Reiki Clinic Proprietary
Limited (Reiki Clinic Pty Ltd)
Anti-Spam Policy
(Last updated November 23, 2006)
Reiki Clinic is committed to permission-based email
marketing practices, and as a result has established this no-tolerance
Anti-Spam Policy. Reiki Clinic will occasionally update this Anti-Spam
Policy. When it does, Reiki Clinic will also revise the last update
date at the top of this Anti-Spam Policy. For changes to this policy,
Reiki Clinic will notify you (the customer) by placing a notice on
its web site home page.
1. What is Spam?
Spam is commercial email or unsolicited bulk email,
including junk mail, which has not been requested by the recipient.
It is intrusive and often irrelevant or offensive, and it wastes valuable
resources. Spam messages are the opposite of permission-based email,
which are normally anticipated, personal, relevant and/or associated
with a pre-existing business or personal relationship. Inappropriate
newsgroup activities, consisting of excessive posting of the same
materials to several newsgroups, are also deemed to be spam.
2. Laws Restricting Spam
Spam laws vary from state to state, and from country
to country. This Reiki Clinic Anti-Spam Policy has been developed
to conform to the highest commercially reasonable standards. As a
result, and without limiting the general prohibitions against all
spam activities, the following are expressly prohibited:
(a) Use of false headers, or other false information,
to identify the point of origin or the transmission path of the email,
or to hide the true origin of the email sender,
(b) Unauthorized use of a third party's internet domain
name without the permission of such third party, to make it appear
that the third party was the point of origin of the email,
(c) Use of any false or misleading information in the
subject line of the email, and
(d) Assisting any person in using the products or services
of Reiki Clinic for any of these previously mentioned activities.
3. Questions to Ask Yourself
To help in establishing whether someone is participating
in activities constituting spam, ask yourself the following questions:
(a) Are they sending email to non-specific addresses,
such as info@domain.com or sales@domain.com?
(b) Have they deliberately falsified their transmission
path information or originating address?
(c) Are they sending email to mailing lists or distribution
lists, which then send indirectly to various other email addresses?
(d) Have they imported for use a purchased list of any
type?
(e) Are they continuing to mail to anyone who has asked
to be deleted from your mailing list?
(f) Does their email not provide a fully functioning
link to unsubscribe?
(g) Does their email subject line contain false or misleading
information?
(h) Have they used a third party's email address or
domain name without the party's consent?
If you answer yes to any of these questions, then the
people in question are likely involved in spam activities.
4. Reporting Spam
If you believe that you have received spam from or through
Reiki Clinic's facilities, please send a complaint from your email
account along with the unsolicited email, with completed header, to
abuse@sanandasales.com. Please provide any other information that
you believe may help us in our investigation. Reiki Clinic does not
investigate or take any action based on anonymous spam complaints.
5. False Spam Complaints
Reiki Clinic supports the efforts of various organizations
working to responsibly eliminate spam activities. However, if an individual
has opted-in to receive email from a customer of Reiki Clinic, and
then falsely or maliciously files a spam complaint against Reiki Clinic
or its customers, Reiki Clinic will cooperate fully with the appropriate
agencies to ban the complainant from use of anti-spam software and
the Internet community.