Anti-spam bill Introduced into Canadian Senate
BILL S-235 introduced by the Honourable Senator Goldstein was given first reading May 07, 2008.
the text of the bill is available here
Defined tags for this entry: canada, canadian, cnadian spam law, harper, law, north america, ottawa, spam, task force on spam
CAUCE joins in anti-spyware amicus brief
In a friend-of-the-court brief filed today, CAUCE joins the Center for Democracy and Technology to argue that anti-spyware vendors should be protected by the liability protections afforded other filtering companies under the Communications Decency Act. CAUCE joined a broad spectrum of Internet and technology industry groups, public interest organizations, civil liberties groups and individual companies that are all committed to the proposition that users should be empowered to control their own Internet experiences. The brief urges the court to protect anti-spyware vendors from liability in cases brought to intimidate anti-spyware vendors into ignoring spyware.
Amicus Brief [PDF].
Colorado has a new spam law
CAUCE director John Levine notes:
The governor of Colorado recently signed a new anti-spam law into effect. Since CAN SPAM draws a tight line around what states can do, this law is mostly interesting for the way that it pushes as firmly against that line as it can.
Read the rest of his comments on his blog.
I need a job, and just got some spiffy email about a new job site!
Posted on behalf of: Neil Schwartzman, Executive Director CAUCE
A friend of mine just wrote to me about a new service called NotchUp.com so I looked them up on DomainTools.
Now, why would a company obfuscate their domain registration? I can’t think of a good reason why. That isn’t to say that NotchUp.com is not a fine upstanding company, I don’t know, but having correct and open information in your domain registration means you are taking responsibility for your online conduct.
Unemployed folks, and others looking to change jobs should be very careful when joining a job recruitment site; they can be real hornet's nest. For one, job applicants are giving out a tremendous amount of personal data that can be misused to the ends of personal identity theft. As well, many of them are not worth the bother, or can be out-and-out malicious.
Another friend was the victim of a drive-by virus-infected when someone ostensibly reached out to him about a VP-level job, one for which he was suitable (he's a sales guy, so it might not have been entirely targeted).
The CAUCE advice?
- Stick with the biggies - to name a few; Linkedin, Monster, Workopolis, Craigslist
- Check out new companies and new job sites from the comfort of your own browser!
- Run the domain through DomainTools
- Get yourself a copy of the great tool from McAfee Site Advisor, a plug-in that works for both Internet Explorer and
Firefox , and check out their reviews. - Use the
Alexa Firefox plug-in to check out if the site has a reasonable amount of traffic. - Use your favourite search engine on the name and the domain name of any potential job site or employer. Then search again and add the qualifier + spam. Or + scam
- Never respond to Unsolicited email
- If the job seems too good to be true, (especially if you are desperate!), stay away!
Good luck with your job search, don’t let the bad guys swindle you!
Canadian Spam Law?
The scuttlebutt around Ottawa these days is the Harper government is seriously considering tabling a spam law in the House of Commons possibly before the summer break. More on this as it develops!
Defined tags for this entry: canada, canadian, cnadian spam law, harper, law, north america, ottawa, spam, task force on spam

