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WEST VIRGINIA CODE
CHAPTER 46A. WEST VIRGINIA CONSUMER CREDIT AND PROTECTION ACT
ARTICLE 6G. ELECTRONIC MAIL PROTECTION ACT
Added by Acts 1999, chapter 119, House Bill 2627
(Passed March 13, 1999; in effect ninety days from passage)
§ 46A-6G-1.
Definitions.
As used in this article:
(1) "Bulk electronic mail message"
means an electronic mail message sent in bulk to users of an interactive
computer service who have not requested or solicited the message.
Unauthorized for purposes of a bulk electronic mail message, means a bulk
electronic mail message sent in quantity in contravention of the
authorization granted by or in violation of the policies or contractual
rights of the electronic mail service provider.
(2) "Electronic mail address" means a
destination, commonly expressed as a string of characters, to which
electronic mail may be sent or delivered.
(3) "Initiate the transmission" means
the action by the original sender of an electronic mail message, not the
action by any intervening interactive computer service that may handle or
retransmit the message.
(4) "Interactive computer service"
means any information service, system, or access software provider that
provides or enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server,
including specifically a service or system that provides access to the
internet.
(5) "Internet domain name" means a
globally unique, hierarchical reference to an internet host or service,
assigned through centralized internet naming authorities, comprising a
series of character strings separated by periods, with the right-most string
specifying the top of the hierarchy.
(6) "Person" means any individual,
corporation, partnership, association, limited liability company or any
other form or business association.
§ 46A-6G-2.
Limitations on unauthorized electronic mail.
No person may initiate the transmission of an unauthorized
electronic mail message with the intent to deceive and defraud, or a bulk
electronic mail message from a computer located in the state of West
Virginia or to an electronic mail address that the sender knows, or has
reason to know, is held by a West Virginia resident that:
(1) Uses a third party's internet
domain name without the permission of the third party, or otherwise
misrepresents any information in identifying the point of origin or the
transmission path of a commercial electronic mail message;
(2) Contains false or misleading
information in the subject line;
(3) Does not clearly provide the date
and time the message is sent, the identity of the person sending the
message, and the return electronic mail address of that person; or
(4) Contains "sexually explicit
materials" which are defined as a visual depiction, in actual or simulated
form, or an explicit description in a predominately sexual context, nudity,
human genitalia, or any act of natural or unnatural sexual intercourse.
§ 46A-6G-3.
Interactive computer service authority; liability.
(1) An interactive computer service may
block the receipt or transmission through its service of any bulk electronic
mail that it reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in violation of this
article.
(2) An interactive computer service may
disconnect or terminate the service of any person that is in violation of
this article.
(3) No interactive computer service may
be held liable for any action voluntarily taken in good faith to block the
receipt or transmission through its service of any bulk electronic mail
which it reasonably believes is, or will be, sent in violation of this
article; nor will any interactive computer service be held liable for any
action voluntarily taken in good faith to disconnect or terminate the
service of any person that is in violation of this article.
(4) No interactive computer service or
public utility will be liable for merely transmitting a bulk electronic mail
message on its network.
§ 46A-6G-4. Sale or
possession of enabling software prohibited.
No person may sell, give or otherwise
distribute or possess with the intent to sell, give or distribute software
that:
(1) Is primarily designed or produced
for the purpose of facilitating or enabling the falsification of electronic
mail transmission information or other routing information;
(2) Has only a limited commercially
significant purpose or use other than to facilitate or enable the
falsification of electronic mail transmission information or other routing
information; or
(3) That is marketed by that person or
another acting in concert with that person with that person's knowledge for
use in facilitating or enabling the falsification of electronic mail
transmission information or other routing information.
§ 46A-6G-5.
Violations; right of action for injunction, damages.
(a) No person or organization may
initiate an unauthorized bulk electronic mail message in violation of this
article.
(b) A recipient of an unauthorized bulk
electronic mail message in violation of this article may bring an action to
recover actual damages for any injury sustained by the receipt of an
unauthorized bulk electronic mail message. In lieu
of actual damages, a minimum damage assessment of one thousand dollars may
be recovered for violations of this article. Punitive damages may
be awarded for the willful failure to cease initiating unauthorized bulk
electronic mail messages. Court costs and
reasonable attorney fees may be awarded for violations of this article.
(c) A recipient of an unauthorized bulk
electronic mail message initiated in violation of this article may bring an
action to enjoin the initiator from sending any further unauthorized bulk
electronic mail messages. Any court costs or other
costs incident to such action including reasonable attorney fees may be
awarded.
(d) Initiating
an unauthorized bulk electronic mail message to any computer or computer
network located in this state shall constitute an act in the state for the
purposes of section thirty-three, article three, chapter fifty-six of this
code.
(e) Any interactive computer service
provider or public utility whose property or person is injured by any
violation of this article may bring an action to recover for any damages
sustained, including, but not limited to, loss of profits. In addition,
court costs and attorney fees may be recovered. The service provider may
elect, in lieu of actual damages to recover ten
dollars for each and every unauthorized bulk electronic mail message
transmitted in violation of this article, or twenty-five thousand dollars
per day, whichever is greater.
(f) The provisions of this section
shall not be construed to limit any person's right to pursue any additional
civil remedy otherwise allowed by law.
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