CONSUMER
ALERT
MIKE
COX
ATTORNEY
GENERAL
The
Attorney General provides Consumer Alerts to inform the public of unfair,
misleading, or deceptive business practices, and to provide information and
guidance on other issues of concern.
Michigan's
Anti-Spam Law
The
Unsolicited Commercial E-mail Protection Act
2003
Public Act 42, MCL 445.2501 et seq
Michigan's anti-spam law became
effective on September 1, 2003. This
alert provides a general overview of the law.
A full copy of the law is available at: http://www.mileg.org/printDocument.asp?objName=mcl-act-42-of-2003&version=txt.
For general information on
reducing junk e-mail, see the Attorney General's "Spam
Reduction - Tips for Reducing Junk E-mail" alert.
Consumers should be aware that federal spam laws may be enacted that
could affect the options of Michigan consumers.
What
is Unsolicited Commercial E-mail?
Commercial e-mail is e-mail that promotes goods,
services, real property, and other things of value.
Under Michigan law, an e-mail is considered
"unsolicited" if it was sent without the recipient's express permission by
a business with which the consumer had no preexisting business or personal
relationship.
A "preexisting business relationship" is
defined as a relationship existing before the receipt of an e-mail and formed
voluntarily by the recipient with another person (through an inquiry,
application, purchase, or use of a product or service furnished by the sender).
Finally, an e-mail is not unsolicited if it was
received as a result of the recipient opting into a system in order to receive
promotional material.
What
Is Required of Senders of Unsolicited Commercial E-mail?
A person who intentionally sends (or causes to be
sent) an unsolicited commercial e-mail message through an e-mail service
provider that the sender knew or "should have known" was located in
Michigan, or to an e-mail address that the sender knew or "should have
known" was held by a Michigan resident, must do the following:
- Include
in the e-mail subject line "ADV:" as the first four characters;
- Provide
the sender's legal name, correct street address, valid Internet domain
name, and valid return e-mail address;
- Establish
a toll-free telephone number, a valid return e-mail address, or another
"easy-to-use" electronic method by which a recipient can notify
the sender to stop sending e-mail and prominently disclose this information
in e-mail messages;
- Establish
and maintain the necessary policies and records to ensure that consumers'
requests not to receive additional e-mail will be honored.
What
Is A Sender of Commercial E-mail Prohibited from Doing?
A person who sends (or causes
to be sent) unsolicited commercial e-mail either through an e-mail service
provider located in Michigan, or to an e-mail address held by a resident of
Michigan, may not do any of the following:
- Use
a third-party's Internet domain name or e-mail address in identifying the
point of origin or transmission path of the e-mail ad without the third
party's consent.
- Misrepresent
any information in identifying the e-mail's point of origin or
transmission path.
- Fail
to include the information necessary to identify the e-mail's point of
origin.
- Sell,
distribute, or provide (directly or indirectly) software used to falsify
transmission/routing information.
Civil
Remedies
The
following parties may bring a civil suit against a sender who violates the act:
- A
person who receives an unsolicited commercial e-mail;
- An
e-mail service provider through whose facilities the e-mail was transmitted;
- The
Attorney General.
Private
parties can recover actual costs and reasonable attorney fees, plus:
The prevailing recipient or service provider
would be awarded actual costs and reasonable attorney fees.
Criminal
Penalties
In
general, a violation of the act would be considered a misdemeanor punishable by
up to one year of imprisonment and a fine of up to $10,000.
However, persons who violate prohibitions relating to the disclosure of
routing and transmission information or who violate the act in the furtherance
of another crime would be guilty of a felony punishable by up to four years in
prison and a fine of up to $25,000. Each
commercial e-mail sent in violation of the act would be a separate violation.
Proof
that the recipient was unable to contact the sender through the return e-mail
address provided by the sender would constitute "prima facie" evidence
- evidence that would, if uncontested, establish that a sender committed
a criminal violation of the act.