Whether 'Anti-Spam' Laws Violate The First Amendment (article 8)
Why Robert Redford May Call Your House to Get Your Vote, But He May Not Send You an Email
by
R. Jonas Geissler†
[Cite as: R. Jonas Geissler,
Whether 'Anti-Spam' Laws Violate The First Amendment,
2001 J. Online L. art. 8, par. ___.]
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Introduction
{par. 1} In the election of 2000, Pennsylvania—my home state—was
among the many states considered battlegrounds for the highly-contested
presidential election.[1]
For many of us living in the battleground
states, it was not uncommon to receive phone calls from the political camps
asking for support and encouraging us to get out the vote for their candidate.[2] In the 2000 election, this effort sometimes
took the shape of pre-recorded messages from various celebrities, calling one’s
home with a message about the candidate they supported.[3]
{par. 2} Not everyone was aware that these were pre-recorded
messages; at least in the beginning.
So, when an out-of-state houseguest of mine answered the phone in my
home and heard Robert Redford calling, she believed it to be the genuine article. She hurriedly handed the phone to wife
stating, "It’s for you," as though we had been expecting Bob to call all
evening. Amusing as it was to receive
calls from celebrities, it became tiresome to be inundated by the sheer amount
of voter solicitation from television, direct mail, print media, radio
broadcast, and phone calls during the 2000 election. I took some consolation from the fact that when I used my email
or accessed the Internet I was not attacked with the same barrage of junk mail
that filled my conventional mailbox everyday.
Unless I had signed up for an email listserv about the campaign or
sought out a political party’s web page, I was not given information on the
election involuntarily through these media.
Even though email and the Internet are efficient and price-effective media,
they were not used by the major campaigns as the conventional media were for
push-type communications, i.e. those communications that come to the passive
listener rather than those specifically sought out by the listener.[4]
{par. 3} Why didn’t Robert Redford write me an email, though, if he
was willing to call my home about his favorite candidate? Some states’ legislation stood in the way of
any political party sending unsolicited email en masse in the same fashion the
major parties had sent unsolicited conventional mail and phone calls.[5] Unsolicited, bulk email, often called spam,[6]
is illegal to send in many states and is the subject of proposed federal
restrictions.[7]
{par. 4} Since spamming is currently an unsettled area of the law
and different attempts at legislation are either pending, have failed, or are
being challenged in the courts, the topic is ripe for investigation. This article outlines the constitutionality,
under a first amendment analysis, of the proposed federal anti-spam law with
regard to a limited area of speech: political speech. In order to do this, this article will: (1) establish the basis for anti-spam laws, (2) establish a doctrinal framework in which to analyze anti-spam laws that affect political speech, (3) analyze the current necessity for anti-spam laws, and (4) conclude that anti-spam laws, as presently proposed, are unconstitutional.
Anti-Spam Laws Are Based at Most on a Substantial Government Interest
{par. 5} In the proposed federal anti-spam statute—the object of
this article’s analysis—the federal government claims a substantial interest in
regulating spam based on (1) the cost to Internet Service Providers ("ISPs"),
and (2) the recipients right to decline to receive spam directed at themselves
or their children.[8] Though email is sent for free by
individuals, there is a cost associated with moving and storing the volume of
email over the Internet.[9]
{par. 6} The government has a legitimate interest in protecting the
mental equanimity of individuals.
Courts have held that restrictions of free speech in the use of
loudspeakers in public places were constitutional because the government had an
interest in protecting the quiet and tranquility of individuals.[10] Similarly, spam is received in email
inboxes. The email may be read at work
or home, but, regardless of where it is read, it is directed at the individual
who cannot merely look away.[11] Until the recipient has read the content of
the email its nature may not be evident; but, once read, its damage to the
reader, if any, is done. Individuals’
rights to be free of governmental intrusion into their beliefs within their
homes,[12]
however, mitigates the government’s interests.
Therefore, the government should not make a regulation so intrusive that
the regulation itself outweighs individuals’ mental equanimity.
