Handling Spam is forced, involuntarily, unpaid Work (stolen time)
The involuntary handling of spam, is unpaid work. Likewise for advertisements inserted in the mailbox of the living house and unsolicited telephone advertisements. To solve the problem this work must be paid. Currently it is not paid, as there is no proof that human life has value.
Current text as video - https://youtu.be/QD0HJqrR_kI .
I have not agreed voluntarily to receive advertisements over the phone, but if I do not handle them, I cannot use my phone for the reasons I possess it. Forced labour is defined as any form of work, for which an individual has not agreed, but there are any form of penalties, if the work is not performed. Handling unsolicited advertisements is forced labour. This is involuntary work and there is a sanction, if I do not perform it - I cannot use the communication channel for its intended purpose.
The same applies for spam, paper advertisements in a mailbox and unsolicited emails. As the problem is unpaid work, the solution is to pay for the work, €600 Euro each time. I am fine with everybody who thinks this work should not be paid, just do me one favour: I want to transfer all my correspondence to someone, who thinks that sorting out the advertisements produces no costs. Then ask that person to filter out the advertisements and deliver the rest to me. The work to split the correspondence should not be paid, alright? Likewise, I am fine with people who think the work is less than €600 Euro per piece. I want to forward all my correspondence to people who think the work is worth less money. They again will have to sort all unsolicited advertisements and for their work issue bills to the ones who sent the advertisements.
Of course, sometimes it is unclear who exactly sent the advertisements. Then there is extra work to figure this out and this work should be paid by another €600 Euro. And honestly, before handling spam from scrambled senders, first clear senders spam should be forced to pay for the work they cause. It is not the role of a state to impose penalties, the state must guarantee that in each single case forced labour is afterwards remunerated worthy.