When sending commercial emails to people you do not know, is there any difference between targeting b2b or b2c. For example, assume I send an email to a contact info of another company (for example, info@OtherCompany.com) would the same spam law apply as with sending the email to just of a random user?

Edit: The spam law I am referring to are of the US.

Thank you

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Law depends of the country, and you didn't specify which country you live in. Also, you are asking if that's ok to spam companies, and I find this weird :) – Ravachol Dec 30 '11 at 11:15
Thank you, edited my country. Well, mostly I'd like to advertise my product. I am not sure in what form I am allowed to do so. – vondip Dec 30 '11 at 11:18
This is not a legal advice website, so your question is off topic. It has little to do with the technical aspects of sending email. – Daniel Beck Dec 30 '11 at 11:22
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The laws on spam differ from state to state. In many cases there is not much you can do if you recieve spam by email. Its much like the existance of "junk mail" once you get on the list to recieve it, there isn't much you can do about it, email is basically free reign. – Ramhound Dec 30 '11 at 13:10
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closed as off topic by Daniel Beck, surfasb, Sathya Dec 30 '11 at 11:33

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