Hyarchis is alleged to have sent commercial electronic messages by SMS, without the consent of the recipient.
The exact nature of the messages was not disclosed; however, in a statement ACMA did let on that they were in relation to mobile premium services, which ‘usually cost more than standard SMS messages and charges can apply for messages, sent and received’.
“If you receive unwanted messages from unknown numbers that advertise a business or service, or invite you to sign up to a subscription, you could be getting spammed,” said Lyn Maddock, Acting ACMA Chair.
“Consumers should be aware that providing consent to receive messages from mobile premium service providers also amounts to giving permission to be billed for these services.”
Hyarchis received a formal warning rather than a fine over the alleged breaches.
However they are the latest to be outed in what appears to be a crackdown by the regulatory watchdog on Spam practices.
Hyarchis busted in ACMA spam crackdown
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Think Technology Australia deliver massive ROI to a Toyota dealership through SharePoint-powered, automated document management
Fabric workshops help partners tap into data services demand growth.
Shortfalls in cyber expertise deepen the cost and complexity of security incidents
Promoted Content
Have ticket queues become your quiet business risk?
Promoted Content
Why Australia’s Industrial Leaders Are Turning to Dynamic Aspect for Dynamics 365 Business Central




