Spam Policy
The
abuse and misuse of e-mail is a serious problem and Glyptic Visions is
committed to a zero-tolerance, anti-spamming policy. Under this policy, we
prohibit spam, or any unsolicited commercial email, from being sent either:
- Over the Glyptic Visions
network, by customers or any other users of the Glyptic Visions network
(including customers' customers);
- Over ANY network if the
message sent advertises or mentions a site hosted on an
Glyptic Visions server.
Definition of UCE (Unsolicited Commercial E-mail), or SPAM
- Bulk UCE, promotional
material, or other forms of solicitation sent via e-mail that advertise
any IP address or URL belonging to or pointing Glyptic Visions or any URL
(domain) that is hosted by Glyptic Visions, whether directly or
indirectly.
- Unsolicited postings to
newsgroups advertising any IP or URL hosted by Glyptic Visions.
The use of webpages set up on ISPs that allow
SPAM-ing (also known as "ghost sites")
that directly or indirectly reference customers to domains or IP addresses
hosted by Glyptic Visions.
- Advertising, transmitting, or
otherwise making available any software, program, product, or service that
is designed to facilitate a means to SPAM.
Forging or misrepresenting message headers, whether in whole or in part,
to mask the true origin of the message.
- For further information on
mail abuse, please visit the Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS) website.
Repercussions
of SPAM
Across the Web, it is generally accepted that SPAM is
an inconsiderate and improper business practice.
- Glyptic Visions. SPAM is not
only harmful because of its negative impact on consumer attitudes toward Glyptic
Visions, but also because it can overload Glyptic Visions’s
network and resources, especially on our shared (virtual) server
environments.
- Our Providers. Since it is
unsolicited, users who receive SPAM often become angry and send complaints
to our upstream providers. This upsets our providers who abhor SPAM for
the same reasons that Glyptic Visions does - it causes negative consumer
attitudes and drains resources. We strive to maintain favorable business
relationships in the Web community and obviously will not allow any
practice that threatens these relationships.
Punishment
For SPAM
Glyptic Visions reserves the right to terminate, without warning, any account
that violates this policy. Usage of Glyptic Visions services constitutes
acceptance and understanding of this policy.
Glyptic
Visions may, at its option, charge $25.00 per SPAM complaint we receive. These
are non-refundable charges and will be invoiced at the time of complaint
notification.
Glyptic
Visions reserves the right to decide what it considers "SPAM",
"UCE", "mail bombing", or "bulk e-mail", and to
determine from all of the evidence whether or not the e-mail recipients were
from an "opt-in" e-mail list.
Should
you choose to e-mail from Glyptic Visions servers, especially if you use mailing
lists, you must read and adhere to the following guidelines, which are offered
as a statement of Internet standards and best practices for proper mailing list
management and preventing e-mail abuse.
Basic
Mailing List Management Principles for Preventing Abuse
Mailing lists are an excellent vehicle for distributing focused, targeted
information to an interested, receptive audience. Consequently, mailing lists
have been used successfully as a highly effective direct marketing tool.
Unfortunately,
some marketers misuse mailing lists through a lack of understanding of Internet
customs and rules of the forum pertaining to e-mail. Others fail to take
adequate precautions to prevent the lists they manage from being used in an
abusive manner.
- The e-mail addresses of new
subscribers must be confirmed or verified before mailings commence. This
is usually accomplished by means of an e-mail message sent to the
subscriber to which s/he must reply, or containing a URL which s/he must
visit, in order to complete the subscription. However it is implemented, a
fundamental requirement of all lists is the verification of all new
subscriptions.
- Mailing list administrators
must provide a simple method for subscribers to terminate their
subscriptions, and administrators should provide clear and effective
instructions for unsubscribing from a mailing list. Mailings from a list
must cease promptly once a subscription is terminated.
- Mailing list administrators
should make an "out of band" procedure (e.g., a means of contact
by which messages may be sent for further correspondence via e-mail or
telephone) available for those who wish to terminate their mailing list
subscriptions but are unable or unwilling to follow standard automated
procedures.
- Mailing list administrators
must ensure that the impact of their mailings on the networks and hosts of
others is minimized by proper list management procedures such as pruning
of invalid or undeliverable addresses, or taking steps to ensure that
mailings do not overwhelm less robust hosts or networks.
- Mailing list administrators
must take adequate steps to ensure that their lists are not used for
abusive purposes. For example, administrators can maintain a
"suppression list" of e-mail addresses from which all
subscription requests are rejected. Addresses would be added to the
suppression list upon request by the parties entitled to use the addresses
at issue. The purpose of the suppression list would be to prevent
subscription of addresses appearing on the suppression list by unauthorized
third parties. Such suppression lists should also give properly authorized
domain administrators the option to suppress all mailings to the domains
for which they are responsible.
- Mailing list administrators
must make adequate disclosures about how subscriber addresses will be
used, including whether or not addresses are subject to sale or trade with
other parties. Once a mailing list is traded or sold, it may no longer be
an opt-in mailing list. Therefore, those who are acquiring
"opt-in" lists from others must examine the terms and conditions
under which the addresses were originally compiled and determine that all
recipients have in fact opted-in specifically to the mailing lists to
which they are being traded or sold.
- Mailing list administrators
should make adequate disclosures about the nature of their mailing lists,
including the subject matter of the lists and anticipated frequency of
messages. A substantive change in either the subject matter or frequency
of messages may constitute a new and separate mailing list requiring a
separate subscription. List administrators should create a new mailing
list when there is a substantive change in either the subject matter or
frequency of messages. A notification about the new mailing list may be
appropriate on the existing mailing list, but existing subscribers should
never be subscribed automatically to the new list. For example, if Company
A acquires Company B, and Company B has compiled opt-in mailing lists, Company A should not summarily incorporate Company
B's mailing lists into its own.
*This SPAM Policy and all other Glyptic Visions policies
are subject to change by Glyptic Visions without notice. Continued usage of our
services after a change to this policy is implemented and posted on the Glyptic
Visions site constitutes your acceptance of such change or policy. We encourage
you to regularly check the Glyptic Visions site for any changes or additions.