• newsletters • best of austin • find a paper • submit an event • advertise with us • contact • jobs •
HOME: JANUARY 21, 2005: NEWS
text size

Naked City

Get a Rope: Abbott Targets UT Spammer

BY RACHEL PROCTOR MAY

Feel like your inbox is a little light on offers for a great deal on a mortgage? Maybe that's because Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott this week sued one of America's most notorious spammers – a 22-year-old junior at UT – under two Texas laws – the Electronic Mail Solicitation Act and the Deceptive Trade Practices Act – and the way-too-cutsily titled Federal CAN-SPAM Act.

Perhaps taking the "hook 'em" slogan a little too seriously, Ryan Pitylak built a spam empire that, according to the case, unleashed hundreds of thousands of spamlets unto the world. Sending unsolicited e-mails is not technically illegal – if you have a product that can actually Enla:rgeYourSma:llSize, you have the right (if not duty) to legally trumpet your wares via cyberspace. However, sending misleading, unsolicited e-mails is. That's what Abbott charges Pitylak and business partner Mark Trotter were doing, thousands of times a day. The suit describes Pitylak sending messages from fake credit and mortgage entities designed to fool people into submitting private information; Pitylak then sold that information to marketing companies for (according to the case) up to $28 a pop. While the attorney general as yet has no idea how much Pitylak may have earned off his endeavors in the Knowledge Economy, a 2004 Chicago Tribune investigation found him to be the owner of a $450,000 house with a spiffy new Jaguar parked out front.

"He's living pretty well for a UT student," said Tom Kelley of the attorney general's office. But perhaps not for long: Pitylak faces federal fines of up to $250 per spam, and state fines of up to $20,000 per violation.


MORE NAKED CITY
 
Share Digg Twitter Facebook Del.icio.us LinkedLn Email Print article


POST A COMMENT

(optional):
:

Permission to Print. Letter to the editor.
 
See our
Elections
page

for more
coverage.

RELATED STORIES


Naked City
Headlines and happenings from Austin and beyond

Greens Want Texas Clean
Alliance for a Clean Texas says lawmakers can create one

GAO Slams Drug Czar's Covert Propaganda
The GAO condemns White House Drug Office 'news reports' on itself as 'illegal covert propaganda'

Güero's Development: too much of a good thing
South Congress' 1400 block would be completely overhauled with condos, garage

Old Billboards Never Die, They Just Trade Away
Council (again) tries to tackle roadside advertising clutter

No-Brainers for Education Agency
The Sunset Commission issues recommendations to improve the Texas Education Agency

Dignity in the Classroom
Progressive lawmakers seek to protect gay, lesbian, and transgendered students

Keel: Rule Changes Don't Target Earle
Dems wary of, but don't challenge, new Ethics Committee powers

Inaugurate This
Your guide to Black Thursday activities

UT Says No Nukes
Yudof recommends against Los Alamos bid

Still Fighting Redistricting
Plaintiffs argue state used inaccurate census data

An Education Wish List
A business think tank says more funding is needed to send low-income kids to college

FURTHER READING
Keywords
for this story
Greg Abbott
spam
Ryan Pitylak
Mark Trotter

Really White Vigilante

BLOGS
White vs. Shami, Round One
Re-Dunking the Tea Bag
Texies and the City

'A' Is for Axed: Cactus Gets Chopped, Classes Get Cut
White vs. Shami, Round One
Neon Genesis Evangelion: End of Evangelion

ARCHIVES
More from
January 21, 2005
News
Arts
Books
Food
Screens
Music
Columns
Sports

Browse the
Archives by
Issue
Author
Column
Review
Section


Short Story Party
Sound Wars
Mind Over Music
Online Contests
Chrontourage
Chronicle Merch

 

Ads of the Day