Everyday I receive emails that violate the CAN Spam Act ( This act was put in place to try and prevent spam or at least put into place acceptable email practices for businesses. Whenever you send an email to your customers that might be deemed “commercial” you fall into the set of emails covered by this act.
Commercial content â any email which advertises or promotes a commercial product or service, including content on a website operated for a commercial purpose;
guidelines:
- Donât use false or misleading header information. Your âFrom,â âTo,â âReply-To,â and routing information â including the originating domain name and email address â must be accurate and identify the person or business who initiated the message.
- Donât use deceptive subject lines. The subject line must accurately reflect the content of the message.
- Identify the message as an ad. The law gives you a lot of leeway in how to do this, but you must disclose clearly and conspicuously that your message is an advertisement.
- Tell recipients where youâre located. Your message must include your valid physical postal address. This can be your current street address, a post office box youâve registered with the U.S. Postal Service, or a private mailbox youâve registered with a commercial mail receiving agency established under Postal Service regulations.
- Tell recipients how to opt out of receiving future email from you. Your message must include a clear and conspicuous explanation of how the recipient can opt out of getting email from you in the future. Craft the notice in a way thatâs easy for an ordinary person to recognize, read, and understand. Creative use of type size, color, and location can improve clarity. Give a return email address or another easy Internet-based way to allow people to communicate their choice to you. You may create a menu to allow a recipient to opt out of certain types of messages, but you must include the option to stop all commercial messages from you. Make sure your spam filter doesnât block these opt-out requests.
- Honor opt-out requests promptly. Any opt-out mechanism you offer must be able to process opt-out requests for at least 30 days after you send your message. You must honor a recipientâs opt-out request within 10 business days. You canât charge a fee, require the recipient to give you any personally identifying information beyond an email address, or make the recipient take any step other than sending a reply email or visiting a single page on an Internet website as a condition for honoring an opt-out request. Once people have told you they donât want to receive more messages from you, you canât sell or transfer their email addresses, even in the form of a mailing list. The only exception is that you may transfer the addresses to a company youâve hired to help you comply with the CAN-SPAM Act.
- Monitor what others are doing on your behalf. The law makes clear that even if you hire another company to handle your email marketing, you canât contract away your legal responsibility to comply with the law. Both the company whose product is promoted in the message and the company that actually sends the message may be held legally responsible.
The FTC guidelines for what makes a spam email are surprisingly easy to understand. The easiest way to protect yourself is to use a commercial carrier for your bulk emails in particular. aWeber is the vendor that I use. They make sure that users have opted into your list, that your address is on the end of your emails and that users can quickly and easily opt out of your emails.
Why should you worry about the CAN Spam Act? The failure to comply with this act can lead to penalties of $16000 per email.
One reply on “Does Your Email Violate the CAN Spam Act?”
Thanks to @legalnomads who caught my error calling CAN-Spam, Canned Spam (which I suppose would be the meat). CAN stands for “Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography And Mktg”