On Friday 06 December 2002 12:10 pm, Matthew Davis wrote:
- Michael Kallas (michael.kallas@web.de) wrote:
This has been considered illegal by the Landgericht Berlin:
Mailing list subscription confirmation notice for mailing list Mailman-Users
We have received a request from [IP address] for subscription of your email address, "michael.kallas@web.de", to the mailman-users@python.org mailing list.
[...] This court decided (search Google for "16 O 515/02") that it is considered to be "unwanted advertisement" (UCE, SPAM) if a businessman gets a mail in which he is asked whether he wants to be subscribed to a newsletter. It would be the task of the newsletter administrator to prove that the other person really _wanted_ to subscribe. Similar rights could be used for private persons, so this affects indeed all mailing lists / newsletters.
So turn off the confirmation so you assume if the user clicks the subscribe, they _want_ to be subscribed.
So, how do you then prove that it was them and not someone else?
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"Suppose you were an idiot . . . . And suppose you were a member of Congress . . . . but I repeat myself."...Mark Twain