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Government to take "Steps" against spamming
The Government would take a number of
measures including launching a campaign
entitled "STEPS" to fight Hong
Kong's spam epidemic, the Secretary for
Commerce, Industry and Technology, Mr
John Tsang, said today (February 24).
Speaking during a luncheon meeting organised
by six information and communication technology
organisations, Mr Tsang said spamming
was a problem that had affected almost
everyone in Hong Kong.
"The fixed telecommunications network
service operators in Hong Kong received
more than 36,000 junk fax complaints in
2004. A survey conducted by the Hong Kong
Internet Service Providers Association
found that spam had risen to account for
around 60% of all emails, with individual
members experiencing as much as 90% of
their emails being spam," Mr Tsang
said.
Drawing on the views expressed to an
earlier consultation and the trend on
recent developments, the Government will
launch the "STEPS" campaign
to contain the problem of spamming.
The first letter "S" stands
for strengthening existing regulatory
measures. In conjunction with relevant
industry associations and service providers,
the Government will start work in two
areas - fax and SMS and MMS.
For fax, the Government will work closely
with fixed telecommunications network
service providers to penalise advertisers
who continue to spam recipients on the
"not-to-call" list by reducing
the timeframe required to cut off their
access to telecommunications services,
which is their means to send out fax advertisements.
For SMS and MMS, the Government plans
to work with the industry to extend the
existing code of practice for mobile network
operators to cover all SMS and MMS unsolicited
promotional messages, including those
sent by the operators themselves.
The second letter "T" stands
for technical solutions. The Government
will collaborate with the industry to
organise seminars, conferences and exhibitions
to promote the latest anti-spam technical
solutions to all users.
The third letter "E" stands
for education. "In the fight against
spam it is vital that the recipients play
their part in denying the spammers by
not purchasing anything marketed through
spam or, better still, not responding
to spam at all.
"To this end, we will work with
industry organisations to develop an information
campaign on spam to raise the level of
awareness and provide accurate information
and useful resources to consumers,"
Mr Tsang said.
The fourth letter "P" stands
for partnerships. Mr Tsang highlighted
that one possible partnership was the
development of a common blacklist to filter
spam at the local Internet service provider
level.
"We will work with industry organisations
to facilitate the process and liaise with
relevant authorities to ensure that the
sharing of information in developing and
maintaining the common blacklists complies
with relevant laws, such as the Personal
Data (Privacy) Ordinance," he said.
On global partnership, Mr Tsang revealed
that the Commerce, Industry and Technology
Bureau would soon become one of the Founding
Signatories of a Multilateral Memorandum
of Understanding on Co-operation in Countering
Spam.
"This MoU will facilitate co-operation
among Asia-Pacific signatories on many
fronts in tackling the spam problem. We
will continue to develop international
partnerships and play a leading role in
the fight against spam," he said.
The last letter "S" stands
for statutory measures. Mr Tsang said
that the Government believed it would
be necessary to enact legislation to regulate
spamming.
"Such a piece of legislation would
prevent Hong Kong from becoming a safe
haven sheltering illicit spammers. It
would also facilitate co-operation with
overseas jurisdictions with similar legislation
in investigation and enforcement work
against spammers.
"We have an open mind on the exact
form and content of the legislation, but
the key is to strike the right balance
between the need to discourage spamming
and to enable legitimate e-marketing activities
to develop properly.
"Our aim is to work out a legislative
framework which is largely acceptable
to different stakeholders before we proceed
to draft the legislation. We will engage
representative stakeholder groups over
the next few months for detailed and pragmatic
discussions. We intend to introduce the
full draft legislation into the Legislative
Council some time next year," Mr
Tsang said.
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