OKLAHOMA STATUTES
TITLE 15. CONTRACTS
SECTION 776
Added by Okla.
Laws 1999, ch. 337, House Bill 1410 (1999)
Approved by Governor June 8, 1999; effective July 1, 1999
Amended by Senate
Bill 660 (2003), approved April 22, 2003; effective November 1, 2003
and House
Bill 1691 (2003), approved May 29, 2003; effective November 1, 2003
§ 776.1
A. It shall be unlawful for a person to initiate
an electronic mail message that the sender knows, or has reason to know:
1. Misrepresents any information in identifying the
point of origin or the transmission path of the electronic mail
message;
2. Does not contain information identifying the
point of origin or the transmission path of the electronic mail
message; or
3. Contains false, malicious, or misleading
information which purposely or negligently injures a person.
B. Any person violating the provisions of this
section shall be subject to a civil penalty of up to Five Hundred
Dollars ($500.00).
C. All acts and practices declared to be unlawful
by subsection A and E of this section shall, in addition, be violations
of the Oklahoma Consumer Protection Act.
D. For purposes of this section, an electronic
mail message which is declared to be unlawful by subsection A of this
section shall be considered a fraudulent electronic mail message or a
fraudulent bulk electronic mail message.
E. It shall be unlawful for any person to sell,
give, or otherwise distribute or possess with the intent to sell, give
or distribute software which:
1. Is primarily designed or produced for the
purpose of facilitating or enabling the falsification of electronic
mail transmission information or other routing information;
2. Has only limited commercially significant
purpose or use other than to facilitate or enable the falsification of
electronic mail transmission information or other routing information;
or
3. Is marketed by that person or another acting in
concert with that person and with that person's knowledge for use in
facilitating or enabling the falsification of electronic mail
transmission information or other routing information.
§ 776.2
A. Any person whose property or person is injured
by reason of a violation of any provision of this act may sue for and
recover any damages sustained, and also recover the costs of bringing
the suit. The term "damages" shall include but shall not be
limited to the loss of profits.
B. If the injury arises from the transmission of
fraudulent electronic mail, the injured person, other than an electronic
mail service provider, may also recover attorney fees and costs. In lieu
of actual damages, the injured person may elect to recover the lesser of
Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each unsolicited bulk electronic mail message
transmitted in violation of this act, or Twenty-five Thousand Dollars
($25,000.00) per day. The injured person shall not have a cause of
action against the electronic mail service provider that merely
transmits the fraudulent electronic mail over its computer network.
C. If the injury arises from the transmission of
fraudulent electronic mail, an injured electronic mail service provider
may also recover attorney fees and costs. In lieu of actual damages, the
injured electronic mail service provider may elect to recover the
greater of Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each fraudulent electronic mail
message transmitted in violation of this act, or Twenty-five Thousand
Dollars ($25,000.00) per day.
D. At the request of any party to an action
brought pursuant to this section, the court may, in its discretion,
conduct all legal proceedings in such a way as to protect the secrecy
and security of the computer, computer network, computer data, computer
program, and computer software involved in order to prevent possible
recurrence of the same or a similar act by another person and to protect
any trade secrets of any party.
E. The provisions of this act shall not be
construed to limit any right of a person to pursue any additional civil
remedy otherwise allowed by law.
§ 776.3
Transmitting or causing the transmission of
fraudulent electronic mail to or through a computer network of an
electronic mail service provider located in this state shall constitute
an act in this state. When jurisdiction over a person is based solely
upon this section, only a cause of action arising from acts enumerated
in this section may be asserted against that person. Nothing contained
in this act shall limit, restrict, or otherwise affect the jurisdiction
of any court of this state over foreign corporations which are subject
to service of process pursuant to the provision of any other law.
§ 776.4
For purposes of Sections 1 through 3 of this act:
1. "Electronic mail messages" means a
message, file, or other information that is transmitted through a local,
regional, or global network regardless of whether the message, file, or
other information is viewed, stored for retrieval at a later time,
printed on to paper or other similar material, or is filtered or
screened by a computer program that is designed or intended to filter or
screen items of electronic mail;
2. "Fraudulent electronic mail message"
or "fraudulent bulk electronic mail message" means any
electronic mail message or bulk electronic mail message which is
declared unlawful by subsection A of Section 1 of this act;
3. "Initiate the transmission" means the
action of the original sender of an electronic mail message, not to the
action by any intervening computer service that may handle or retransmit
the message;
4. "Computer network" means a set of
related, remotely connected devices and any communications facilities
including more than one computer with the capability to transmit data
among them through the communications facilities; and
5. "Electronic mail service provider"
means any person who:
a. is an intermediary in sending or receiving
electronic mail, and
b. provides to end-users of electronic mail
services the ability to send or receive electronic mail.
