Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
ALEXANDRIA, VA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 04/26/07 -- Project Honey Pot filed suit in the Eastern
District of Virginia seeking damages for spam and email address harvesting
targeting the Project's members. The suit was filed against the entire
universe of John Doe defendants using any of the 2,593,657 IP addresses
captured by Project Honey Pot over the past two years, and seeks
potentially more than $1 billion in statutory damages under the U.S.
CAN-SPAM Act and the State of Virginia's Anti-Spam statute.
"Our members have one thing in common: they all want spam to stop," said
Matthew Prince, co-founder of Project Honey Pot and CEO of Unspam
Technologies, Inc. "Aided by the vast amount of data our community of
volunteers has helped gather, as well as the top legal minds in the
anti-spam world, we are bringing this fight to the spammers. This suit will
make them slither out from under the rocks where they're hiding."
Project Honey Pot is represented in the suit by Jon Praed of the
Washington, D.C.-based firm the Internet Law Group. Mr. Praed and the ILG
make a living putting spammers out of business and have been responsible
for some of the leading anti-spam prosecutions including Verizon Online v.
Alan Ralsky, AOL v. CN Productions, and AOL v. Cyber Entertainment Network.
"Project Honey Pot's community-based approach has been critical to
developing a suit of this scope," explained Mr. Praed. "It is important to
remember that this is a group of volunteers who have pooled their resources
in order to gather the data necessary to go after the worst spammers in the
world. This is literally the Internet community as a whole standing up and
saying, 'We're sick of spam, and it's high time we do something about it!'"
This suit represents the first time U.S. law has been used to challenge the
practice of email harvesting, something CAN-SPAM imposes enhanced penalties
for. Harvesting is the use of spidering programs to trawl the Internet
stealing email addresses. While the practice is the primary way spammers
build their email lists, without the data gathered by Project Honey Pot it
has been a challenge for anyone to bring a suit against harvesters.
"If you've engaged in spamming or harvesting in the last two years, then
chances are you're on our radar screen," explained Mr. Prince. "And you
should sleep a little less well tonight."
About Project Honey Pot
Project Honey Pot (www.projecthoneypot.org) is a volunteer, open source
anti-spam initiative founded with the purpose of gathering the necessary
data to bring technical and legal solutions to the problem of spam. The
Project has tens of thousands of members in more than 100 countries
worldwide and maintains an ever-growing network of more than 2 million spam
trap email addresses. Project Honey Pot is administered by Unspam
Technologies, Inc. (www.unspam.com), a Park City, Utah-based company that
works with governments to craft effective solutions to the problem of spam.
About the Internet Law Group
The Internet Law Group (www.i-lawgroup.com) is a boutique law firm
representing corporate clients in complex disputes related to the Internet
and other high technology practice areas. Based in Washington, D.C., the
firm combines sophisticated litigation expertise with a deep understanding
of the Internet. Jon Praed, the founding partner of ILG, is known by the
British Tabloids as the "Spamhunter General."
Erin E. Barry
Media Relations Project Honey Pot / Unspam Technologies, Inc.
435.513.2631 (direct)