What Do YOU Want To Find On Mobilised?
 
ACMA Issues Biggest Ever Fine To Phone Spammer Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Tuesday, 24 July 2007
Nobody likes a spammer, but it is all the more galling when they cost you money by making you phone in to hear their time wasting exploitations. Thankfully one particularly offensive marketing ploy has hit the dust with the ACMA successfully issuing DC Marketing with a A$149,600 fine for breaking the law.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has issued DC Marketing Europe Limited with a substantial fine for what is described as missed call marketing, a ploy where an automatic dialler is set up to call you mobile phone and then hang up after the first ring so that you are left with a missed call message on your phone.

Naturally the inquisitive or polite victim, returns the call on their dime only to get a recorded marketing message.

Always do an Internet search of any unknown number you get calling your mobile. Often you will find somebody else has already been stung and posted a warning on a news group somewhere.

In this case the ACMA described the actions of DC Marketing as extensive breaches of Australia's Spam Act 2003 and it is the largest penalty issued by ACMA since the Spam Act's penalty provisions came into force in April 2004.

The ACMA penalised DC Marketing for 102 contraventions relating to missed call marketing activities in July and August 2006.

‘Consumers need to feel confident that when they use their mobile phone they are not going to be deceived into receiving unwanted marketing messages,' said Chris Chapman, ACMA Chairman. ‘This penalty should serve as a warning to all service providers that ACMA will act decisively on conduct that breaches the Spam Act.'

The ACMA points out that Consumers (the victims) had "no way of knowing who the missed call was from before calling DC Marketing and so effectively paid to receive DC Marketing's marketing messages".

It found the marketing messages sent out by DC Marketing were unsolicited, did not identify the sender and did not contain an unsubscribe facility, each of which is a breach of the Spam Act.

The Act sets outs that commercial electronic messages must have the following features:
  • Consent - it must not be sent without the recipient's consent
  • Identity - it must contain accurate information about the person or organisation that authorised the sending of the message
  • Unsubscribe - it must contain a functional ‘unsubscribe' facility to allow the recipient to opt out from receiving messages from that source in the future.
The ACMA says Australia is ranked 28th in the spam-relaying countries thanks to its pursuit of spammers, most recently with the October 2006 decision of Justice Nicholson in the Federal Court in Perth to award a pecuniary penalty of $4.5 million against Clarity1 Pty Ltd and $1 million against its managing director, Mr Wayne Mansfield, for contravening the Spam Act.

‘As a consequence of increased resources provided by the Commonwealth Government in this year's Federal Budget, ACMA will be significantly increasing its anti-spam activities over the next year and will be closely monitoring the mobile marketing industry's compliance with the Spam Act,' Mr Chapman added. With repeat offenders facing potential penalties of up to $1.1 million per day, Mr Chapman warned that ‘non-compliance would prove to be a costly exercise.'

www.spam.acma.gov.au


Related news items
Newer news items
Older news items
Tag This Now:
Delicious
Digg
Stumble
Reddit
Fark