ARTICLE
14 September 2021

The Spam Act: Are your marketing emails considered spam?

CG
Clifford Gouldson Lawyers

Contributor

Clifford Gouldson Lawyers is a leading regional provider of legal services to the business, government and not for profit sectors. Established in Toowoomba more than 15 years ago with a commitment to offering specialised expertise in a regional setting we now provide our services across multiple offices within Queensland and interstate.
The Spam Act 2003 (Cth) regulates marketing emails or messages sent by Australian businesses.
Australia Technology

The Spam Act 2003 (Cth) (the Act) regulates marketing emails or messages sent by Australian businesses. Spam is defined in the Act as unsolicited commercial electronic messages. To fall within the Act's scope, an Australian business must send a message that is commercial in nature. Commercial electronic messages are messages in which the purpose (or one of the purposes) of the message is to offer goods or services or to advertise or promote goods or services.

It is important to note that for a message to be considered spam, it does not need to be sent out in bulk – a single electronic message may also be considered spam.

How Do You Get Consent to Send Marketing Emails?

The Spam Act applies regardless of how possession is obtained – either express (expressly consenting to receive marketing communications) or inferred (clients where it is reasonable to believe they would expect to receive marketing from your business). It is important to note that you cannot send an electronic message to ask for permission because this is a marketing message. Therefore, recipients have to consent by filling in a form, ticking a box on the website, over the phone, face-to-face, or where permission can be inferred.

To infer permission, it is typically when a client or a person has a provable, ongoing relationship with your organisation and the marketing is directly related to that relationship. For example, when a recipient has subscribed to a service, has an account or is a member, and the marketing is relevant to the relationship. Inferred permission does not cover sending messages after a recipient has purchased something from your business.

What about Unsubscribe Buttons?

Under the Act, any commercial electronic messages must include a functional unsubscribe facility (essentially an unsubscribe link). These unsubscribe facilities must be reliable. Simply put, all marketing or sales emails (bar emails sending receipts and similar payment confirmations) must be able to be unsubscribed from. Once a person unsubscribes, the business has five (5) working days to honour the request.

It is important to note that you cannot force people to provide extra personal information or make them create or log in to an account to unsubscribe from the commercial electronic messages.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) provides the following unsubscribe examples which comply with the Act:

Email:To stop receiving messages from us, simply reply to this email with ‘unsubscribe' in the subject line.If you no longer wish to receive these messages, please click the ‘unsubscribe' button below.

SMS:Reply STOPUnsub: (1800-number)

Do I Need to Identify Myself?

Yes – all commercial electronic messages must contain accurate information about your company as the authorised sender of the message. This helps recipients identify legitimate senders and illegal spammers.

Should I Keep a Record of Opting-In

When you get express permission from someone to be added to a mailing list, it is best practice to keep a record of that permission – including who gave the permission, how and when. Under the Spam Act, it is up to the business to prove they got the person's consent.

Legal vs Strict Compliance

There is often a tension between strict compliance with the Spam Act and making commercially viable business decisions. A great number of businesses do not comply with the Spam Act, and a vast majority believe they do not face any consequences. Many businesses decide not to strictly comply with the Act in the interest of building a better commercial mailing list. However, the penalties are severe (upwards of $400 per email that does not comply) and so this attitude should not be encouraged or recommended.

Recent trends suggest citizens are becoming increasingly concerned about how their data is used and stored. It may be pertinent for your business, particularly those who operate in the IT/technology sector, to consider whether strict compliance with data protection and privacy laws (as they stand now or may evolve) could become a basis to differentiate your business favourably from competitors.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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