Daniel Balsam hates spam. Most everybody does, of course. However, he has acted on his hate as few have, going far beyond simply hitting the delete button. He sues them.
Eight years ago, Balsam was working as a marketer when he received one too many e-mail pitches to enlarge his breasts.
Enraged, he launched a Web site called Danhatesspam.com, quit a career in marketing to go to law school and is making a decent living suing companies who flood his e-mail inboxes with offers of cheap drugs, free sex and unbelievable vacations.
“I feel like I’m doing a little bit of good cleaning up the Internet,” Balsam said.
From San Francisco Superior Court small claims court to the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, Balsam, based in San Francisco, has filed many lawsuits, including dozens before he graduated law school in 2008, against e-mail marketers he says violate anti--spamming laws.
His many victories are mere rain drops in the ocean considering that Cisco Systems Inc estimates that there are 200 billion spam messages circulating a day, accounting for 90 percent of all e-mail.
Still, Balsam settles enough lawsuits and collects enough from judgments to make a living. He has racked up well in excess of US$1 million in court judgments and lawsuit settlements with companies accused of sending illegal spam.
His courtroom foes contend that Balsam is one of many sole practitioners unfairly exploiting anti-spam sentiments and laws.
They accuse him of filing lawsuits against out-of-state companies that would rather pay a small settlement than expend the resources to fight the legal claims.
“He really seems to be trying to twist things for a buck,” said Bennet Kelley, a defense lawyer who has become Balsam’s arch nemesis over the years in the rough-and-tumble litigation niche that has sprung up around spam.
Kelley created a Web site with a similar name, Danhatespam.com, that was critical of Balsam’s tactics. Kelley let it expire.
“There is nothing wrong per se with being an anti-spam crusader,” said Kelley, who has sued Balsam twice for allegedly violating confidentiality terms in settlement agreements. “But Dan abuses the processes by using small claims court.”
“A lot of people will settle with him to avoid the hassle,” Kelley said.
Balsam started small in 2002 in small claims court. By 2008, some of his cases were appearing before the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeal and he was graduating from the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law.
“What started just as kicks turned into a hobby, which turned into a career,” Balsam said. “It’s what triggered me to go to law school.”
Balsam has filed lawsuits and got settlements and judgments from companies small and large.
He has sued the Stockton Asparagus Festival and embroiled himself in contentious litigation with Tagged.com, America’s third-largest social networking site.
Balsam noted in his lawsuit that Time magazine dubbed it “the world’s most annoying Web site.”
Tagged.com shot back with a lawsuit of its own, accusing Balsam of threatening to violate terms of an earlier settlement by telling the company he was planning to post terms of the agreement on his Web site.
Balsam is fighting the lawsuit and a lawyer for Tagged.com didn’t return a phone call seeking comment.
Balsam has also been sued by Valueclick Inc for allegedly breaching settlement agreements by exposing confidential terms, which he denies.
“Balsam, who in his anti-spam zeal frequently views matters in absolutes such that anyone who disagrees with him must be villainous,” lawyers for Valueclick Inc stated in a 2007 lawsuit accusing Balsam of disclosing terms of a settlement.
The lawsuit was later dismissed in San Francisco Superior Court and Balsam declined to discuss the case other than to say it was “resolved.”
He said, generally speaking, those who sue him are “retaliating” for lawsuits he filed against them.
“I feel comfortable doing what I’m doing,” Balsam said of the lawsuits against him. “And I’m not going away.”
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