FTC Goes After Foreign Spammers

WASHINGTON – In an effort to get a handle on spam, phishing gags and Nigerian rip-off artists, President Bush signed a bill before the Christmas holiday empowering the Federal Trade Commission to further root out email spammers in foreign countries.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Gordon H. Smith, R-Ore., comes at the same time as a report from email filtering company Postini stating that spam now accounts for 92.6 percent of all email.

With its new spam-fighting jurisdiction under the U.S. Safe Web Act, the FTC can now investigate the origin of email scammers in multiple countries by tracking email servers and other nefarious methods of concealing point of origin, particularly in cases where spammers route their attacks through several different countries. The FTC also can seek assistance from foreign law enforcement.

In response to the passing of the bill, the FTC said it will focus on illegal spam and scam operations originating out of Africa, Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe.

The FTC was formerly able to pursue foreign spammers but not to the extent that it is now.

"Commerce has gone global and so fraud follows," said Lydia Parnes of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The FTC had been lobbying Congress for several years to obtain such unlimited power in the fight against foreign spam operations, and in 2005 it produced a 32-page report making a plea for the power to break through geographic and legal boundaries so far restricted by U.S. law.

Security firm McAfee recently stated that spam has risen at a rapid rate, indicating how much the digital underworld has developed this past year, and with it the higher degree of damage scams or virus-infected email can have on PC users.

"There's less focus on what is the top virus," Paul King, a senior security advisor for Cisco, told the BBC. “To be quite honest it does not really matter because the criminals just do what works."

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

FSC: Arizona Governor Signs Controversial Age Verification Law

Free Speech Coalition has released a statement regarding Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs signing the state's age verification bill into law.

NCOSE Sues 4 Adult Websites Under Kansas Age Verification Law

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE), a conservative anti-pornography organization, has sued four adult websites in Kansas under the state's age verification law.

Sarina Havok, Robin Coffins Launch New Site Through Grooby's Blue.xxx

Sarina Havok and Robin Coffins have launched their new membership site, SarinaAndRobin.com, through Grooby's website management company Blue.xxx.

SpankChain Pauses SpankPay, SpankMatch

SpankChain has paused SpankPay, its adult crypto payment platform, and SpankMatch, its adult networking platform.

Sen. Mike Lee Tries Again to Criminalize All Porn With Interstate Obscenity Definition Act

Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah has introduced the Interstate Obscenity Definition Act, which would redefine almost all visual depictions of sex as obscene and therefore illegal.

Ofcom Investigates 2 Adult Sites for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom is investigating two adult sites for failure to comply with age assurance requirements under the Online Safety Act, which Ofcom is charged with enforcing.

MojoHost to Launch New GPU Servers

MojoHost has announced plans to launch new GPU servers for its clients.

Maximilian Peldszus Joins Fanblast

Former BestFans CEO Maximilian Peldszus has joined creator software company Fanblast.

Kiiroo Joins Pineapple Support as Supporter-Level Sponsor

Kiiroo has joined the ranks of over 60 adult businesses and organizations committing funds and resources to Pineapple Support.

Sex Work CEO Debuts Upgraded 'GPTease' AI Assistant

Sex Work CEO has introduced the Power Tier upgrade to its AI-powered, NSFW text generator, GPTease.

Show More