 66 | (a) "Assist the transmission" means actions taken by a | ||
| 67 | person to provide substantial assistance or support that enables | ||
| 68 | a person to formulate, compose, send, originate, initiate, or | ||
| 69 | transmit a commercial electronic mail message when the person | ||
| 70 | providing the assistance knows or consciously avoids knowing | ||
| 71 | that the initiator of the commercial electronic mail message is | ||
| 72 | engaged, or intends to engage, in any practice that violates | ||
| 73 | laws protecting consumers. | ||
| 74 | (b) "Commercial electronic mail message" means an | ||
| 75 | electronic mail message sent for the purpose of promoting real | ||
| 76 | property, goods, or services for sale or lease. The term does | ||
| 77 | not mean an electronic mail message to which an interactive | ||
| 78 | computer service provider has attached an advertisement in | ||
| 79 | exchange for free use of an electronic mail account if the | ||
| 80 | sender has agreed to such an arrangement. | ||
| 81 | (c) "Electronic mail address" means a destination, | ||
| 82 | commonly expressed as a string of characters, to which | ||
| 83 | electronic mail may be sent or delivered. | ||
| 84 | (d) "Initiate the transmission" means the action by the | ||
| 85 | original sender of an electronic mail message, not the action by | ||
| 86 | any intervening interactive computer service that may handle or | ||
| 87 | retransmit the message, unless the intervening interactive | ||
| 88 | computer service assists in the transmission of an electronic | ||
| 89 | mail message when it knows, or consciously avoids knowing, that | ||
| 90 | the person initiating the transmission is engaged, or intends to | ||
| 91 | engage, in any act or practice that violates laws protecting | ||
| 92 | consumers. | ||
| 93 | (e) "Interactive computer service" means any information | ||
| 94 | service, system, or access software provider that provides or | ||
| 95 | enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server, | ||
| 96 | including a service or system that provides access to the | ||
| 97 | Internet and similar systems operated or services offered by | ||
| 98 | libraries or educational institutions. | ||
| 99 | (f) "Internet domain name" means the globally unique, | ||
| 100 | hierarchical reference to an Internet host or service which is | ||
| 101 | assigned through a naming authority and which consists of a | ||
| 102 | series of character strings separated by periods. | ||
| 103 | (g) "Person" means an individual, corporation, | ||
| 104 | partnership, or association. | ||
| 105 | (2)(a) A person may not transmit, conspire with another to | ||
| 106 | transmit, or assist in transmitting a commercial electronic mail | ||
| 107 | message from a computer located in this state to an electronic | ||
| 108 | mail address that the sender knows, or has reason to know, is | ||
| 109 | held by a resident of this state if the commercial electronic | ||
| 110 | mail message: | ||
| 111 | 1. Uses a third party's Internet domain name without the | ||
| 112 | permission of the third party or which otherwise misrepresents | ||
| 113 | or obscures any information in identifying the point of origin | ||
| 114 | or the transmission path of a commercial electronic mail | ||
| 115 | message; or | ||
| 116 | 2. Contains false or misleading information in the subject | ||
| 117 | line. | ||
| 118 | (b) For purposes of this subsection, a person knows that | ||
| 119 | the intended recipient of a commercial electronic mail message | ||
| 120 | is a resident of this state if that information is available | ||
| 121 | upon request from the registrant of the Internet domain name | ||
| 122 | contained in the recipient's electronic mail address. | ||
| 123 | (3) In addition to any other remedy provided by law, a | ||
| 124 | person may bring an action for appropriate injunctive or other | ||
| 125 | equitable relief for a violation of subsection (2). The court | ||
| 126 | may award damages of: | ||
| 127 | (a) Five hundred dollars to the recipient of a commercial | ||
| 128 | electronic mail message who suffers damage as a result of a | ||
| 129 | violation of subsection (2) or the court may award actual | ||
| 130 | damages, whichever is greater. | ||
| 131 | (b) One thousand dollars to an interactive computer | ||
| 132 | service that suffers damage as a result of a violation of | ||
| 133 | subsection (2) or the court may award actual damages, whichever | ||
| 134 | is greater. | ||
| 135 | (4)(a) An interactive computer service may, upon its own | ||
| 136 | initiative, block the receipt or transmission through its | ||
| 137 | service of any commercial electronic mail message that it | ||
| 138 | reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in violation of | ||
| 139 | subsection (2). | ||
| 140 | (b) An interactive computer service may not be held liable | ||
| 141 | for any action voluntarily taken in good faith to block the | ||
| 142 | receipt or transmission through its service of any commercial | ||
| 143 | electronic mail message that it reasonably believes is, or will | ||
| 144 | be, sent in violation of subsection (2). | ||
| 145 | Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2003. | ||