13-65 - Utah Commercial Email Act
Title 13 > 13-65
Sections (4)
General Provisions
13-65-101 - Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1) “Advertiser” means a person who advertises the person’s product, service, or website through the use of commercial email.
(2) “Commercial email” means an email used primarily to:advertise or promote a commercial website, product, or service; orsolicit money, property, or personal information.
(3) “Division” means the Division of Consumer Protection.
(4) “Domain name” means any alphanumeric designation that is registered with or assigned by any domain name registrar, domain name registry, or other domain name registration authority as part of an electronic address on the Internet.
(5) “Electronic mail service provider” means a company or a service that provides routing, relaying, handling, storage, or support for email addresses and email inboxes.
(6) “Header information” means information attached to an email, including:the originating domain name;the originating email address;the destination;the routing information; andany other information that appears in the header line identifying, or purporting to identify, a person initiating the message.
(7) “Initiate” means an act of:originating, transmitting, or sending commercial email; orpromising, paying, or providing other consideration for another person to originate, transmit, or send a commercial email.
(8) “Initiator” means a person who:originates, transmits, or sends commercial email; orpromises, pays, or provides other consideration for another person to originate, transmit, or send a commercial email.”Initiator” does not include a person whose activities are a routine conveyance.
(9) “Preexisting or current business relationship” means a situation where the recipient has:made an inquiry and provided an email address; ormade an application, a purchase, or a transaction, with or without consideration, related to a product or a service offered by the advertiser.
(10) “Recipient” means an addressee of an unsolicited email.
(11) “Routine conveyance” means an Internet service provider’s or email provider’s automatic electronic mail message processes, including routing, relaying, handling, or storing through an automatic technical process, for which a person other than the Internet service provider or email provider has identified the electronic mail message recipients and provided the recipients’ addresses.
(12) “Unsolicited commercial email” means a commercial email sent by an advertiser to a recipient that:has not provided direct consent to the advertiser to receive the commercial email; anddoes not have a preexisting or current relationship with the advertiser.
(13) “Utah email address” means an email address that :is provided by an electronic mail service provider that sends bills for providing and maintaining that email address to a mailing address in this state;is ordinarily accessed from a computer located in this state;is provided to an individual who is currently a resident of this state; orresults in delivery of an email to a server in Utah.
Amended by Chapter 170, 2024 General Session
Restrictions on Commercial Email
13-65-201 - Prohibited uses of email.
An advertiser or an initiator may not initiate or advertise in a commercial email sent from this state or sent to a Utah email address if:
(1) the commercial email contains or is accompanied by a third party’s domain name without the permission of the third party;
(2) the commercial email contains or is accompanied by false, misrepresented, or forged header information, even if the commercial email contains truthful identifying information for the advertiser in the body of the email; or
(3) the commercial email has a subject line that is likely to mislead a recipient, acting reasonably under the circumstances, about a material fact regarding the identity of the advertiser, the contents, or the subject matter of the commercial email.
Amended by Chapter 170, 2024 General Session
13-65-202 - Cause of action.
(1) The following persons may bring a claim against an advertiser or initiator who violates Section 13-65-201:an electronic mail service provider;a recipient of an unsolicited commercial email; ora person whose brand, trademark, email address, or domain name an advertiser or initiator uses, without authorization, in the header information.There is a rebuttable presumption that a commercial email that violates Section 13-65-201 is an unsolicited commercial email.The burden of proving that a commercial email is not an unsolicited commercial email is on the defendant.
(2) A person described in Subsection (1)(a)(i) or (ii) may recover:actual damages; andexcept as provided in Subsection (2)(c), liquidated damages of 100 for each unsolicited commercial email transmitted in violation of Section 13-65-201.
(3) A person described in Subsection (1)(a)(iii) may recover: actual damages; andliquidated damages in an amount equal to the lesser of:2,000,000.
(4) The prevailing party in an action brought under this section may recover reasonable attorney fees and costs.
(5) Defendants in an action under this section are jointly and severally liable.There is no cause of action under this section against an electronic mail service provider who is involved only in the routine conveyance of commercial email over the email service provider’s computer network.
Enacted by Chapter 377, 2023 General Session
13-65-203 - Enforcement.
(1) The division shall administer and enforce the provisions of this chapter in accordance with Chapter 2, Division of Consumer Protection.
(2) The attorney general, upon request, shall give legal advice to, and act as counsel for, the division in the exercise of the division’s responsibilities under this chapter.
(3) In addition to the division’s enforcement powers under Chapter 2, Division of Consumer Protection:the division director may impose an administrative fine of up to 2,500 for each violation of this chapter; oraward any other relief that the court deems reasonable and necessary.
(4) If a court of competent jurisdiction grants judgment or injunctive relief to the division, the court shall award the division: reasonable attorney fees;court costs; andinvestigative fees.
(5) A person who violates an administrative or court order issued for a violation of this chapter is subject to a civil penalty of no more than $5,000 for each violation.A civil penalty authorized under this section may be imposed in any civil action brought by the attorney general on behalf of the division.
(6) All money received for the payment of a fine or civil penalty imposed under this section shall be deposited into the Consumer Protection Education and Training Fund created in Section 13-2-8.
Enacted by Chapter 377, 2023 General Session