Sanford 'Spamford' Wallace (born c. 1968) is an Internet spammer. He initially sent junk faxes before coming to notoriety in 1997, promoting himself as the original "Spam King". Wallace's prolific spamming has resulted in encounters with the United States government, anti-spam activists, and large corporations such as Facebook and MySpace.

Early career

In the late 1990s, his company, Cyber Promotions, aka Cyberpromo, was widely blacklisted as a source of unsolicited email. Wallace's high-profile pro-spam stance and unrepentant persistence earned him the derisive nickname 'Spamford'.

In 1995, Wallace formed Cyber Promotions, entering the spam market. Thanks to a self-marketing campaign, Cyberpromo rapidly became the most successful seller of email marketing—as well as the number one source of unsolicited email. In 1996 he was sued by Concentric Network, an ISP, and entered into a consent decree not to use their network again. After Cyberpromo failed to become a legitimate business, Wallace returned to junk faxing in late 1997. He was also the owner of a night club in New Hampshire called Plum Crazy, which filed for bankruptcy in 2004. It appears that Wallace did not leave the Internet marketing business entirely. In 2001 he was linked to a website, passthison.com, which utilized multiple-window launching to snag Web viewers, an advertising practice rarely seen outside of the online pornography industry. Wallace was also involved in another opt-in project, SmartBotPRO.NET, which is now apparently also defunct.

On October 8, 2004, the Federal Trade Commission filed suit against Wallace and his company, SmartBOT, for infecting computers with spyware then offering a solution to remove the problem for $30. In January 2005, it was announced that Wallace had agreed to stop distributing the software until the charges with the FTC are settled. again against Wallace and SmartBOT for practices similar to the 2004 suit. This time Wallace and his co-defendants were ordered to pay $5,089,550.48 in fines.

In 2007, MySpace filed suit against Wallace for phishing and spamming. Wallace had used automated software not allowed by MySpace to create 11,000 fake profiles, in order to direct MySpace users to other websites. In July 2007, US District Judge Audrey B. Collins issued an order prohibiting Wallace from creating or maintaining MySpace profiles, and from using MySpace to post public comments, or send private messages. In April 2008, the California Central District Court issued a default judgment against Wallace in MySpace's lawsuit, after Wallace failed to turn over documents or appear in court.

On January 26, 2008, The Register reported that the FTC has asked the Judge overseeing the 2006 settlement to find Wallace and partner Walter Rines in civil contempt of court for their use of malware and social engineering on MySpace to promote porn and gambling sites. In May 2008 Wallace and Rines were ordered to pay $230 million to MySpace by the L.A. District Court when they failed to appear for trial.

Facebook sued Wallace in California District Court for posting spam messages on members' walls. Wallace has already been fined $4 million for installing ad-related spyware on peoples' computers, and was fined $230 million for his activities on MySpace, according to MediaPost.

Wallace filed for bankruptcy in June 2009. On October 29, 2009, federal judge Jeremy D. Fogel awarded Facebook $711 million in damages. Although Facebook believed it was unlikely to collect due to Wallace's bankruptcy, the presiding judge in the case also recommended criminal contempt charges against Wallace, which carry the possibility of incarceration. Wallace denied the charges and was released on $100,000 bail.

In August 2015, Wallace pleaded guilty to electronic mail fraud and criminal contempt of court as well as admitting to mass spamming in 2008 and 2009. He also pleaded guilty to violating a court order to not access Facebook's computer network. He pleaded guilty to one count of fraud and related activity in connection with electronic mail and one count of criminal contempt of court.

Wallace served his sentence in Colorado, where he was assigned Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate number 16075-111. He was released from prison on May 21, 2018, after serving 21 months.

See also

  • Oleg Nikolaenko
  • Leo Kuvayev
  • List of Ig Nobel Prize winners

References

  • Mike Hammer and Brian Shapiro interview with Sanford Wallace September 7, 2016

News articles

  • Sanford Wallace mini-bio and interviews from archive.org, originally at AnnOnline
  • CNET: Return of the Spam King November 20, 1997
  • CNET: Spam site killed under threats January 19, 1998
  • Wired: Sanford Wallace: Back to the Fax? January 23, 1998
  • FTC files case against spyware companies October 7, 2004
  • U.S. files first suit against Internet 'spy ware' October 8, 2004
  • Notorious Net marketer to halt spyware ads January 4, 2005
  • FTC Orders Former Spam King To Pay $4 Million For Spyware Scam May 4, 2006
  • MySpace files phishing and spam suit against Sanford Wallace March 27, 2007
  • Spamford Wallace's MySpace riches come under attack January 26, 2008
  • MySpace Wins Record $230m in Case Against 'Spam King' May 14, 2008

Court cases

  • Concentric Network Corporation v Cyber Promotions
  • Cyber Promotions v AOL
  • Cyber Promotions v CompuServe
  • Cyber Promotions v Earthlink Wallace case archives
  • Wallace v. Welch (1999)
  • Spamford Wallace banished from MySpace