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Anti-spam legislation will
help fight spammers
A local anti-spam legislation could prevent
Hong Kong from becoming a safe haven sheltering
illicit spammers, the Secretary for Commerce,
Industry and Technology, Mr John Tsang,
said today (April 28).
Speaking at a luncheon meeting of the
Foreign Correspondents' Club, Mr Tsang
said such legislation would facilitate
co-operation with overseas jurisdictions
in investigation and enforcement work
against spammers, and should have a deterrent
effect on irresponsible e-marketers spamming
fax and automated dialling pre-recorded
marketing messages.
"Over the past two months, we have
been discussing actively with stakeholder
groups from the ICT industry, the business
sector, legal experts and consumer organisations
on the draft legislative framework with
a view to finding a balance between protecting
recipients' rights on the one hand, and
enabling the proper development of e-marketing
and e-commerce on the other," Mr
Tsang said.
"We also explored the merits of
the 'opt-in' and the 'opt-out' approaches,
and how each would impact on the business
sector. We aim to firm up the framework
for wider public consultation later this
year and introduce the legislation into
the Legislative Council the following
year.".
The secretary also gave an update on
all government initiatives to contain
the problem of spam under the "STEPS"
campaign announced in February this year.
In the area of strengthening existing
regulatory measures, the Government is
actively discussing with fixed network
operators the possibility of reducing
the timeframe required to cut off access
to telecommunications services by irresponsible
fax advertisers who persistently ignore
recipients' advice not to send them further
fax advertisements.
The Government is also discussing with
mobile network operators to extend an
existing Code of Practice for the handling
of inter-operator unsolicited promotional
Short Message Service (SMS) to cover intra-operator
unsolicited promotional SMS.
"We are hopeful that, in the next
few months, these improvement measures
would be put in place, and the problem
can be better moderated," Mr Tsang
said.
On technical solutions, the Government
is liaising with the industry to organise
seminars and conferences in the next few
months to encourage users to adopt technical
solutions to protect themselves from spam
e-mail. A dedicated theme page to enable
the public to learn more about the latest
technical solutions and the spam problem
is being developed.
Furthermore, the Government was also
developing a targeted education and promotion
programme to raise everyone's level of
awareness, including youngsters, adults,
businesses and industry players, about
how they could do their part to fight
spam and to provide them with accurate
information and useful resources through
various channels. These education programmes
will be launched in the next month or
so.
Regarding partnership, Mr Tsang emphasised
that the Government was continuing to
foster international partnerships with
overseas agencies.
"As announced yesterday, my Bureau
has become one of the 12 founding signatories
of a Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding
on Co-operation in Countering Spam. The
MoU facilitates signatory agencies across
the Asia-Pacific region to share knowledge,
information and intelligence about known
sources of spam, network vulnerabilities,
methods of spam propagation, and technical,
educational and policy solutions to the
spam problem. It also focuses on putting
anti-spam solutions and strategies into
action.
"We look forward to developing positive
and mutually beneficial co-operative relationships
with fellow agencies under the framework
of the MoU.
"Locally, we are encouraging industry
organisations to develop codes of practice
and best practice guidelines to combat
spam. Specifically, we are discussing
with the Internet Service Provider industry
in Hong Kong on the feasibility of developing
a common blacklist for more effective
screening of spam e-mails," Mr Tsang
said.
Ends/Thursday, April 28, 2005
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