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Spam Label for Smut Proposed

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From Reuters

Pornographic spam e-mail would have to be clearly labeled so Internet users could easily filter it out, under a rule proposed Wednesday by the Federal Trade Commission.

Unsolicited pornography would have to bear a label reading “Sexually-Explicit-Content:” in the subject line and the messages themselves would not be allowed to contain graphic material, the FTC said.

Outrage over unsolicited pornography and other forms of unsolicited e-mail spurred Congress to pass the first nationwide anti-spam law last year, which required the FTC to develop labels for smut.

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Pornographers would not be allowed to include sexually explicit pictures in the body of the message, though they would be allowed to include hyperlinks to access their material.

The “Sexually-Explicit-Content:” label, although ungrammatical, will make it easier to block explicit content while letting through e-mail from anti-pornography groups that may use the phrase, the FTC said.

The public will have three weeks to comment on the proposal, which is due to take effect in mid-June.

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