Everyone has their own idea about what spam fax or junk fax is,
however legal definitions may not match your opinion of the pile
of advisements spilling out of your fax machine. On the other
hand, if your company utilizes fax marketing, then you also have
your own view on fax advertisements.
As of July 9, 2005, the new junk fax exemptions, in many ways,
protect companies that send unsolicited faxes (except in the state
of California). The new exemption to the established law protects
companies that have "established a business relationship"
with the recipient. However, if your company intends to launch
a fax marketing campaign, consult the law in its entirety to discover
all details and stipulations guiding unsolicited fax advertising.
Conversely, if you are receiving unwanted faxes, what can you
do?
How to Stop Unwanted Spam Faxes
The Junk Fax Prevention Act, enacted on July 9 of 2005 by Congress
amends the previously established act by permitting businesses
or entities to send unsolicited advertisements to consumers and
businesses with which the sender has an established business relationship.
It also requires senders of fax advertisements to include a notice
and contact information on the cover page informing the recipient
how to ”opt-out” of any future fax advertisements.
Stop
wasting paper & ink on Junk Faxes!
Millions are already using an online fax to email service!
However, even if you opt out, that does not stop other entities
or businesses from sending unwanted faxes. Here are a few things
you can do,
•Contact the sender directly
•Take advantage of the opt out option
•File a complaint with the FCC
•Install a spam filter device between the fax machine and
the incoming phone line
•Consider using an online
fax service and using your email filtering options
If you are a legitimate fax service or broadcaster, how do you
know if someone is using your service to send illegal faxes?
FCC regulations state, "The person or business on whose behalf
an unsolicited fax advertisement is sent is liable even if they
did not physically send the fax themselves. A fax broadcaster
(the person or entity transmitting messages to a fax machine on
another person’s behalf) may also be liable if it has "a
high degree of involvement" in the sender’s fax messages,
such as supplying the fax numbers to which a message is sent?"
With this in mind, here are a few warning signs that your customer
may be using your services for illegal purposes:
•Large volume faxing
•Consecutive phone numbers
•A large quantity of unique numbers
•The customer is listed on the FCC website enforcement page,
Telecommunications Consumers Division, Unsolicited Faxes
If your company practices fax marketing, what can you do?
Target your market. As long as your recipient wants to receive
notifications, special deals, sale announcements or coupons from
your company you should not have any worries. In fact, with this
kind of specific marketing your percentage of positive returns
might increase. Secondly, honor returned opt outs and discontinue
random dialing and untargeted marketing campaigns to avoid possible
lawsuits or bad publicity.
Fax communications can produce positive results for both advertisers
and customers and generate win/win results if applied using common
sense and mutual consent.
Stop
wasting paper & ink on Junk Faxes!
Find out Why you should be using an online fax to email service!
If you're interested in retiring your fax machine, reducing
costs and gaining office space, while not compromising customer
service - click on the Google links
on the right and left sides of this page. If you
are just looking for an extra fax line, a fax
to email account may be what you are looking for. You
can get one for as low as $3.95 per month. It sure beats paying
the phone company $40 - $50.00 per month!