This issue is not just that the spammer in question forged headers, this person also used stolen credit card numbers to sign up for new accounts to thwart Earthlink's abuse department. I suspect this will be the core of the fraud case - any activity involving use of stolen card numbers over telecomunications networks is wire fraud. There may also have been fraudulent claims made in some of the UCE emails (yes, shocking! :) Kudos to Mary Youngblood at Eathlink for going after this guy... - Daniel Golding On Thu, 15 May 2003, John Payne wrote:
--On Thursday, May 15, 2003 19:14 +0200 Randy Bush <randy@psg.com> wrote:
what is wrong with this picture?
apart from the fact you've confused nanog with spam-l?
this exemplifies the corporate and legislative attempt to confuse spam == uce with forgery. if they can make the latter the issue, this leaves the way completely clear for unsolicited commercial email from the corporate sector which now fills our post boxes with ground trees.
Carmack stole identities to sign up for Earthlink accounts. Don't confuse this with putting someone else's email address in his ratware.
And the thing that protects us against unsolicited commercial email from the corporate sector is ISPs enforcing their AUPs. Spammers forge, steal, hijack to avoid AUP enforcement.