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Judge Bars Sending of Unwanted E-Mail

The New York attorney general sued after more than half a million computer users complained about a barrage of spam.

NEW YORK (AP) -- A state judge Wednesday barred a Niagra Falls company from sending commercial e-mails to Internet subscribers without their permission.

State Supreme Court Justice Lottie Wilkins issued a permanent judicial order to MonsterHut Inc., which state officials accused of sending some 500 million unsolicited commercial e-mails and then telling complaining recipients that they had requested it.

State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer sued MonsterHut after some 750,000 computer users complained that, since March 2001, they had received the unwanted e-mails; tried to have them stopped; but were told they had "opted in" to receive them.

Spitzer said MonsterHut.com told its clients -- and, later, the court -- that the recipients had agreed to receive e-mail through "third party, permission-based" agreements. This meant that MonsterHut.com got the computer users' names from organizations that had already gotten permission to send ads to them.

The judge said MonsterHut.com had "not offered any proof or legal basis to demonstrate that their practice conforms with industry-wide accepted 'opt in' protocols." She barred the firm from further "fraudulent, deceptive and illegal acts and practices" pertaining to e-mail advertising.

There was no telephone listing for MonsterHut in Niagara Falls or the surrounding area.

Copyright 2002. Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.