Two U.S. senators have introduced a bill aimed at attacking a growing problem: unsolicited commercial text messages or mobile
spam.
The m-Spam Act, introduced Thursday by Senators Olympia Snowe and Bill Nelson, would strengthen the powers of the U.S. Federal
Communications Commission and Federal Trade Commission to fight mobile spam and would prohibit commercial organizations from
sending text messages to mobile phone owners with numbers listed on a national do-not-call registry.
"Mobile spam invades both a consumer's cell phone and monthly bill," Snowe, a Maine Republican, said in a statement. "There
is also increasing concern that mobile spam will become more than just an annoyance -- the viruses and malicious spyware that
are often attached to traditional spam will most likely be more prevalent on wireless devices through m-spam."
Mobile users in the U.S received about 1.1 million spam text messages in 2007, up 38 percent from 2006, Snowe said in a news
release. In some cases, mobile subscribers pay up to $0.20 for each text message received and sent. Some providers allow users
to block text messages.
"Spam e-mail is bad enough," Nelson, a Florida Democrat, said in a statement. "Now, we are seeing a proliferation of unwanted
text messages -- and consumers are getting stuck paying."
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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