HB 1211 2003
   
1 A bill to be entitled
2          An act relating to electronic messages; providing
3    definitions; prohibiting a person from transmitting,
4    conspiring to transmit, or assisting in transmitting a
5    commercial electronic mail message from a computer within
6    the state to a resident of the state if that message uses
7    an Internet domain name without permission, misrepresents
8    the point of origin of the message, or contains false or
9    misleading information; specifying circumstances under
10    which a person has knowledge that the intended recipient
11    of a message is a resident of this state; providing for
12    injunctive or other equitable relief for a violation of
13    the act; authorizing the court to award damages;
14    authorizing a computer service to block the receipt or
15    transmission of a message upon reasonable belief that the
16    message is or will be sent in violation of the act;
17    providing immunity from liability for such action;
18    providing an effective date.
19         
20          WHEREAS, the Legislature finds that the volume of
21    unsolicited electronic mail has grown exponentially in the past
22    year as individuals and organizations have discovered that they
23    are able to send electronic advertisements to hundreds of
24    thousands of Internet users at virtually no cost, and
25          WHEREAS, unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages
26    constitute the majority of unsolicited electronic mail, and
27    unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages often impose an
28    out-of-pocket monetary cost on recipients who cannot refuse such
29    messages and who incur incremental fees for time spent accessing
30    and reviewing each message, and
31          WHEREAS, to the recipient, an unsolicited commercial
32    electronic mail message is often indistinguishable from other
33    electronic mail messages and the unsolicited messages thus
34    diminish the utility of the electronic mail service because
35    users must sort through unwanted advertisements to obtain those
36    messages they wish to receive, and
37          WHEREAS, unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages
38    cannot be effectively blocked and thus, invade the privacy of
39    recipients, and this invasion of privacy is exacerbated for
40    recipients whose electronic mail service issues an alert for
41    each message received, resulting in repeated disruption of
42    computer use, and
43          WHEREAS, advertisers may reach electronic mail users by
44    less-intrusive means that do not impose the cost of unwanted
45    advertisements on recipients and that do not interfere with
46    recipients' ability to use electronic mail service, and
47    advertisers may also continue to use electronic mail as a low-
48    cost method of reaching a wide audience if their mailings are
49    solicited, and
50          WHEREAS, unsolicited electronic mail sent in bulk often
51    imposes significant monetary costs on interactive computer
52    services, businesses, and educational and nonprofit
53    organizations because they must divert a significant portion of
54    limited computing resources to processing and storing these
55    messages and to responding to complaints by recipients, and
56          WHEREAS, unsolicited electronic mail is increasingly
57    diminishing the quality of service provided to customers of
58    interactive computer services and is harming the business
59    operations of interactive computer services, NOW, THEREFORE,
60         
61          Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
62         
63          Section 1. Electronic mail containing unauthorized domain
64    name or false or misleading information prohibited; penalties.--
65          (1) As used in this section, the term:
66          (a) "Assist the transmission" means actions taken by a
67    person to provide substantial assistance or support that enables
68    a person to formulate, compose, send, originate, initiate, or
69    transmit a commercial electronic mail message when the person
70    providing the assistance knows or consciously avoids knowing
71    that the initiator of the commercial electronic mail message is
72    engaged, or intends to engage, in any practice that violates
73    laws protecting consumers.
74          (b) "Commercial electronic mail message" means an
75    electronic mail message sent for the purpose of promoting real
76    property, goods, or services for sale or lease. The term does
77    not mean an electronic mail message to which an interactive
78    computer service provider has attached an advertisement in
79    exchange for free use of an electronic mail account if the
80    sender has agreed to such an arrangement.
81          (c) "Electronic mail address" means a destination,
82    commonly expressed as a string of characters, to which
83    electronic mail may be sent or delivered.
84          (d) "Initiate the transmission" means the action by the
85    original sender of an electronic mail message, not the action by
86    any intervening interactive computer service that may handle or
87    retransmit the message, unless the intervening interactive
88    computer service assists in the transmission of an electronic
89    mail message when it knows, or consciously avoids knowing, that
90    the person initiating the transmission is engaged, or intends to
91    engage, in any act or practice that violates laws protecting
92    consumers.
93          (e) "Interactive computer service" means any information
94    service, system, or access software provider that provides or
95    enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server,
96    including a service or system that provides access to the
97    Internet and similar systems operated or services offered by
98    libraries or educational institutions.
99          (f) "Internet domain name" means the globally unique,
100    hierarchical reference to an Internet host or service which is
101    assigned through a naming authority and which consists of a
102    series of character strings separated by periods.
103          (g) "Person" means an individual, corporation,
104    partnership, or association.
105          (2)(a) A person may not transmit, conspire with another to
106    transmit, or assist in transmitting a commercial electronic mail
107    message from a computer located in this state to an electronic
108    mail address that the sender knows, or has reason to know, is
109    held by a resident of this state if the commercial electronic
110    mail message:
111          1. Uses a third party's Internet domain name without the
112    permission of the third party or which otherwise misrepresents
113    or obscures any information in identifying the point of origin
114    or the transmission path of a commercial electronic mail
115    message; or
116          2. Contains false or misleading information in the subject
117    line.
118          (b) For purposes of this subsection, a person knows that
119    the intended recipient of a commercial electronic mail message
120    is a resident of this state if that information is available
121    upon request from the registrant of the Internet domain name
122    contained in the recipient's electronic mail address.
123          (3) In addition to any other remedy provided by law, a
124    person may bring an action for appropriate injunctive or other
125    equitable relief for a violation of subsection (2). The court
126    may award damages of:
127          (a) Five hundred dollars to the recipient of a commercial
128    electronic mail message who suffers damage as a result of a
129    violation of subsection (2) or the court may award actual
130    damages, whichever is greater.
131          (b) One thousand dollars to an interactive computer
132    service that suffers damage as a result of a violation of
133    subsection (2) or the court may award actual damages, whichever
134    is greater.
135          (4)(a) An interactive computer service may, upon its own
136    initiative, block the receipt or transmission through its
137    service of any commercial electronic mail message that it
138    reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in violation of
139    subsection (2).
140          (b) An interactive computer service may not be held liable
141    for any action voluntarily taken in good faith to block the
142    receipt or transmission through its service of any commercial
143    electronic mail message that it reasonably believes is, or will
144    be, sent in violation of subsection (2).
145          Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2003.