Archive for June, 2014

CASL Myth # 3 – I need to get “expressed” consent from everyone in my database.

No. Consent has already been given to you if

1. They have conducted business with you for the past 2 years.
2. They are not a client of yours but you have been communicating with them for the past 6 months and they have not requested removal.
3. They have a personal or family relationship with you.

The law states under Section 6, “Unsolicited electronic messages

6. (1) It is prohibited to send or cause or permit to be sent to an electronic address a commercial electronic message (we are talking just CEM’s here) unless

(a) the person to whom the message is sent has consented to receiving it, whether the consent is express or implied.”

Note the words “express or implied”. Imagine someone has given you their business card. On their card, they have their email address.

When meeting people in person, and they hand you a business card, “you may have their implied consent to send them CEMs, as long as:

Remember, that whether you have expressed or implied consent, that you still need an unsubscribe mechanism in your CEMs. More on that in Myth #4

Source: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/E-1.6/page-2.html#h-3 & http://fightspam.gc.ca/eic/site/030.nsf/eng/h_00050.html

We hosted a complimentary Open Forum Webinar June 19th for our clients. We shared information about the law that affects the marketing and sales strategies for business. Since then, there seems still be a lot of questions around the issue.

If you would like a copy of the webinar or ebook, email me.

CASL Myth # 2 – The government is trying to stop business from marketing.

No. ‘The intent of the new law is to deter the most damaging and deceptive forms of spam from occurring in Canada. Spam includes more than unsolicited commercial messages. It has become the vehicle for a wide range of threats to online commerce affecting individuals, businesses and network providers. It can lead to the theft of personal data to rob bank and credit card accounts (identity theft); online fraud luring individuals to counterfeit websites (phishing); the collection of personal information through illicit access to computer systems (spyware); and false or misleading representations in the online marketplace.

Businesses are victimized by the counterfeiting of business websites to defraud individuals and businesses (spoofing). Network providers—recognizing that spam represents 75 to 90 percent of all email traffic—are forced to invest ever-increasing resources to prevent spam from entering their networks. Once established, spam slows networks down, and spam-borne viruses and other malicious software (malware) are used to operate networks of “zombie” computers (botnets) without their owners’ knowledge. These network attacks threaten the stability of the Internet and online services.’

In other words, the government wants to keep us safe.

Source: https://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/ecic-ceac.nsf/eng/gv00521.html#q2

We hosted a complimentary Open Forum Webinar June 19th for our clients. We shared information about the law that affects the marketing and sales strategies for business. Since then, there seems still be a lot of questions around the issue.

If you would like a copy of the webinar or ebook, email me.