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Published byQuentin Grant Modified over 9 years ago
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Literally True Deception
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Deceptive Ads A statement (or omission) that is Likely to mislead A reasonable consumer About a material fact.
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What’s material? FTC Analysis Likely to affect consumer choice If false, injury is likely All significant health and safety claims Other evidence Cost compared to competing product Reliable consumer survey data Credible testimony
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Who’s the reasonable consumer? General populace Target audience Children Elderly Terminally ill Evidence Expert testimony Consumer data
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What’s misleading? “The world’s best pizza” Sunscreen “Contains Aloe Vera” “3 out of 4 doctors recommend” “Approved by the American Institute of Science”
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Gaines burger Dog Food, 1960s FTC found that this ad misled consumers... Why?
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AT&T vs. