OanbFree
ZERO Tolerance Spam Policy!
What Is It? ...and How To Avoid It?...
Please read this entire page to protect yourself!
What about the Tell-A-Friend Form on the Greeting Cards page? Are we liable for SPAM?
Please read the entire page!
If You Received an OanbFree SPAM:
CLICK HERE TO REPORT IT!
GUIDELINES:
OanbFree,
strictly prohibits its Web Site owners from using spam and other forms
of Internet abuse to seek referrals. Spam is defined as including, but
not limited to, the following:
- Electronic
mail messages addressed to a recipient with whom the initiator does not
have an existing business or personal relationship or is not sent at
the request of, or with the express consent of, the recipient;
- Messages
posted to Usenet and message boards that are off-topic (unrelated to
the topic of discussion), cross-posted to unrelated newsgroups, or
posted in excessive volume;
- Solicitations
posted to chat rooms, or to groups or individuals via Internet Relay
Chat or "Instant Messaging" system (such as ICQ);
- Certain
off-line activities that, while not considered spam, are similar in
nature, including distributing flyers or leaflets on private property
or where prohibited by applicable rules, regulations, or laws
- Sending
emails posting your HTTP://AFFILIATE ID.OanbFree.COM ADDRESS and/or
information regarding OanbFree or the OanbFree SYSTEM to people you do
not know UNLESS they PERSONALLY REQUESTED INFORMATION FROM YOU!
We recommend that you KEEP ALL:
- EMAIL ADDRESSES,
- SIGN UP REQUESTS
And
- CONTACT
FORMS submissions that "ask" for more information, from you. This way
you have proof in case down the road anyone disputes your emailed
reports and other items. SAVE them on a separate floppy disk or
re-writeable CD - this way they do not load up on your memory on your
hard drive AND you can keep your business organized.
OanbFree SOLE DISCRETION:
OanbFree, may undertake, at its sole discretion and with or without prior notice, the following enforcement actions:
Account Termination:
Upon the receipt of a credible complaint, the Web Host will immediately
terminate the Web site of the individual implicated in the abuse,
without warning. Termination results in the immediate closure of the
site, the loss of all referrals, and a prohibition against any future
Web site.
Account Suspension:
Upon the receipt of a credible complaint, the Web Host may immediately
suspend the Web site of the individual implicated in the abuse. After a
thorough investigation, if the spamming incident is verified, but does
not rise to the level of a terminable offense, the Web Host may (but is
not obligated to) lift the suspension.
Fines:
If the Server charges OanbFree a fine, the originating Web site
owner/affiliate is liable to pay the fine before his/her site is
reactivated - minimum fine of $500 per complaint...
WHY IS SPAM BAD?:
Spam
is bad for a multitude of reasons. Unlike the "junk mail" you receive
in your "snail" mailbox, electronic junk mail costs the recipients more
time and money than it costs the sender. For example, AOL has said that
they were receiving 1.8 million spams from Cyber Promotions per day
until they got a court injunction to stop it. Many major service
providers estimate that upwards of 30% of their daily email traffic is
spam, costing them upwards of $1 million per month in hardware,
bandwidth, and administrative costs -- equaling nearly $2 per month per
user. By contrast, the spammer can use a simple dial-up account with an
Internet service provider and send out more than a half-million emails
per day for around $20/month.
Spam
is also an unequaled time-waster. It takes time to download, sort
through, and identify junk mail, and then it takes time to discard it.
Assuming that it takes the typical user only 10 seconds to download,
identify, and discard a message, that equates to about 5,000 hours of
connect time per day spent for an ISP the size of AOL.
No
other kind of advertising costs the advertiser so little and the
recipient so much. The closest analogy would be auto-dialing junk phone
calls to cellular users or receiving a bill from your postman for
"postage due" on that month's junk mail; you can imagine how favorably
that might be received.
Anti-spamming
legislation has already taken affect in more than a dozen states in the
U.S., and has been banned in several countries in Europe.
If you have any questions, feel free to contact us BEFORE you send out emails:
CLICK HERE TO ASK US!
ENCOURAGING PROPER NETIQUETTE:
At
OanbFree, we understand that our members are interested in responsibly
promoting their OanbFree Web Site. While we are quite vigorous in
enforcing our anti-spam policy, we understand that many members are not
well-versed in Internet "Netiquette" and the traditions, protocols, and
mores of Internet usage. To encourage our site owners and all Internet
users to learn more about Internet Netiquette, below is information to
assist you with appropriate methods of promotion and how to avoid
running afoul of Internet norms.
DOs and DON'Ts of Promoting Your Site
DO mention your Web site to friends and family in person, following up with an email message later that day.
DON'T
gather up random email addresses and send unsolicited messages to
individuals with whom you have no ongoing relationship, otherwise you
are setting yourself up for SPAM COMPLAINTS which will shut your site
down as well as jeopardize the ENTIRE OanbFree WEB SYSTEM!
DO
include a brief mention of your Web site in an email that you were
already intending to send to your friends, family members, immediate
coworkers or classmates with whom you regularly communicate by email.
DON'T
send referral solicitations to friends whose email addresses you've
managed to dig up but with whom you haven't spoken in years.
DO
use mailing lists or mailing services that are verified "opt-in."
("Opt-in" means that the people on the list have *specifically*
requested to be on the list and are willing to receive messages of the
type you are sending.)
DON'T
use mailing lists or mailing services that claim to be "opt-in" but
cannot prove it. (They must be able to demonstrate that the only way
people have gotten on the list is through an affirmative act on their
part.)
DO use a signature when sending messages to those you know would not mind.
DON'T add a signature when posting in ongoing discussions in Usenet newsgroups until you have read if it is within their guidelines.
DO join and check out Usenet newsgroups or and read their rules.
DON'T
post a referral solicitation to Usenet newsgroups, message boards, or
Web-based discussion sites, EXCEPT those specifically designated in
their charter or by their operators for postings of a purely commercial
nature. (Even for locations where commercial messages are *explicitly*
authorized, postings may still be a violation if they are excessively
cross-posted or posted more frequently than necessary.)
DO mention your Web site in holiday cards, letters, and on appropriate correspondence.
DON'T
print out flyers and stick them on car windshields or distribute them
where doing so constitutes trespassing or otherwise violates applicable
rules, regulations, or laws.
DO think of new and creative ways to gain new referrals.
DON'T act on those ideas without first considering whether they might be inappropriate or prohibited.
(When in doubt, ASK FIRST!)
CLICK HERE TO ASK US!
REPORT SPAM:
If
you have received a SPAM EMAIL, regarding the OanbFree Web Sites,
please inform us! This is in violation of our OanbFree.com Anti-Spam
Policy and we will not tolerate it.
Please forward all relevant evidence to: spamabuse@OwnANewBusiness.com and place the words "spamabuse" in the subject line.
We will respond immediately!
Thank you,
OanbFree.com
Web Design and Hosting Teams
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