The U.S. Federal Trade Commission and Spain’s data protection authority, Agencia Española de Proteccion de Datos, recently signed a bilateral memorandum of understanding to promote enhanced cooperation and information sharing on spam enforcement activities.
TIBCO Staffware Process Suite stands out for its overall breadth, depth, and freedom of choice. Download this independent report that highlights TIBCO’s strengths and overall leadership in the Business Process Management market. TIBCO has over 15 years experience, over 500,000 users, and is the 2nd fastest growing vendor.
Something went wrong :(Ruffle failed to load the Flash SWF file.Access to fetch has likely been blocked by CORS policy.If you are the server administrator, please consult the Ruffle wiki for help.View Ruffle WikiView Error Details |
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Spain’s data protection authority, Agencia Española de Proteccion de Datos (AEPD), recently signed a bilateral memorandum of understanding to promote enhanced cooperation and information sharing on spam enforcement activities.
Something went wrong :(Ruffle failed to load the Flash SWF file.Access to fetch has likely been blocked by CORS policy.If you are the server administrator, please consult the Ruffle wiki for help.View Ruffle WikiView Error Details |
In July 2004, the ETC signed a similar agreement with the United Kingdom and Australia.
In October 2004, the FTC, the AEPD, and other enforcement agencies from countries around the world met in London to develop greater international enforcement cooperation against spam.
Under the “London Action Plan,” 26 agencies from 19 countries, along with numerous private-sector representatives, agreed to share information about spam enforcement, participate in investigative training sessions, and undertake joint education and enforcement projects.
Germany is taking spam control into its own hands. People who send junk e-mail in Germany will face fines of as much as 50,000 euros according to a draft law agreed upon by Germany’s ruling coalition of Social Democrats and Greens.
The law will also prevent spammers from disguising their name and the nature of the e-mail.
German lawmakers hope that the steep fine will make people think twice about sending spam. It has been illegal to send spam in Germany since July 2004, but the ruling coalition hopes the new legislation will help stop the practice.
© 2005 Information Management Journal.
© 2005 Top Tech News.