This is what we have sent back to the companies that offer us the vacations & investment advice.
REMOVE FROM LIST !!!!!!
Effective December 20, 1992, FCC rules ban the transmission of
unsolicited advertisements to telephone facsimile machines.
An "unsolicited advertisement" is defined as a transmission advertising
the commercial availability or quality of property, goods or services
without the prior express invitation or permission of the person or
entity receiving the transmission.
Unsolicited advertisements may not be transmitted by any device to a
telephone facsimile machine unless the person receiving the facsimile
has given prior express invitation or permission to receive it. If the
sender and the recipient have an established business relationship, an
invitation or permission to receive unsolicited facsimile
advertisements is presumed to exist.
However, the recipient may end an
established business relationship by requesting that no further
unsolicited advertisements be sent, thus revoking any invitation or
permission to receive further transmissions.
FCC rules require that each transmission to a telephone facsimile
machine must clearly contain, in a margin at the top or bottom of each
transmitted page or on the first page of the transmission, (1) the
date and time the transmission is sent (2) the identity of the sender
and (3) the telephone number of the sender or of the sending machine.
All telephone facsimile machines manufactured on or after December 20,
1992 must have the capacity to clearly mark such identifying
information on the first page or on each page of the transmission.
[Note, according to the FCC January 13, 1993 Public Notice, the
requirement to mark faxes with the above identifying information on
applied to fax machines and not for fax cards used in computers
pending reconsideration proceedings.]
WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR COMPLIANCE WITH FCC RULES ON TELEPHONE
FACSIMILE TRANSMISSIONS?
The person on whose behalf a facsimile transmission is sent will
ultimately be held liable for violations of the TCPA or FCC rules.
DO THE TCPA AND THE FCC'S RULES PREEMPT STATE LAW?
Steve
tele-dataservices.com