Español(Spanish Formal International)French (Fr)Deutsch (DE-CH-AT)Italian - ItalyEnglish (United Kingdom)Canadian(Canada)

Spam Policy

At CasinoShare, we are completely dedicated to customer service excellence, which extends all the way through to our e-mail practices.
We respect your choice and are committed to permission-based e-mail marketing practices. As a result, we have established and are committed to a zero-tolerance Anti-Spam Policy, and we provide opt-outs for each of our subscribed services.

Considerable time and effort has been invested to ensure that we adhere to guidelines expressed in the FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSIONS CANSpam Act and we expressly prohibit promotion and marketing to our clients by anyone, including our affiliate advertising program, by the transmission, distribution or delivery of any unsolicited bulk or unsolicited commercial e-mail ("Spam”).

We will ALWAYS ensure:

  • Your e-mail address appears in the e-mail message.
  • We use properly formatted “From” fields.
  • Our details are accurate and we have valid contact information.
  • We use a clear, honest and non-misleading subject line.
  • Our "Reply" address is ready to receive your e-mails.
  • We use an automated option for the recipient to unsubscribe from receiving future messages from the sender.
  • Our unsubscribe requests are always honored within 5 days.
  • We will respond promptly to people concerned about receiving improper or illegal messages and investigate all complaints in a timely manner.
  • There is an unsubscribe link in every e-mail.
  • Our mailing lists are clean and databases updated regularly.
  • We delete permanent delivery failures (hard bounces) from lists on a regular basis.
  • We publish a privacy policy.
  • We have a valid POSTMASTER and ABUSE address.
  • The e-mail does not contain objectionable content.
  • That e-mail addresses are collected via online forms, and that our e-mails fully disclose the terms and conditions of e-mail address usage and respondents are given the opportunity to opt out.


 

We will NEVER condone:

  • Invalid e-mail headers.
  • The utilization of non-existent domain names.
  • The use of techniques intended to hide or confuse any information used to identify the delivery path of the message.
  • Unauthorized use of a 3rd party internet property, relays or equipment.

We feel so strongly about this spam policy that we enforce it into our advertising partner agreements. If we find any partner guilty of sending unsolicited bulk e-mail, we may, without notice, take whatever action we deem fitting, up to and including a severance of the relationship.
At any point, should you wish to report an incidence of spam, please contact us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 

DEFINITION OF SPAM:

The difficulty in addressing the problem of SPAM begins when you try to define the word. Internet users and marketers differ widely in how they define SPAM and other forms of objectionable e-mail. Some people consider all advertisements or even unwanted messages to be SPAM, while others try to define it in terms of existing acceptable use policies or network etiquette rules. The two most common definitions of SPAM are Unsolicited Commercial Email (“UCE”) and Unsolicited Bulk E-mail ("UBE"), although both are not mutually exclusive. A third alternative is to define SPAM as Unsolicited Bulk Commercial Email (“UBCE”), although this may be functionally equivalent to UCE.


They key aspect of nearly all definitions of SPAM (including legal definitions in various laws worldwide) is that the e-mail message must be “unsolicited”. In general, a communication is considered to be unsolicited if there is no prior relationship between parties, and the recipient has not granted express and verifiable permission for the message to be sent. It can also mean that the recipient has previously sought to terminate the relationship, usually by instructing the other party not to send any more messages in the future.

Some definitions of SPAM include only messages that are of a “commercial” nature. “Commercial” is generally defined in terms of message content rather than the sender’s actual or presumed motivation for sending the message. A typical definition includes any message that promotes the sale of goods or services. There are many non-commercial varieties of SPAM, including, opinion surveys, religious messages, virus hoaxes and the like.

Bulk means that the message is sent as part of a larger collection of messages all of which have substantially identical content. Here the problem lies in the volume of e-mail, not their content. The main issue lies in how many copies of a message must be sent and within what time period, for them to qualify as a bulk transmission. There is currently no agreed upon threshold.

To summarize: To be SPAM, a message must be an “unsolicited commercial communication”. This means that it must be (i) unsolicited and (ii) commercial in nature. The DMA also requires that e-mail messages must not be Bulk – i.e. e-mails of similar content and nature must not be indiscriminately sent to multiple addresses via automated means. This applies to both a single unsolicited message sent to a large number of recipients as well as separate, but identical copies of an unsolicited message sent to a large number of recipients (the only difference between the two being the stage at which the message is copied). Members must also obtain the express and verifiable permission. This requires that the sender retain sufficient proof of permission and be able to produce that proof on demand to be able to demonstrate that initial consent was given.

At any point, should you wish to report an incidence of SPAM, please contact us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 


Please note that we no longer accept players from the United States of America.