FCC Cancels Proposed Fine of Fax Broadcaster

Complaints of unsolicited faxes (aka "junk faxes") persistently are the most common type of complaint that the FCC receives.  As a result, the FCC issues a steady stream of investigations, citations and proposed fines for junk faxes.  This week, the FCC released an order that we believe marks the first adjudication determining that a "fax broadcaster" is not liable for unsolicited faxes sent on behalf of others.  See below for the details. 

 

On December 8, the FCC released an order canceling a proposed fine against CyberData, Inc. The FCC concluded, based on the record before it, that CyberData presented a "reasonable case" that it was a fax broadcaster, not a sender under the FCC's junk fax rules. The Commission noted three factors that supported the conclusion that CyberData was not liable:

  1. The ads were for services that CyberData does not provide and appeared to be transmitted on behalf of third parties;
  2. No evidence contradicted CyberData's assertion that it did not have a "high degree of involvement" with the senders' transmissions. 
  3. CyberData took steps to prevent further transmission of unsolicited faxes. The FCC noted that CyberData maintained a do-not-fax database and that it terminated services to entities found by the FCC to have violated the junk fax rules. 
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