Board logo

subject: The 10 Essential Things You Need to Know about CAN-SPAM Compliance [print this page]


Ok, so we've all received the unwanted emails offering up everything from

millions in unclaimed dollars to imposter designer watches to the latest and

greatest ED substance, diet revolution, multi-level scheme, etc,

etc, etc...

While those types of emails are considered by most of us a nuisance or spam,

how aware are you of whether YOU, your brand or company has ever violated

CAN-SPAM laws?

To make it easier my team and I at Buzzphoria, the social media marketing

company (www.buzzphoria.com) have put together a list of the 10 essential

things you need to know about CAN-SPAM compliance.

1. What is CAN-SPAM? Written into law in 2003, CAN-SPAM is a United States

federal government measure to ensure that all email adequately identifies

its origin, allows a user to remove themselves from future mailings and

provides the government and ISPs a right to action against anyone not

following CAN-SPAM requirements.

2. Did you know that CAN-SPAM is only applicable to email that is sent and

received in the United States? It also overrides any state level spam laws.

3. If you have specific CAN-SPAM questions, you'll want to refer to the

Federal Trade Commission (FTC). They're the governing body in legal

prosecutions and also update CAN-SPAM's core compliance requirements. The

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is also involved when it comes to

emails that are sent to cell devices.

4. Under CAN-SPAM once a recipient has opted out of receiving your email,

you may not contact them again for further marketing opportunities. An email

unsubscribe operates similar to a Do-Not-Call list with telephone

numbers.

5. In terms of opt-out function, landing and links CAN-SPAM requirements

keep things simple for the recipient. Senders are allowed to only have the

recipient take one action after landing on the unsubscribe page from an

opt-out click-thru. At that point, the recipient can click on a confirm

button, check a box, etc. Senders cannot require recipients to sign into an

account and perform other actions to be removed from the list or require a

fee. You must support the unsubscribe link and the resulting landing page

for at least 30 days to ensure that recipients have enough time to

unsubscribe. This helps avoid senders from having confusing or complicated

opt out mechanisms.

6. CAN-SPAM mandates that you must remove a recipient from mailing lists or

suppress sending to them within 10 days of receipt of their opt-out request.

7. Transactional email is exempt from CAN-SPAM since it is mandated by the

FTC. CAN-SPAM defines transactional email as one which "facilitates an

agreed-upon transaction or updates a customer in an existing business

relationship." This definition prohibits marketing messages from being

labeled as transactional although it does allow for marketing content in a

transactional email. It is advised that a sender get input from someone

who's an expert in email law to certify that the content does apply to the

transactional definition.

8. CAN-SPAM requires that headers accurately reflect the originator of the

email message. Failure to do so is considered fraudulent and in direct

conflict of the transparency spirit of the law.

9. CAN-SPAM has no volume thresholds for enforcement. Any amount of email

sent, regardless even if it's just to a single recipient, is covered by

CAN-SPAM.

10. Violation of CAN-SPAM can result in monetary fines and jail time

depending on the number of offenses and the sender's intent. Also, a sender

in violation can face civil damages from private ISPs.

The 10 Essential Things You Need to Know about CAN-SPAM Compliance

By: Adam Steuer




welcome to loan (http://www.yloan.com/) Powered by Discuz! 5.5.0