{par. 7} The right to free expression is protected by the federal
constitution.[13] This right encompasses written speech, such
as email. Even unpopular speech is
entitled to protection,[14]
although some restrictions on free speech are constitutional. To place anti-spam laws that affect
political speech into the proper doctrinal framework, one must: (1) briefly
distinguish types of restrictions on free speech and the proper tests for each,
(2) establish the speech characteristics of spam relative to the proposed
federal anti-spam law, and (3) place the anti-spam law in the proper doctrinal
test.
Restrictions on Free Speech Are Based on the Speech’s Content or on Its
Collateral Effect
{par. 8} Restrictions on free speech can be divided into
restrictions based on the content of the speech, and restrictions based on the
adverse effects associated with the speech regardless of its content. The Supreme Court has found that certain
categories of speech content are not
entitled to full free-speech protection.
These categories include: obscenity,[15] advocacy of
imminent lawless behavior,[16]
defamation,[17]
"fighting words"[18]
and speech that is, itself, criminal, e.g. solicitation.[19] Placement of speech into one of these
categories is tantamount to an acknowledgement that the speech cannot be
nullified by the introduction of yet more speech. Such a categorization emphasizes the value of meaningful dialogue
by excluding from protection utterances that are not part of the "exposition of
ideas" or of "slight social value as a step to[ward] truth."[20]
{par. 9} In order to be constitutional, however, the
categorization must be neutral as to the content of the particular utterance.[21] It is axiomatic that spam that fits into one
of the court-ordained categories of unprotected speech such as obscenity would
not be protected speech, even in the absence of an anti-spam law.[22]
A restriction based on content that does not fall into these categories is
presumed unconstitutional. An anti-spam law that were based on a particular type
of content would be presumptively unconstitutional. Content-based regulations
are subject to a strict-scrutiny test in which the government must show that the
regulation is "necessary to serve a compelling state interest and that it is
narrowly drawn to achieve that end."[23] The means will not be the least restrictive,
i.e. most narrowly drawn, if the effect of the content of the speech can be
effectively be rebutted by the introduction of more speech into the marketplace
of ideas.[24]
Speech that is "commercial," however, is an exception to this general
rule. Commercial speech may be subject
to a regulation without passing the test of strict scrutiny; rather, such
speech is subject to an "intermediate scrutiny" analysis.[25]
{par. 10} A second type of restriction on free speech comprises
regulations that relate not to the content of speech, but rather to the time,
place, and manner of speech.[26] If the government imposes a restriction on
speech unrelated to content , but, instead, based on the independent impact of
the speech, a court will apply a two-part test to determine if the restriction
is, in fact, content neutral. The court
will review the statute to determine
whether, on its face, it actually does target the content of the speech. If it does, the statute is not
content-neutral and is therefore subject to the strict scrutiny review applied
to content-based restrictions.[27] Second, even if the statute is facially
neutral, the court will determine whether it was intended to suppress certain
types of expression.[28] If so, the statute is again subject to a
strict scrutiny analysis. If the
statute passes this two-prong test, however, it is a content-neutral
restriction on free speech.
{par. 11} Content-neutral speech restrictions are assessed with
regard to the particular forum. If the
restriction applies to a public forum then the significant government’s
interest embodied in the content-neutral statute must outweigh the individual’s
interest in free expression in the public forum. Additionally, the restriction must not close adequate alternative
channels[29]
and it must be narrowly tailored.[30] If the content-neutral restriction applies
to speech in a non-public forum, then the government need only show that the
restriction is rationally related to a legitimate government interest, so long
as the restriction’s impairment of expression is not substantial, i.e. that
there are other channels open to the speaker to reach the same audience. If, however, the restriction’s impairment of
expression is substantial—if there are no alternative channels to reach the
same audience—then the government must show that the restriction is narrowly
tailored to further a significant government interest.[31]
{par. 12} Regardless of
where a restriction falls into this framework, courts may also strike it
down if it is overbroad or vague. A restriction is overbroad if it sweeps
into its reach speech or behavior that is otherwise protected by guarantees of
free speech.[32] A restriction is vague if it fails to
clearly identify the proscribed conduct.[33] To strike down an entire statute under the overbreadth doctrine—rather than
ruling a particular application of the statute unconstitutional—the burden on
free speech must be substantial.[34]
{par. 13} When the Court considers political speech, the level of
scrutiny is typically "strict," though political speech may still be subject to
certain content-neutral restrictions such as time, place and manner
restrictions, and special content based restrictions such as electioneering
laws limiting campaigning within the vicinity of a polling place. Political speech is deemed to be at the core
of First Amendment values; it is therefore entitled to the greatest possible
protection.
