Ask HN: Twoo.com creating accounts on invite, how legal is this?
Following some friend invite, I received an e-mail from twoo.com, something like:
"Congratulations, you're now a twoo member. Welcome to twoo, here are your login details. E-mail: <my email> Password: 8-character random hex"
Is this legal?
8 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 20.4 ms ] threadTheir SMTP or Internet transit provider’s terms of service is another story. Some allow single opt-in subscriptions and memberships, some don’t, and some (most?) don’t mind unless it generates complaints.
Twoo is known for this (https://techcrunch.com/2013/08/03/a-year-of-spam-twoo/), so if you don’t like it, their SMTP or transit carriers are probably the only recourse, and probably doesn’t care.
(Disclaimer: Not a lawyer. Don't know much about law.)
I suspect this thread is an act of guerrilla marketing.
And I suspected that in EU, storing e-mail addresses without user's permission might actually be illegal.
The Internet is the wild wild west, lots of scummy practices (including shadow profiles).
They can't pretend that you checked the "I agree to the terms of service ..." checkbox just yet.
So technically they can't "make you a member" against your will they are just bringing you very close to becoming one.