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21 December 2008 - Amendments to Electronic Unsolicited Communications

   21 December 2008 - New regulations issued by the Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Mr. Eamon Ryan T.D., dealing with unsolicited communications in the area of electronic communications networks and services. The new regulation, Statutory Instrument No. 526 of 2008, amends Statutory Instrument No. 535 of 2003 which came into force in November 2003.

Amongst the changes in the new Statutory Instrument are:

  • An increase from €3,000 to €5,000 in the penalty for a summary offence in respect of a contravention of the regulation relating to unsolicited communications.
  • The creation of an indictable offence for a contravention of the regulation relating to unsolicited communications. Where the person tried is a body corporate the fine imposed may not exceed €250,000 or, if 10% of the turnover of the person is greater than that amount, an amount equal to that percentage. Where the person tried is a natural person, the fine imposed may not exceed €50,000.
  • Provision for the prosecution of an officer of a body corporate for an offence under the regulations whether or not the body corporate itself has been proceeded against or been convicted of the offence committed by the body.
  • In relation to offences concerning the contravention of the regulation relating to unsolicited communications if, in court proceedings concerning such offences, the question of whether or not a subscriber consented to receiving an unsolicited communication is in issue, the onus of establishing that the subscriber consented will lie on the defendant.

Statement by Communications Minister Eamon Ryan announcing the new regulations on 21 December 2008:

“Unwanted communication, either by email or to a mobile phone is more than a nuisance – it wastes money and energy. Millions every year are lost to Irish companies through lost productivity as spam clogs inboxes and crashes servers. Spam is a serious threat to the internet, taking up valuable space on servers and posing a significant security risks through viruses. Importantly, such communication is a serious invasion of our privacy. More and more we are seeing marketers contact the consumer via their mobile phone. Evidence shows that spamming increases during the Christmas holidays making these regulations timely.

 

The Data Protection Commissioner who will oversee the enforcement of these new laws has reported an eight-fold increase in complaints received. Making spamming an indictable offence with a hefty price tag for the offenders gives Ireland one of the most stringent enforcement regimes in Europe.

 

Spam is spam and it has no future. Marketers must carefully build up relationships with their customers over time and make sure that any marketing has the permission of the consumer. This will help secure our digital economy as well as reducing costs and annoyance.’

Statement by the Data Protection Commissioner, Mr Billy Hawkes welcoming the new regulations on 22 December 2008:

“The signing of these Regulations by the Minister is an important and significant step in the fight against unsolicited communications for marketing purposes. I welcome the increase in penalties which have come into effect I am confident that the strengthening of the law in this area will help me in my task to enforce the regulations concerning unsolicited communications. I want to take this opportunity to remind persons engaged in direct marketing activities that my Office continues to pay close attention to the whole area of unsolicited communications by telephone, fax, email and text message. The new regulations, together with the serving of a considerable volume of summonses by my Office in the past fifteen months, serve to send a strong message to all involved in direct marketing about the necessity of compliance with the law.”

 “I want, in particular, to send a message to all involved in business to familiarise themselves with the law which applies to unsolicited communications for direct marketing purposes. Increasingly, in this period of economic downturn, my Office is receiving complaints about businesses making unsolicited contact with their past customers for marketing purposes. In many cases, such contact is unlawful and, if carried out by telephone, text message or email it may be a criminal offence. Ignorance of the law is not an acceptable excuse for non-compliance and I will have no hesitation in applying the full force of the new regulations to offenders.”

A copy of relevant Irish Data Protection law is available here.



 

 

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