The Speech Characteristics of Spam
{par. 14} Three distinctions must be established before we can
undertake a first amendment analysis.
First, because spam is directed at individuals or organizations’ email
accounts, it is not speech in a public forum. Second, like current state statutes,[35] the proposed
federal anti-spam law[36]
applies to commercial speech. The
distinction between commercial and non-commercial speech is significant even
though, as we shall see, determining the commercial quality of email speech if
often difficult. Third, many of the cases that have thus far
dealt with spam have been efforts by the plaintiffs to seek temporary
restraining orders or permanent injunctions against the spammers. Because anti-spam laws act to block all
speech in a manner similar to those cases, i.e. by imposing a limitation on the
sending of emails over private networks, this article treats the proposed
federal anti-spam statute as a prior restraint on free speech.
Private Email Accounts Are Not Public Fora
{par. 15} A forum is public if it is specifically designated as such
or if its characteristics meet a two-part test: (1) the forum is traditionally
used for assembly and expression, and (2) the forum’s principle purpose is to
allow the free exchange of ideas.[37]
{par. 16} Email accounts are not designated public fora. Whereas a bulletin board service or Internet
chat room might specifically be designated by their respective managers as
public fora, an individual’s email account cannot be presumed to be so designated. In fact, restrictions on the sending of
unsolicited mail by ISPs would imply the contrary: that email mailboxes are specifically not designated public fora.
{par. 17} Email mailboxes do not meet the two-part test for a public
forum, either. Admittedly, there is
very little tradition to apply to the first prong of the test. Popular use of email is not a long-standing
tradition but a relatively recent development.
The Court has ruled that conventional home mailboxes do not constitute
public fora.[38] By analogy, then, individual’s email
mailboxes are not public fora either.
Additionally, though email mailboxes may be used for the exchange of
ideas, they are not necessarily intended for the "free" exchange of ideas. Again, ISPs’ restrictive terms of use for
distribution of mass email to their email account holders imply that
individuals’ email accounts are not a site for the free exchange of ideas. Therefore, either by analogy to conventional
mailboxes or by their own characteristics under a public-forum analysis, email
mailboxes are not public fora.
The Proposed Federal Statute Defines Spam as Commercial Email
{par. 18} The proposed federal anti-spam law does not use
the term spam, but, instead, refers to unsolicited "commercial electronic mail
messages."[39] Since by its plain language, the statute is
intended to affect "commercial electronic mail messages," the definition of
this term is crucial to the constitutional analysis of the statute as a
whole. The act defines "commercial
electronic mail message" as:
{par. 19} any electronic mail message that primarily advertises or
promotes the commercial availability of a product or service for profit or
invites the recipient to view content on an Internet web site that is operated
for a commercial purpose. An electronic
mail message shall not be considered to be a commercial electronic mail message
solely because such message includes a reference to a commercial entity that
serves to identify the initiator.[40]
{par. 20} The act does not define "for profit," or "commercial
purpose." Singling out commercial spam,
as opposed to a prohibition on all spam, is a content-based restriction on the
exercise of free speech. Commercial
speech, however, is not entitled to the same level of protection as non-commercial
speech.[41]
{par. 21} The characteristics of spam make drawing a line between
commercial and non-commercial speech difficult, if not impossible, in some
circumstances. Take, for example, an
email that directs the recipient to view a web page that is intended to induce
the viewer to purchase partisan literature or make donations to a political
group.[42] Though the solicitation of donations or
subscriptions may not seem to fit the for-profit requirement at first, consider
that that requirement is not defined.
If the organization seeking donations is not incorporated as a
non-profit organization, is a donation to it "for profit"? If the organization or its leaders make
money from subscriptions to support themselves, do the subscription fees count
as profit?
