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Quieted E-Mail Protester Still Rides Herd on Intel

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Dusting himself off after his recent legal setback against Intel Corp., Ken Hamidi is getting back in the saddle. Literally.

The disgruntled former Intel engineer is planning a Pony Express-style protest of a recent California court ruling that bars him from sending e-mail to Intel employees.

Riding a steed that he has dubbed “Ponytium III,” Hamidi said he will travel by horseback to Intel headquarters in Santa Clara on Tuesday to deliver a new message “the old-fashioned way.”

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“This event is intended to illustrate the absurdity of Intel’s actions,” said Hamidi, 52. “Intel’s position is a serious threat to freedom of speech in cyberspace.”

Hamidi has had a long-running feud with Intel that dates back to a workers’ compensation dispute. He runs a Web site critical of the company, and last year sent e-mail diatribes to more than 30,000 Intel employees.

Intel sued, and in April a Superior Court judge in Sacramento ruled that the e-mails were a form of trespass. Judge John R. Lewis issued a permanent injunction barring Hamidi from sending e-mail to the semiconductor company’s employees.

The decision marked the first time a court had ruled on whether companies can fence off their employees from unsolicited e-mail, blocking speech that would be protected by the 1st Amendment in other settings.

The ruling has drawn protests from legal scholars and free-speech advocacy groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Hamidi, who lives in Sacramento, said he has appealed the ruling and will continue to make regular deliveries of e-mail to Intel employees “by other means.” The first of those deliveries is set for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, when, Hamidi says, he will trot onto Intel’s campus dressed as a Pony Express rider and carrying a bag of mail.

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Informed of Hamidi’s plans, Intel officials chuckled. “One thing is for certain,” said spokesman Chuck Malloy. “Ken does know how to exercise his right of free speech.”

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Times staff writer Greg Miller can be reached at greg.miller@latimes.com.

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