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Email Spam Guidelines
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Introduction
Fundamentals
MAPS
Princples
Guidelines
Penalties for violation of MAPS Principles
Introduction
Mailing
lists have a long and venerable history on
the Internet. Mailing lists are an excellent
vehicle for distributing focused, targeted
information to an interested, receptive
audience. Consequently, mailing lists have
been used successfully as a highly effective
direct marketing tool. Unfortunately,
mailing lists are also vulnerable to misuse
through a variety of means. An
all-too-common example is where an
individual is force subscribed to a high
number of mailing lists and must take
extraordinary measures to be removed. Also,
some marketers misuse mailing lists, often
through a lack of knowledge about
longstanding Internet customs and rules, or
because they attempt to apply direct paper
mail methodology to the electronic realm.
The guidelines below are intended to assist
list administrators in establishing basic
list management procedures that should help
them avoid the most common pitfalls. Good
list management also pays off in other ways
such as maintaining a high response rate and
reducing costs associated with complaint
handling.
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Internet
Fundamentals
Those
who desire to establish responsible list
management practices must be aware that
there are certain fundamentals inherent to
the structure of the Internet, and to how
the email system functions across the
Internet. Among those that are pertinent to
these guidelines are the following:
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Traffic
on the Internet flows by mutual
agreement. This is not a taxpayer-funded
highway system. The Internet is a
network of networks, interconnected in
myriad ways. Most of the networks that
compose the Internet are privately
owned. When an entity connects its
system to the Internet it immediately
becomes dependent on others to see to it
that its traffic reaches its
destination. Those others in turn have a
responsibility to their owners or
shareholders to maintain their networks
and keep traffic flowing smoothly. This
fact gives network and system owners and
operators considerable say over the
traffic they allow to pass over their
networks.
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Internet
entities are responsible for their own
actions. Traffic flows from one network
to another because of such things as
peering agreements, where two networks
agree to carry one another's traffic.
The Internet is made up of many
interconnected peers; it is not only
expected but necessary that those peers,
and all those systems connecting to
them, act responsibly. The larger the
system, and the more traffic it desires
to transit the network, the greater the
expectations and responsibilities
incumbent upon it.
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The
recipient subsidizes the cost of
delivery. This is not a postal mail or
parcel system, where the sender pays the
full cost of delivery. Every email box
belongs to an individual, a group, an
organization, perhaps a corporation; in
any event, its existence is most often
paid for by someone besides the sender
of a message. This fact gives the
recipient considerable say over what
will be accepted for delivery, and it is
why MAPS emphasizes that all
communications must be concensual.
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MAPSSM Principles
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Guidelines
The
following guidelines are offered as a
statement of Internet standards and best
current practices for proper mailing list
management.
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Permission
of new subscribers must be fully
verified before mailings commence. This
is usually accomplished by means of an
email message sent to the subscriber to
which s/he must reply, or containing a
URL which s/he must visit, in order to
complete the subscription. However it is
implemented, a fundamental requirement
of all lists is for verification of all
new subscriptions.
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There
must be a simple method to terminate a
subscription. Mailing list
administrators must provide a simple
method for subscribers to terminate
their subscriptions, and administrators
should provide clear and effective
instructions for un-subscribing from a
mailing list. Mailings from a list must
cease promptly once a subscription is
terminated.
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There
should be alternative methods for
terminating a subscription. Mailing list
administrators should make an "out
of band" procedure (e.g., an email
address to which messages may be sent
for further contact via email or
telephone) available for those who wish
to terminate their mailing list
subscriptions but are unable or
unwilling to follow standard automated
procedures.
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Undeliverable
addresses must be removed from future
mailings. Mailing list administrators
must ensure that the impact of their
mailings on the networks and hosts of
others is minimized. One of the ways
this is accomplished is through pruning
invalid or undeliverable addresses.
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Mail
volume must take recipient systems into
account. List administrators must take
steps to ensure that mailings do not
overwhelm less robust hosts or networks.
For example, if the mailing list has a
great number of addresses within a
particular domain, the list
administrator should contact the
administrator for that domain to discuss
mail volume issues.
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Steps
must be taken to prevent use of a
mailing list for abusive purposes. The
sad fact is that mailing lists are used
by third parties as tools of revenge and
malice. Mailing list administrators must
take adequate steps to ensure that their
lists cannot be used for these purposes.
For example, administrators can maintain
a "suppression list" of email
addresses from which all subscription
requests are rejected. Addresses would
be added to the suppression list upon
request by the parties entitled to use
the addresses at issue. The purpose of
the suppression list would be to prevent
forged subscription of addresses by
unauthorized third parties. Such
suppression lists should also give
properly authorized domain
administrators the option to suppress
all mailings to the domains for which
they are responsible.
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Terms
and conditions of address use must be
fully disclosed. Mailing list
administrators must make adequate
disclosures about how subscriber
addresses will be used, including
whether or not addresses are subject to
sale or trade with other parties.
Also, conditions of use should be
visible and obvious to the potential
subscriber. For example, two lines
buried deep within a license agreement
do not constitute adequate disclosure.
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Acquired
lists must be used for their original
purpose. Those who are acquiring fully
verified opt-in lists must examine the
terms and conditions under which the
addresses were originally compiled and
determine that all recipients have in
fact opted-in to the type mailing list
the buyer intends to operate.
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The
nature and frequency of mailings should
be fully disclosed. List administrators
should make adequate disclosures about
the nature of their mailing lists,
including the subject matter of the
lists and anticipated frequency of
messages.
A substantive change in the
frequency of mailings, or in the size of
each message, may constitute a new and
separate mailing list requiring a
separate subscription.
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One
subscription, one list. Addresses should
not be added to other lists without
fully verified consent of the address
owner. It should never be assumed that
subscribers to a list about "abc"
want to
be added to another "abc"
list, let alone
a list about "xyz". A notification about
the new mailing list may be appropriate
on the existing mailing list, but
existing subscribers should never be
subscribed automatically to the new
list.
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Penalties for violation of MAPS Principles
Our datacenter has ZERO tolerance for spamming. Incase either you or your
clients are responsible are reported to be spamming then the, unless
proved otherwise within 24 hours:
1) The concerned website may be deleted without any warning.
2) The particular domain name will be listed as a spammer with various
websites by our datacenter which may cause it to be blocked from many
search engines.
Please support us against our fight against spamming and keep Internet
clean and productive
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Incase you have any queries please contact
us.
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Indian Network Information
Centre. All rights Reserved
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