{par. 22} Given that the definition of commercial electronic mail
message is divided by the placement of "or" in the beginning and end of the first sentence, an email message may
meet the definition if the message: (1) primarily advertises, (2) promotes
commercial availability of a product or service for profit, or (3) invites the
recipient to view the content on an Internet web site that is operated for a
commercial purpose. Therefore, a
message that has nothing whatsoever to do with profit would nonetheless be
subject to statutory restriction, as long as the message invites the recipient
to view an Internet website operated for a commercial purpose. Like the undefined "profit" characteristic,
the undefined "commercial purpose" characteristic fails to clarify what email
may fall within the statute. For
example, if the AFL/CIO sent an unsolicited email, en masse, to non-members,
would it be for a commercial purpose?
Trade unions have a commercial purpose, namely the greater reward for
their members’ labor, but they may also want to send a message that could be viewed
as political, e.g., buy American. Would
such a message be commercial from this sender, since the adoption of the point
of view would result in commercial gain, but not be commercial from another
sender who would not directly gain?
{par. 23} None of the three aforementioned defined characteristics
of unsolicited commercial electronic mail messages in the first sentence of the
definition contain a de minimis exception.
Nor is there such an exception contained elsewhere in the proposed
statute. Therefore, it would appear
that if an unsolicited email directs the recipient to a website, it would be
considered a commercial email if that website contained any reference to an
item for sale or even to the making of donations. Taken to an extreme, this may even include email directing the
reader to websites that contain links to yet other web sites that may have
items for sale or a solicitation of donations.
{par. 24} When, indeed, a message is mixed and has both political
and non-political content, it becomes difficult for to characterize as
political on non-political. Such a
determination is itself a political question.
For example, one court may view an unsolicited message sent from a
separatist group,[43]
en masse, to non-members, as a political message; whereas, another court may
view the same message as a terrorist threat, particularly if the message
advocates violence against a class of people of which the email recipient is a
member. The question of the political
nature of something is non-justiciable,[44] in part
because it places values on the substance of the political argument. The proposed legislation would burden courts
with the task of determining the value of political speech. Consider also that
if a reader determined that an email was commercial –say, because it solicited
a donation– he could file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission ("FTC")
under the proposed statute and force the political organization which sent the
email to defend against any resulting claim.[45] There would be an obvious chilling effect on
the free exchange of ideas from this threat of FTC action. Fear of having to defend against such an
action could lead to a wholesale avoidance of mass email communications of any
type.
The Proposed Anti-Spam Statute Acts as a Prior Restraint on Free Speech by
the Government
{par. 25} The proposed federal anti-spam law provides a punishment
for the use of an ISP’s network to send spam;[46] the threat
of punishment operates as a prior restraint on the exercise of free speech
since its effect is the same as an injunction[47] —namely, it
allows the ISP to license which sender, if any, may use its network and block
all others even before a message is sent.
The Supreme Court has adopted a strong presumption disfavoring prior
restraints on the exercise of free speech.[48] Earlier private civil actions by ISPs
against spammers have often centered on petitions by the ISPs for temporary
restraining orders or permanent injunctions against spammers’ use of the ISPs’
networks.[49] The proposed federal anti-spam law
criminalizes any attempt to use a network in violation of the private
provider’s terms of use.[50] The statute, therefore, provides state
action to enforce a prior restraint on the use of the ISPs’ networks for spam
speech. This state enforcement of the
ISP’s terms of service vitiates the distinction made by the court in Cyber
Promotions v. America Online, Inc. ("AOL"), namely that AOL’s terms of service
could not be challenged on constitutional grounds because AOL was not a state
actor.[51] Therefore, even though ISPs are not governmental
entities, there is a significant and close nexus between their action to
restrict network use and government enforcement, under the proposed statute,
that the ISPs’ licensing or outright restriction on mass email have the effect
of a prior restraint placed on speech by the government.
Anti-Spam Restrictions on Free Speech Can Be Parsed into Content-Based and
Non-Content-Based Restrictions
{par. 26} The proposed anti-spam law would regulate spam in five
ways: (1) criminalizing fraudulent routing information;[52] (2)
requiring a valid return address on email;[53] (3)
prohibiting the sending of unsolicited commercial email to a recipient after
that recipient has requested to be removed from mail lists under the sender’s
control;[54]
(4) requiring unsolicited commercial email to be self-identified as such and to
include a notice of an option to opt-out of future mailings from that sender;[55]
and (5) as mentioned previously, criminalizing the use of an ISP’s network
equipment to send unsolicited commercial email in contravention of the ISP’s
policy governing use of its equipment.[56] These restrictions can be placed into two
groups: (1) those restrictions on the time, place, and manner of unsolicited
email; and (2) those restrictions based on the content of email.
