The dispute between Intel and Kourosh Kenneth Hamidi started six years ago when Intel sued Hamidi after he blasted its email system with thousands of emails accusing the company of unfair labour practices. The chipmaker claimed Hamidi was trespassing on its property by sending a barrage of unwanted messages to its servers. The former Intel worker, who was fired in 1996, has landed the support of free speech activists and law professors, who argue that Hamidi's speech was the equivalent of water cooler gossip and that he has a right to express his opinions about the company via email. Cindy Cohn, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which submitted a brief on behalf of Hamidi, said the case threatens Internet communications of all types. "If the court upholds the ruling, I think in some way we have broken the Internet," she said. "It will create an Internet in which your attempt to communicate with people is dependent on their consent." But Intel argues the case is not about free speech, but trespassing. Intel spokesperson Tracy Koon said Hamidi has maintained plenty of avenues to get his message out, including Web sites and publicity stunts involving riding to Intel headquarters on horseback to deliver his messages in person on a computer disk. "He's been very persistent about this," Koon said. "We have not made any attempt in all this time to restrict his attempts to say what's on his mind." Koon said the emails at issue in the case were worse than run-of-the-mill spam because some workers took Hamidi's messages personally. Some messages contained phrases such as "Are you tired of being victimised... redeployed, or targeted for termination?" "One of the big problems with this particular thing is that it was disruptive and affected productivity," Koon said. "We had people who believed they were being singled out with negative messages." Mark Theodore, a partner with the law firm Proskauer Rose who wrote an amicus brief on behalf of the US Chamber of Commerce, said the case turns on the rights of an ex-employee to trespass on the property of a company. "Our biggest concern is if the courts were to allow somebody like this -- a former employee -- to bombard an email server with messages against a company, you might find companies restricting email use." He said companies have a right to protect their email systems from a flood of messages in the same way they can protect systems such as their phone networks. "It's a very targeted form of harassment," he said of Hamidi's email string. "It causes all sorts of dissention in the work force."





