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Aug 6 2004
The Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday voted
to outlaw spam sent to mobile devices, but warned that unsolicited text
messages would not be covered by the ban.
By a 5-0 vote, the FCC said sending commercial e-mail
messages to cell phones or handheld computers would not be permitted unless
the recipient had asked to receive the correspondence.
FCC rulings
The Federal Communications Commission was anything but
idle this week. Among the technology-related decisions approved at a meeting
Wednesday:
• Internet: Broadband providers and Internet phone
services must comply with wiretapping requirements designed for the
traditional phone network.
• Spam: E-mail spam sent to mobile devices without
permission will be illegal. Politicians, charities, and nonprofit groups are
exempt.
• TiVo: The company's planned file-sharing service wins a
reprieve from attempts by major movie studios and the NFL to declare it
illegal.
• Fiber: Broadband providers may have more reasons to run
fiber connections to multiunit dwellings like apartment and condo buildings.
The FCC says those fiber links will be deregulated.
• E-rate: The controversial e-rate program, which has been
plagued by fraud and waste, will be the subject of more audits. E-rate
levies taxes on anyone using cell phones, pagers or landlines, with the
money going to pay for cheaper rural phone service and to subsidize schools
and libraries.
• Digital TV: Digital TV broadcasters will be required to
choose what channels they eventually want to use, in what the FCC says is a
near-final step in completing the transition away from analog television.
But the FCC's decision not to include unsolicited text
messages sent through mechanisms like SMS--short message service--has the
potential to create a regulatory loophole. Wireless providers often charge a
few pennies per text message received.
Verizon Wireless subscribers exchanged 2.3 billion text
messages last quarter, up from 2.1 billion during the previous quarter.
Cingular Wireless reported 1.4 billion text messages sent during its last
quarter.
The FCC has previously said that it believes unsolicited
SMS messages are restricted by the 1991 "junk fax" law called the Telephone
Consumer Protection Act. The TCPA, however, only bans automated dialers from
"calling" phone numbers, which may not cover SMS messages that are
transmitted digitally.
"The commission found that Short Message Service messages
transmitted solely to phone numbers, as opposed to those sent to addresses
with references to Internet domains, are not covered by these protections,"
the FCC said in a statement after the vote.
Under the Can-Spam Act, the FCC had until late August to
publish regulations prohibiting "mobile service commercial messages unless
the subscriber has provided express prior authorization to the sender," a
broad definition that seems to include text messages. But the law also gave
the FCC the authority to shrink that definition when necessary to address
"unique technical aspects" of different forms of wireless communications.
The FCC's rules permit mobile providers to register their
Internet domain names in a master database that spammers are supposed to
honor. That database will include only domain names like attwireless.com and
t-mobileusa.com, and not individual e-mail addresses of subscribers.
"Spam has become the plague of the information age," FCC
Chairman Michael Powell said at Wednesday's public meeting. "It truly
frustrates, if not destroys, the powerful experience that some of the new
technologies can provide."
Noncommercial messages sent by politicians, nonprofit
groups or charities are not covered by the Can-Spam Act or the FCC's
forthcoming rules. Anyone violating those rules by sending spam to a mobile
device can be sued in civil court by the Federal Trade Commission.
The text of the final regulations, however, has not been
released.
Legal Issues in Mobile
2004
SMS Mobile spam draws US FCC regulator wrath
Verizon Wireless sues SMS spammer
EU Commission challenges
UK international roaming rates
BT and TMobile UK argue over mobile termination rates
Russian mobile revenues to exceed USD 9 billion in 2004
Ofcom to strengthen premium rate services protection
New UK
Regulations
for opting out of PSMS
Consumer group formulates cell phone in-flight policy
Malaysian couple misread text competition details
Legal Q&As - working time and 3G harassment
Switzerland to insist on Prepaid registration
Malaysian couple misread text competition details
Consumer group formulates cell phone in-flight policy
GSM Wireless Nanny Blocker
Launched
UK Mobile Operators Block Online Porn
Finland's
cellphone service watchdog shuts down SMSs from 'God'
Brazilian Government Faces Legal
Action Over Regulator Sacking
2003
Now you can dump your wife by SMS
EU presses for mobile spam and privacy laws
Mobile Phone whilst driving ban commences in the UK
"No
cell phones" sticker now trademarked
Warning That Bluetooth Class I devices pose hacking
& security risk
Anti-spam laws now in force in the UK ban unsolicited SMS
South Korea Clamps Down on SMS Spam
Tackling worldwide trade in stolen mobiles
New GSM Jammer Looks Like a GSM Cellphone
Sangyo 360 degree surveilance camera working with
3G phones
Bizarre Jamming Of Moldova GSM Network
Camera phones a threat to industrial secrets
US tower firm fined over safety violations
Mobile Phone whilst driving ban commences in the UK
Lawsuit over GSM network seizure in Cote d'Ivoire
African GSM Operators Create Mobile Phone EIR
Blacklist
Woman suffers facial burns from cell phone
Nigerian Regulator Sets Up Arbitration Panels Over GSM Complaints
Calif. bans mobile phone spam
Security Concerns Still Slowing Mobile App Deployment
DoCoMo Mova F505i wth fingerprint authentication technology
GSM Association sets its sights on spamming globally
Vodafone to clamp down on SMS Spam
GSM
Jammer
Security
Device
saved Pakistan's president
Worlds First Mobile Spyphone Launched
EU moves against illegal and harmful content online
Korean Government Admits Developing Anti-Tapping
South Korea
to introduce tougher Location laws |