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After receiving more than 3 million complaints, the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) managed to break one of the biggest spam groups in the
world, putting HerbalKing out of activity.
The company was promoting weight-loss drugs, prescription
pills and many other similar products, operating in several areas including the
United States, New Zeeland and China. The credit card transactions were handled
from Cyprus and Georgia, while the products were shipped from India and China.
The decision reached by a federal district court in Chicago
is that HerbalKing violated the Can-Spam Act of 2003 and demanded the group to
freeze its activity. The group’s computers were able to send more than 10 billion
e-mails every day, causing significant distress to many Internet users. Recent
estimates showed that close to 90 percent of all e-mail sent today worldwide is
spam.
“They were sending extraordinary amounts of spam,” said Jon
Leibowitz, an F.T.C. commissioner. “We are hoping at some level that this will
help make a small dent in the amount of spam coming into consumers’ in-boxes.”
“This is pretty
major. At one point these guys delivered up to one-third of all spam,” said
Richard Cox, chief information officer at SpamHaus, a nonprofit anti-spam
research group.
In addition to these facts, the purchase process did not
include any prescription verification and there were no instructions or dosage
information.
There are several civil and criminal penalties for such acts
provided by the federal laws and the outcome of this action might influence the
amount of spam received by Internet users everywhere.
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