From: Damaged Justice <frogfarm@yakko.cs.wmich.edu>
To: cypherpunks@Algebra.COM
Message Hash: 56c68cd963e7fac97c185a0015b59bc0a4666cdfd55befcbab9cc4db4ff7c4ff
Message ID: <199708080858.EAA31914@yakko.cs.wmich.edu>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-08-08 09:03:46 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 8 Aug 1997 17:03:46 +0800
From: Damaged Justice <frogfarm@yakko.cs.wmich.edu>
Date: Fri, 8 Aug 1997 17:03:46 +0800
To: cypherpunks@Algebra.COM
Subject: Whining for 'Accountability'
Message-ID: <199708080858.EAA31914@yakko.cs.wmich.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text
Net crime begs questions: Who to call?
By [38]Janet Kornblum
August 5, 1997, 8:00 p.m. PT
On June 10, out of the blue, Bruce Hovland's business phone started
ringing off the hook. The people calling weren't happy.
They all demanded to know the same thing: How did they get on his
mailing list? They also insisted, not always nicely, that he not send
them the pornography he had apparently promised them in an email. They
didn't order any porn, they said.
Hovland doesn't send out pornography for a living, and he hadn't sent
angry callers any email, either.
In fact, Hovland is a Florida businessman who rents out an inland
marina and markets various products like construction materials, none
of which have anything to do with porn, email, or the Internet. He
surfs for educational reasons and sometimes sends mail, but that's
about it.
According to Hovland, he is a victim of a crime. Someone--he thinks he
knows who--sent out an email to possibly thousands of people telling
them that "in 48 hours your credit card will be charged $184.80" for
three adult videos. Recipients were then told they could not reply by
email but "If we do not hear from you within 48 hours, we will assume
everything is correct and make the charge to your card."
The email supplied contact numbers, all belonging to Hovland. Perhaps
adding insult to injury, the email said "you may call collect you if
you wish."
Hovland estimates there were thousands of calls from everywhere. "I've
been pretty much threatened from all corners of the world," he said.
He added he reported the incident to the local sheriff's department
and to the [39]FBI and Secret Service.
"I think I've been internationally defamed. I'm known worldwide as a
porn dealer."
But that's not even the part that bothers him the most: Hovland said
this incident alerted him to the fact that there's no place to deal
specifically with Internet crimes. Now, he wants to do something about
it.
"I believe that the entity, the Internet, is accountable. The freedom
of it is what makes it so great, but they need to police it. They need
to have 911 [for the] Internet."
He's already gotten support from one person: Philip Kirschner, a law
student who received the spam and called Hovland to cancel the order.
Kirschner is helping to mount a campaign for legislation or some sort
of task force.
Hovland said he and a friend started tracing the email spam. With some
luck, he explained, he figured out that it came from a wanted man who
had fled the country and left his boat and car at Hovland's marina
without paying rent. Hovland eventually sold the goods, but catching
the alleged culprit is a different story; suing him would be nearly
impossible.
Hovland said he's lost two weeks worth of work. But he noted it could
have been a lot worse: Someone could have directed the spam victims to
a hospital switchboard or some other business that counts on their
phones to help save lives.
"Anyone can be a victim, whether you're an Internet user or not. If a
guy can be in a foreign country and pinpoint his harassment and maybe
be unprosecutable, there's a major problem. International harassment
via the Internet can be an extremely volatile thing. It's a lot more
serious than some fat white guy in Florida getting harassed."
Now he hopes the spam and his experience will lead to something
bigger, maybe even a movement that speaks for the average person who
winds up being a victim of a Net crime.
"A regular businessman in this society can be victimized at the point
of a mouse," Hovland said. "They could literally put me out of
business if they continued. It's bizarre."
related news stories
• [40]CNET Special Feature: Dark side of the Web July 18, 1997
• [41]Laws of cyberland April 25, 1997
• [42]CNET Special Report: Crime on the Net February 7, 1997
• [43]States mull harassment laws January 31, 1997
• [44]States fight harassment December 16, 1996
• [45]FBI in Net porn probe December 12, 1996
38. mailto:janetk@cnet.com
39. http://www.fbi.gov/
40. http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,12590,00.html
41. http://www.news.com/SpecialFeatures/0,5,10040,00.html
42. http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,7754,00.html
43. http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,7550,00.html
44. http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,6262,00.html
45. http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,6157,00.html
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