n spite of the 2003 sentence in favour of Philip Morris, and the one of 2004 in favour of the City of New York, the <a href="http://cigarettes.blogsome.com/" title="cigarettes sales">cigarettes sales</a> of the now famous Online Tobacco Store continued to be delivered regularly to Americans smokers.
The USPS (United States Postal Service), in fact, didn't seem very much worried about the “Copyright” problems of the tobacco colossus and continued delivering <a href="http://likestrike.vnunetblogs.com/my_weblog/" title="cigarettes">cigarettes</a> all over the United States even after a new law in 2003 was passed, studied especially to counter Yesmoke, that prohibited the shipment of <a href="http://blogs.cjb.net/cigarettes/"title="cigarettes">cigarettes</a> by mail in New York State.
Soon many other States adopted the same prohibition, but always without success. The USPS continued undaunted to deliver the <a href="http://www.blogscene.co.uk/cigarettes/"title="cigarettes">cigarettes</a>, under the American Federal Law, that sanctions the right of the citizens to import <a href="http://www.bloxster.net/cigarettes/"title="cigarettes">cigarettes</a> from abroad with customs declaration and payment of the customs duties (which, however, the Customs Bureau, for some reason, continued to ignore).
And even after August 20th 2004, when Philip Morris took possession of the Yesmoke.com domain and the online store transferred to its Swiss address Yesmoke.ch, the USPS went on delivering the <a href="http://cigarettes.blogrox.com/"title="cigarettes">cigarettes</a>, which continued to arrive duty-free on the doorsteps of enthusiastic Americans smokers.
Phillip Morris succeeded in imposing itself on American Federal law, leading to the end of <a href="http://www.blogs4me.com/cigarettes/"title="cigarettes online">cigarettes online</a>, only thanks to pressure on the credit card companies. These, from the beginning of 2005, would no longer accept online payments for <a href="http://clearblogs.com/cigarettes/"title="smoker">smoker</a> purchases, considering Internet a “possible source of supply for minors”.
So, Canadian smokers, too, where duty taxes had been regularly requested and paid, had to give up their online <a href="http://cigarettes.dakotablogs.com/"title="cigarettes brands">cigarettes brands</a> purchases. The use of credit cards, on the other hand, remains completely free and usable by minors to access pornographic sites, gambling houses, online drug stores, and everything else. These apparently don't interfere with Philip Morris’s business.