CAUCE's comments to the industry committee were that Rogers was prosecuted and found to have
bought spam lists from third parties.
Not exact matches
If it's true that Santorum's campaign
bought a
list, that's very bad form — first, it means he's functionally
spamming people, since they didn't ASK to get information from him.
After a good
spam campaign, with a mix of pharmaceutical messages for a client, paid for in batches of a million and sent to a cheap, inferior
list of addresses — and phishing messages for your personal profit, sent to a more precise, targeted
list — you can come back to the market with more data to sell, and more money with which to
buy work and data from the others.
You do NOT want to end up on my
spam blocking
list the way B&N's «
buy the latest blockbuster - wannabe» mails have.
Thus the mention of donors and volunteers in the class of «existing non-business relationship» — one can suggest to one's donors or volunteers that they
buy tickets, without its being
spam (so long as one allows them to get off the mailing
list.)