Skip to content

Biting the hand that feeds IT

The Register ®

Security:


Related Whitepapers

[Print][Mobile][Alerts]

MySpace wins $6m judgment against Spam King

Junk mail menace canned

Published Tuesday 17th June 2008 13:52 GMT

Self-styled former spam king Scott Richter has been ordered to pay MySpace $6m over allegations he blitzed users of the social networking website with junk mail messages sent from hijacked accounts.

An arbitrator decided that Richter and his Colarado-based Web marketing outfit, Media Breakaway, must turn over a $4.8m fine and $1.2m in legal fees to the social networking site. In addition, Media Breakaway staffers were banned from visiting the site again, AP reports.

In a statement, Media Breakaway blamed the offending behaviour on rogue affiliates. Steven Richter, president of Media Breakaway and Scott's dad, took satisfaction that the amount awarded by arbitrators was just 5 per cent of the sum demanded by MySpace.

The ruling is the latest obtained by MySpace against alleged spammers and pales into insignificance compared to the $230m it was awarded against junk mailers Sanford Wallace and Walter Rines last month.

Richter is no stranger to big fines and other legal actions over his alleged spamming activities. In 2006 he paid Microsoft $7m to settle a spam lawsuit. The state of New York received $50,000 from Richter in 2004. He was prevented from launching a line of clothing under the Spam King brand by a lawsuit from Hormel, the firm behind the meaty snack, in 2004. ®

Track this type of story as a custom Atom/RSS feed or by email.
Previous Article Next Article
whitepaper title

Solution Brief: Reduce Energy Costs

Energy consumption has become a big issue. Dramatically increase server utilization and significantly reduce energy costs through Virtualization..
whitepaper title

Enforce Your Email and Web Acceptable Usage Policies

Unmanaged employee use of email and the web can subject any organization to costly risks. Learn how clearly written Email and Web Acceptable Usage Policies (AUPs) can protect your business.
Whitepapers Jobs

Top 20 storiesAll The Week’s HeadlinesArchiveSearch