TENNESSEE CODE
TITLE 47. COMMERCIAL INSTRUMENTS AND TRANSACTIONS
CHAPTER 18. CONSUMER PROTECTION
PART 25. UNSOLICITED ADVERTISING BY ELECTRONIC MEANS
Added by Public Acts 1999, Chapter No. 475
(approved June 17, 1999; effective upon passage)
Amended by Public
Acts 2003, Chapter No. 15
(approved April 11, 2003; effective July 1, 2003)
47-18-2501. Regulation of unsolicited
electronic advertising - Falsification of electronic mail transmission
information prohibited - Institution of actions and damages.
(a) No person or entity conducting business in
this state shall send by e-mail or cause to be e-mailed, documents
consisting of unsolicited advertising material for the lease, sale,
rental, gift offer, or other disposition of any realty, goods, services,
or extension of credit unless that person or entity shall establish a
toll-free telephone number or return e-mail address that a recipient of
the unsolicited e-mailed documents may call to notify the sender not to
e-mail the recipient any further unsolicited documents.
(b) [Repealed.]
(c) Upon notification by a recipient of the
recipient's request not to receive any further unsolicited e-mailed
documents, no person or entity conducting business in this state shall
e-mail or cause to be e-mailed, any unsolicited documents to that
recipient.
(d) A person or entity sending an unsolicited
e-mail shall establish a toll-free telephone number or valid sender
operated return e-mail address that the recipient of the unsolicited
documents may call or e-mail to notify the sender not to e-mail any
further unsolicited documents.
(e) If e-mail consists of unsolicited advertising
material for the lease, sale, rental, gift offer or other disposition of
any realty, goods, services or extension of credit, the subject line of
each and every message shall include "ADV:" as the first four
(4) characters. If these messages contain information that consists of
unsolicited advertising material for the lease, sale, rental, gift
offer, or other disposition of any realty, goods, services, or extension
of credit, that may only be viewed, purchased, rented, leased, or held
in possession by an individual eighteen (18) years of age or older, the
subject line of each and every message shall include "ADV:ADLT"
as the first eight (8) characters.
(f) In the case of unsolicited bulk e-mail, this
section shall apply when the unsolicited e-mailed documents are
delivered to a Tennessee resident via an electronic mail service
provider's service or equipment located in this state. For these
purposes, "electronic mail service provider" means any
business or organization qualified to do business in this state that
provides individuals, corporations, or other entities the ability to
send or receive electronic mail through equipment located in this state
and that is an intermediary in sending or receiving electronic mail.
(g) It is 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 with that person's knowledge for use in
facilitating or enabling the falsification of electronic mail
transmission information or other routing information.
(h) As used in this section, "e-mail" or
"cause to be e-mailed" does not include or refer to the
transmission of any documents by the telecommunications utility or
Internet service provider to the extent that the telecommunications
utility or Internet service provider merely carries that transmission
over its network.
(i) (1) Any person whose property or person is
injured by reason of a violation of any provision of this section may
sue therefor and recover for any damages sustained, and the costs of
such suit. Without limiting the generality of the term,
"damages" includes loss of profits.
(2) If the injury arises from the transmission of
unsolicited bulk electronic mail, 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 bulk electronic
mail message transmitted in violation of this section, or five
thousand dollars ($5,000) per day. The injured person shall not have a
cause of action against the electronic mail service provider that
merely transmitted the unsolicited bulk electronic mail over its
computer network.
(3) If the injury arises from the transmission of
unsolicited bulk electronic mail, 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 bulk electronic mail message
transmitted in violation of this section, or five thousand dollars
($5,000) per day.
(4) 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.
(5) The provisions of this subsection shall not be
construed to limit any person's right to pursue any additional civil
remedy otherwise allowed by law.
(j) The provisions of this section shall not be
construed to restrict or apply to constitutionally protected
communications to and from citizens and their elected representatives.
(k) This section, or any part of this section,
shall become inoperative on and after the date that federal law is
enacted that prohibits or otherwise regulates the transmission of
unsolicited advertising by electronic mail (e-mail).
47-18-2502. Definitions.
As used in this part, unless the context otherwise
requires:
(1) "Computer network" means a set of
related, remotely connected devices and any communications facilities,
including more than one (1) computer with the capability to transmit
data among them through the communications facilities; and
(2) "Without authority" means a person
using the computer network of an electronic mail service provider to
transmit unsolicited bulk electronic mail in contravention of the
authority granted by or in violation of the policies set by the
electronic mail service provider. Transmission of electronic mail from
an organization to its members shall not be deemed to be unsolicited
bulk electronic mail.