The regulation of unsolicited electronic communications (SPAM) in South Africa : a comparative study

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Tladi, Sebolawe Erna Mokowadi

Issue Date

2017-06

Type

Thesis

Language

en

Keywords

Anti-spam laws , Commercial electronic messages , Consumers , Consent , Direct marketing , Dictionary attacks , Disguising of headers (spoofing) , Electronic communications , Electronic mail (e-mail) , Harvesting and sale of e-mail addresses , International cooperation , Opt-out mechanism , Opt-in mechanism , Personal information , Spam , Unsolicited bulk email , Unsolicited commercial communications , Unsolicited electronic communications

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The practice of spamming (sending unsolicited electronic communications) has been dubbed “the scourge of the 21st century” affecting different stakeholders. This practice is also credited for not only disrupting electronic communications but also, it overloads electronic systems and creates unnecessary costs for those affected than the ones responsible for sending such communications. In trying to address this issue nations have implemented anti-spam laws to combat the scourge. South Africa not lagging behind, has put in place anti-spam provisions to deal with the scourge. The anti-spam provisions are scattered in pieces of legislation dealing with diverse issues including: consumer protection; direct marketing; credit laws; and electronic transactions and communications. In addition to these provisions, an Amendment Bill to one of these laws and two Bills covering cybercrimes and cyber-security issues have been published. In this thesis, a question is asked on whether the current fragmented anti-spam provisions are adequate in protecting consumers. Whether the overlaps between these pieces of legislation are competent to deal with the ever increasing threats on electronic communications at large. Finally, the question as to whether a multi-faceted approach, which includes a Model Law on spam would be a suitable starting point setting out requirements for the sending of unsolicited electronic communications can be sufficient in protecting consumers. And as spam is not only a national but also a global problem, South Africa needs to look at the option of entering into mutual agreements with other countries and organisations in order to combat spam at a global level.

Description

Citation

Tladi, Sebolawe Erna Mokowadi (2017) The regulation of unsolicited electronic communications (SPAM) in South Africa : a comparative study, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/25265>

Publisher

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN