This website uses cookies to improve your browsing experience. By continuing to use this website you agree to our use of cookies. For more information on our use of cookies, click here to review the Cookies Policy.。
On 20 January 2005, the Executive Yuan ap-proved a draft Act to Regulate Abusive Trans-mission of Commercial Electronic Mails. The main points of the proposed legislation are as follows:
A person or entity that abusively sends e-mails and thereby harms the interests of the recipient will be liable to pay damages in the amount of NT$500 to NT$2,000 per person per e-mail, up to a maximum of NT$20 million.
An advertiser or advertising agent who is aware, or could have ascertained, that the sender of such e-mails is violating the Act will be liable for damages jointly and severally with the sender.
When sending commercial e-mail, the sender must provide a mechanism whereby the re-cipient can opt not to receive further mailings of the same type, and the e-mail subject line must include the notice "commercial," "ad-vertisement," "ADV," or another approved indication. The sender must supply correct header information (i.e. information attached to the e-mail indicating its source, path, des-tination, date of transmission, etc., by which the sender may be identified), and must state the personal name, company name, and busi-ness or residential address of the sender.
The draft explicitly prohibits the following actions by a sender: sending an e-mail in the knowledge that (1) the recipient has opted not to receive commercial e-mails, (2) the subject line of the e-mail includes deceptive or mis-leading statements, or (3) the header informa-tion prior to forwarding is incorrect. Violators of these provisions will be liable to pay com-pensation.