In June 2003, Meng Weng Wong started the
SPF-discuss mailing list and posted the very first version of the "Sender Permitted From" proposal, that would later become the
Sender Policy Framework, a simple email-validation system designed to detect email spoofing as part of the solution to spam. The
CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was signed into law by
President George W. Bush on December 16, 2003, establishing the
United States' first national standards for the sending of commercial
email and requiring the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to enforce its provisions. The
backronym CAN-SPAM derives from the bill's full name: "
Controlling the
Assault of
Non-
Solicited
Pornography
And
Marketing Act of 2003". It plays on the word "canning" (putting an end to)
spam, as in the usual term for unsolicited email of this type; as well as a pun in reference to the
canned SPAM food product. The bill was sponsored in Congress by Senators
Conrad Burns and
Ron Wyden. In January 2004,
Bill Gates of
Microsoft announced that "spam will soon be a thing of the past." In May 2004,
Howard Carmack of
Buffalo, New York, was sentenced to 3½ to 7 years for sending 800 million messages, using stolen identities. In May 2003 he also lost a $16 million civil lawsuit to
EarthLink. On September 27, 2004, Nicholas Tombros pleaded guilty to charges and became the first spammer to be convicted under the
CAN-SPAM Act of 2003. He was sentenced in July 2007 to three years' probation, six months' house arrest, and fined $10,000. On November 4, 2004,
Jeremy Jaynes, rated the 8th-most prolific spammer in the world, according to
Spamhaus, was convicted of three felony charges of using servers in
Virginia to send thousands of fraudulent emails. The court recommended a sentence of nine years' imprisonment, which was imposed in April 2005 although the start of the sentence was deferred pending appeals. Jaynes claimed to have an income of $750,000 a month from his spamming activities. On February 29, 2008 the
Supreme Court of Virginia overturned his conviction. On November 8, 2004, Nick Marinellis of
Sydney,
Australia, was sentenced to 4⅓ to 5¼ years for sending
419 Nigerian emails. On December 31, 2004, British authorities arrested Christopher Pierson in
Lincolnshire,
UK and charged him with
malicious communication and causing a
public nuisance. On January 3, 2005, he pleaded guilty to sending hoax emails to relatives of people missing following the Asian
tsunami disaster. ==2005==