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New Federal Trade
Commission Rule Requires Warning
for Sexually-Explicit Spam
Rule Intended to Protect Email Users from Unwanted
Sexual Images in Spam
Effective May 19, 2004, spam that includes
sexually-oriented material must include the warning
"SEXUALLY-EXPLICIT:" in the subject line,
according to a rule adopted this year by the Federal
Trade Commission. The CAN-SPAM Act, approved by Congress
in 2003, directed the Commission to adopt a rule requiring
a mark or notice to be included in spam that includes
sexually-oriented content. Anyone in violation of
the rule faces fines.
According to the Federal Trade Commission, the rule
requires the mark to be included in both the subject
line of any email message that contains sexually-oriented
material, and in the equivalent of a "brown paper
wrapper" in the body of the message. The "brown
paper wrapper" is what an email recipient initially
will see when opening a message containing sexually-oriented
material. It will include the prescribed mark or notice,
certain other specified information, and no other
information or images.
To learn more about the rule, please visit http://www.ftc.gov/os/2004/04/040413adultemailfinalrule.pdf.
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