I know this is gonna start a fight -
The guy himself is making a protest: to a limited group of people contained on a mailing list: he is not wantonly harvesting addresses and spamming indescriminately without the recipient's permission: he mails to employees within a single organisation, many of which have requested the mails: he removes people from his list on request.
This sounds to me pretty much like a closed membership reflector. Am I totally wrong? He has a seperate website which is also available to public access from the rest of the world, so he's only "using" (debatable concept here)
Intel's "resources", and his own.
The
Register has been tracking this story on and off for several years, and I have been reading his protest site occasionaly, some of which (from the viewpoint of an engineer who has experienced similar) makes for pretty appalling reading.
If you think carefully and re-read the judgement, I would say that this ruling is actually
progress against SPAM, since certain exclusions for legitimate mass-mailing have now been legally established, thereby preserving the rights of mailing lists to exist. It is also the first time that the courts have shown that they have finally taken advice on the technical issues of the use of a new communications medium - similar to the "TV Wars" in the 60's where a number of obscure rulings were also seen this way - but in the end defined the limits for broadcasters and distributors. Similar happened with the film industry and the establishment of distribution networks in the 20's and 30's. Read David Puttnam's book "The Undeclared War" and then try and relate it to what's happening on the web now. Even the RIAA's behaviour at the moment is almost a copy of the way the US film studios (and the French, and the British) behaved in the 30's - only in those days, they didn't sue - Thompson sub-machine guns were cheap and easily available in those days (still are).
Think about this in the long term, as if you were building a house. Build the foundations first, install the pipe work next, and after that, you can start putting in the stuff that finally shows *above ground*, the walls and the roof - ie. the "Application" bit
The
next step is to define what a Spammer is - and then the hammer will come down.