Spamhaus
has been granted temporary relief in its recent legal battle with a US marketing
firm, after a US Court of Appeals ruled that a lower court had not properly
calculated damages against the UK anti-spam organisation.
The ruling on Thursday does not free Spamhaus from having to pay monetary
damages in the case, however.
Spamhaus was ordered to pay an
$11.7m default
judgement to
e360insight
in October 2006.
E360insight had claimed that Spamhaus had unjustly labelled the marketing
firm as an origin for unwanted email, and had placed the firm on its Registry of
Known Spam Origins (Rokso).
Spamhaus claimed that the US court had no jurisdiction over it and refused to
proceed with the case.
As a result, the court entered a default judgement and awarded damages based
on e360insight owner David Linhardt's own estimates on prior and future damages
from the blacklisting.
That estimate, said the Court of Appeals, was not properly examined or
audited by the courts before being awarded by the lower court.
"Linhardt's affidavit is a conclusory statement of the lost value of his
business, based largely on his calculations of lost future profits," declared
the court.
The statement provides a list of businesses involved in "actual and pending
contracts and a total calculation of his calculation of loss, but says nothing
about the status of his relationship with those businesses before e360 was
listed on the Rokso".
The judge ordered the lower court to conduct a more thorough investigation
into the damages.
The court also overturned an injunction that would have forced Spamhaus to
remove e360 from its blacklists and post an apology on its website.
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