The Time, Place and Manner Restrictions Meet Constitutional Scrutiny.
{par. 27} Criminalizing fraudulent routing information and requiring
a valid return address appear to be time, place and manner restrictions. The former may even be a separately
proscribed category of speech, i.e. speech that is itself criminal, if the
recipient relies to his detriment on fraudulent routing information. Therefore, these provisions will be subject
to a facial review of neutrality and a determination of whether the government
intends to suppress certain types of expression,. If the restrictions pass these two prongs then the government
need only show that the restrictions are rationally related to a legitimate
government interest.
{par. 28} Both the routing and return address provisions apply only
to unsolicited commercial electronic mail; nonetheless, the requirements, even
if applied to all electronic mail, do appear facially neutral. The fraudulent routing information provision
forbids the intentional transmission of a message to a computer in the United
States: "with knowledge that any domain name, header information, date or time
stamp, originating electronic mail address, or other information identifying the
initiator or the routing … [be] false or misleading."[57] The return address provision requires that
the initiator of a message to a recipient in the United States include: "a valid
electronic mail address, conspicuously displayed, to which a recipient may send
a reply to the initiator to indicate a desire not to receive any further
messages."[58] These requirements also appear to be
facially neutral inasmuch as they impose an equal burden on all speakers. Therefore, they pass the first prong of the
non-content-based analysis.
{par. 29} The restrictions do not appear aimed at the suppression of
any given expression either. Alternative channels of communication are open to all speakers through
the Internet—opt-in mail lists, bulletin board services, chat rooms, paid or
exchanged advertisement on other websites—or through conventional media. The non-content-based restrictions impose
the same burden on any initiator of an email message that falls within the
definition of unsolicited commercial email, which could broadly include any
initiator; therefore, the restrictions pass the second prong of the
non-content-based analysis.
{par. 30} The requirement that all spam be sent with an accurate
return address to which the recipient may respond is similar to existing
requirements on conventional mail.[59] At first blush, it may appear that such a
requirement eliminates the anonymity of the sender, such that he or she must
then fear retribution for his or her speech.
In the context of a political message, anonymity can be crucial to the
speaker’s right to speak freely and is, therefore, constitutionally protected.[60] Anonymity protects the speaker from fear of
retribution and "ensures that readers will not prejudge [the writer’s] message
simply because they do not like its proponent."[61] Anonymity can be preserved in email,
however, even when the sender provides an accurate return email address. The sender’s email address need not be
descriptive of him or her; it can be a combination of numbers and letters
bearing no relation to the sender. Therefore, the sender would remain anonymous
to all but the most astute email users who may be able to trace the path of the
email, but still may not be able to identify the individual writer. This situation is analogous to a
conventional mail sender who lists only a post office box address for his or
her return address. The sender is
anonymous to the recipient, yet the recipient is able to reply to the
sender. Thus the anti-spam proposal
preserves mental equanimity by allowing recipients to opt out of future
mailings. A deliberate process is also
created: a sender of bulk emails may also receive responses causing the sender
to consider other points of view. This
deliberative process may raise the quality of speech by debate.
Content-Based Restrictions Fail Constitutional Scrutiny
{par. 31} The other restrictions of the proposed legislation relate
to the content of the message. These
restrictions must pass a content-based analysis, namely that the restriction
must be narrowly tailored to meet a compelling government interest,[62]
unless it is limited to commercial speech, in which case the government
interest need only be no more extensive then necessary to meet a substantial
government interest.[63] The opt-out provisions may survive either of
these tests, but the enforcement of ISPs terms of use is not narrowly tailored,
and it is more extensive than necessary.
{par. 32} The legislation would give the recipients of spam the
right to opt out of future mailings.[64] In the closely analogous case of
conventional mail delivered through the U.S. Postal Service, the Court has
upheld a law that allowed a mail recipient to obtain a post office order
removing the recipient from the mailer’s mailing list.[65] "A mailer’s right to communicate must stop at
the mailbox of an unreceptive addressee."[66] This proscription is narrowly tailored to
the individual addressee and meets the compelling interest of the government in
protecting recipients who have that they do not wish to receive email from a
specific sender; the opt-out requirement is therefore constitutional.
