First, I have NOT read this order, however:
As the order is to those "having actual knowledge of this Default Judgment and Permanent Injunction Order
This tells me all that I need to know in terms of the scope of it. A default judgement means that the defendant never responded. That means that the only thing that the court has to go on is what is in the plaintiff's pleadings. Moreover, generally speaking and because of that, a default judgement will often (if not close to always) give the plaintiff everything for which they asked. Again, I have _not_ read the pleadings, but I'd bet dollars to doughnuts (what *does* that saying mean, anyways?) that if you read the plaintiff's pleadings, specifically in their "what they want the court to do" section (called in some jurisdictions a "request for relief" or "relief requested"), you will find that the court's order closely tracks what the plaintiff asked the court to do. Again, when a defendant defaults, that's pretty much SOP, the court will create an order based on that for which the plaintiff has asked. Anne -- Anne P. Mitchell, Attorney at Law CEO ISIPP SuretyMail Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law) Author: The Email Deliverability Handbook Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange Dean Emeritus, Cyberlaw & Cybersecurity, Lincoln Law School Prof. Emeritus, Lincoln Law School Chair Emeritus, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop Counsel Emeritus: Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS) (now the anti-spam arm of TrendMicro)