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SPAM POLICY
At Nitro Marketing we
are concerned with the amount of unsolicited email internet users are
receiving. Emails sent from
Nitro
Marketing
are never sent unsolicited. However,
we frequently contract with other optin lists to email our offers.
Per our contracts these emails must be sent to optin email lists
only.
If
you feel you have received an email from Nitro
Marketing
or one of our partners that was sent unsolicited, please submit
the original email you have received using
this form here.
Definition of UCE
(Unsolicited Commercial E-mail), or SPAM:
- The
bulk UCE, promotional material, or other forms of solicitation sent
via e-mail that advertise any IP address belonging to Nitro
Marketing or any URL (domain)
that is hosted by Nitro
Marketing.
- The
use of webpages set up on ISPs that allow SPAM-ing (also known as
"ghost sites") that directly or indirectly reference
customers to domains or IP addresses hosted by Nitro
Marketing.
- Advertising,
transmitting, or otherwise making available any software, program,
product, or service that is designed to facilitate a means to SPAM.
- Forging
or misrepresenting message headers, whether in whole or in part, to
mask the true origin of the message.
Basic Mailing List
Management Principles for Preventing Abuse
Mailing
lists are an excellent vehicle for distributing focused, targeted
information to an interested, receptive audience. Consequently, mailing
lists have been used successfully as a highly effective direct marketing
tool.
Unfortunately,
some marketers misuse mailing lists through a lack of understanding of
Internet customs and rules of the forum pertaining to e-mail. Others
fail to take adequate precautions to prevent the lists they manage from
being used in an abusive manner.
The
following is a list of mailing list management principles:
- Mailing
list administrators must provide a simple method for subscribers to
terminate their subscriptions, and administrators should provide
clear and effective instructions for unsubscribing from a mailing
list. Mailings from a list must cease in a reasonable time frame
once a subscription is terminated.
- Mailing
list administrators must ensure that the impact of their mailings on
the networks and hosts of others is minimized by proper list
management procedures such as pruning of invalid or undeliverable
addresses, or taking steps to ensure that mailings do not overwhelm
less robust hosts or networks.
- Mailing
list administrators must take adequate steps to ensure that their
lists are not used for abusive purposes. For example, administrators
can maintain a "suppression list" of e-mail addresses from
which all subscription requests are rejected. Addresses would be
added to the suppression list upon request by the parties entitled
to use the addresses at issue. The purpose of the suppression list
would be to prevent subscription of addresses appearing on the
suppression list by unauthorized third parties. Such suppression
lists should also give properly authorized domain administrators the
option to suppress all mailings to the domains for which they are
responsible.
- Mailing
list administrators must make adequate disclosures about how
subscriber addresses will be used, including whether or not
addresses are subject to sale or trade with other parties. Once a
mailing list is traded or sold, it may no longer be an opt-in
mailing list. Therefore, those who are acquiring "opt-in"
lists from others must examine the terms and conditions under which
the addresses were originally compiled and determine that all
recipients have in fact opted-in specifically to the mailing lists
to which they are being traded or sold.
- Mailing
list administrators should make adequate disclosures about the
nature of their mailing lists, including the subject matter of the
lists and anticipated frequency of messages. A substantive change in
either the subject matter or frequency of messages may constitute a
new and separate mailing list requiring a separate subscription.
List administrators should create a new mailing list when there is a
substantive change in either the subject matter or frequency of
messages. A notification about the new mailing list may be
appropriate on the existing mailing list, but existing subscribers
should never be subscribed automatically to the new list. For
example, if Company A acquires Company B, and Company B has compiled
opt-in mailing lists, Company A should not summarily incorporate
Company B's mailing lists into its own.
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