{par. 33} The proposed federal statute also puts the power of state
action behind private ISP’s.[67] In so doing, the statute dissolves the
doctrinal basis on which one court upheld an ISP’s use of filtering software to
screen out spam as not violative of the first amendment because the ISP was not
a state actor.[68] Therefore, the government’s enforcement of
private actors’ terms of use may violate a sender’s first amendment rights if
the terms of use, and not the federal statute, would fail a first amendment
analysis. To minimize the implication
of governmental action in enforcing private ISPs’ terms of use, the Act
includes limiting criteria.[69] These limiting criteria require that ISPs
give notice of their terms of use they do not require compliance with any set
criteria, nor do they limit the government enforcement of the ISPs’ terms of
use. Therefore, the provision providing
for enforcement of ISPs terms of service is an unconstitutional broadsword used
to remove cancerous spam where the scalpel of a limited regulation would be
more easily justified, e.g. the non-content-based return address requirement of
the anti-spam law. Given the mixed
commercial and non-commercial content of email that would fall within the
anti-spam law’s broad sweep, some non-commercial messages would be proscribed
while others would escape censorship based on the government’s interpretation
of the content. A case challenging this
statutory scheme would be analogous to the case of Metromedia, Inc. v. San
Diego.[70] In that case, the Court stuck down portions
of San Diego’s ordinance which prohibited billboards containing some
non-commercial speech while excepting certain other categories of non-political
speech. Though the Court acknowledged
that commercial speech may be subject to
more restrictions than non-commercial speech, the Court found that the
government may not choose among the non-commercial messages those subjects it
deems appropriate for public disclosure.[71]
{par. 34} Even if the proposed federal anti-spam law survives all
other doctrinal scrutiny, the overbreadth doctrine may be its undoing. A restriction on all expression in a given
forum—even a non-public forum such as email—is overbroad because no conceivable
government interest can justify an absolute prohibition on speech.[72] The state action behind enforcement of ISPs’
terms of use sweeps within the ambit of the statute’s prohibition virtually all
speech sent through an ISP; therefore the statute is overbroad.
Anti-Spam Laws Are Neither Appropriate Nor Necessary
{par. 35} The marketplace of ideas can regulate spam without the
need for further government regulation.
As earlier mentioned, the introduction of other speech into the market
place may obviate the need for government regulation if the new speech can
counteract the speech the government wants to proscribe. Moreover, email users have the ability
affirmatively to reject unwanted spam without government regulation. Free Internet services are available that
filter mail messages from known spammers.[73] Email users may subscribe to voluntary
opt-in email marketing services.[74] By sending messages through such services,
legitimate commercial emailers can reach consumers interested in their product
or service without the need for government regulation to protect disinterested
email users from unsolicited messages. Even if the marketplace could not
regulate spam, existing law can regulate the most egregious forms of spam such
as pyramid schemes and inducements to send money for non-existent products,
without the need for a sweeping restriction on First Amendment rights.[75] Spam is, for example, apt to be considered a
trespass.[76]
{par. 36} Regulation of email, which is sent and received globally
even if the regulation is restricted to computers in the United States, places
the United States in the role of policing a world where not all countries share
the same values for free speech. The United
States has made it official policy to recognize the global quality of the
Internet and its limited role in the regulation of the Internet.[77] An attempt to interject itself in the
governance and policing of the Internet would be contrary to the established
policy of the federal government.[78]
Conclusion
{par. 37} The proposed federal anti-spam law would
unconstitutionally limit speech because the government interest in preventing
mere annoyance is not the sort of compelling interest needed to limit core
political speech—the inevitable effect of the proposed statute. Adequate responses to the problem of
spamming already exist. Spamming can be
regulated by private civil actions, by public criminal actions, and by the
market place of ideas, without the need for a separate general anti-spam
law. Any attempt to impose specific
anti-spam regulations beyond mere time, place and manner restrictions such as
requiring accurate return addresses, would needlessly and unconstitutionally
limit free speech.
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