§ 776.5
For purposes of Sections 1 through 3 of this act:
1. "Electronic mail" means an electronic
message or computer file containing an image of a message that is
transmitted between two or more computers or electronic terminals and
includes electronic messages that are transmitted within or between
computer networks;
2. "Electronic mail service provider"
means any person who:
a. is an intermediary in sending or receiving
electronic mail, and
b. provides to end-users of electronic mail
services the ability to send or receive electronic mail;
3. "Established business relationship"
means a prior or existing relationship formed by a voluntary
communication between a person or entity and the recipient with or
without an exchange of consideration, on the basis of an inquiry,
application, purchase or use by the recipient regarding products or
services offered by such person or entity;
4. "Unsolicited commercial electronic mail
message" means a commercial electronic mail message sent without
the consent of the recipient, by a person with whom the recipient does
not have an established business relationship. "Unsolicited
commercial electronic mail message" does not include electronic
mail messages where the sender:
a. is an organization using electronic mail to
communicate exclusively with its members,
b. is an organization using electronic mail to
communicate exclusively with its employees or contractors, or both,
c. has the consent of the recipient, or
d. has an established business relationship with
the recipient, as defined in this section; and
5. "Commercial electronic mail message"
means an electronic mail message sent for the purpose of encouraging the
purchase or rental of, or investment in, property, goods or services.
Commercial electronic mail message does not include an electronic mail
message:
a. to which an electronic mail service provider
has attached an advertisement in exchange for free use of an
electronic mail account, when the user has agreed to the arrangement,
b. between persons with a prior business
relationship, or
c. between persons with a personal relationship.
§ 776.6
A. It shall be a violation of this act for any
person to transmit a commercial electronic mail message that:
1. Falsifies electronic mail transmission
information or other routing information for the unsolicited
commercial electronic message; or
2. Contains false or misleading information in the
subject line.
B. It shall be a violation of this act for any
person that sends a commercial electronic mail message to use a third
party's internet address or domain name without the third party's
consent for the purpose of transmitting electronic mail in a way that
makes it appear that the third party was the sender of such mail.
C. It shall be a violation of this act for any
person that sends an unsolicited commercial electronic mail message to
fail to use the exact characters "ADV:" as the first four
characters in the subject line of an unsolicited commercial electronic
mail message.
D. It shall be a violation of this act for any
person that sends an unsolicited commercial electronic mail message
containing sexually explicit material, or advertising sexually explicit
goods or services, to fail to use the exact characters
"ADV-ADULT:" as the first ten characters in the subject line
of such an unsolicited commercial electronic mail message.
E. It shall be a violation of this act for any
person that sends an unsolicited commercial electronic mail message to
fail to provide a mechanism allowing recipients to easily and at no cost
remove themselves from the sender's electronic mail address lists so
they are not included in future mailings. A sender of an unsolicited
commercial electronic mail message shall remove the recipient from their
electronic mail message list if the sender receives an electronic mail
message from the recipient to the sender-operated return electronic mail
address that indicates anywhere in the subject line or text that the
recipient wants their name removed from the list of the sender.
§ 776.7
A. Any person whose property or person is injured
by reason of a violation of any provision of this act may recover any
damages sustained and the costs of suit. Without limiting the generality
of the term, "damages" shall include loss of profits.
B. If the injury arises from the transmission of
unsolicited or commercial electronic mail messages, the injured person,
other than an electronic mail service provider, may also recover
attorneys' fees and costs, and may elect, in lieu of actual damages, to
recover the lesser of Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each and every
unsolicited commercial electronic mail message transmitted in violation
of this act, or Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00) per day. The
injured person shall not have a cause of action against the electronic
mail service provider, which merely transmits the unsolicited commercial
electronic mail message over its computer network.
C. If the injury arises from the transmission of
unsolicited or commercial electronic mail messages, an injured
electronic mail service provider may also recover attorneys' fees and
costs and may elect, in lieu of actual damages, to recover the greater
of Ten Dollars ($10.00) for each and every unsolicited commercial
electronic mail message transmitted in violation of this act, or
Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00) per day.
D. All acts and practices declared to be unlawful
in Section 2 of this act shall, in addition, be violations of the
Oklahoma Consumer Protection Act.
E. At the request of any party to an action
brought pursuant to this section, the court may, in its discretion,
conduct all legal proceedings in such a way as to protect the secrecy
and security of the computer, computer network, computer data, computer
program and computer software involved in order to prevent possible
recurrence of the same or a similar act by another person and to protect
any trade secrets of any party.
F. An e-mail service provider does not violate
this section and the injured party shall not have a cause of action
against an electronic mail provider due to the fact that the electronic
mail provider:
1. Is an intermediary between the sender and
recipient in the transmission of an electronic mail message that
violates this section; or
2. Provides transmission of unsolicited commercial
electronic mail messages over the provider's computer network or
facilities, or shall be liable for any action it voluntarily takes in
good faith to block the receipt or transmission through its service of
any electronic mail advertisements that it believes is, or will be
sent, in violation of this section.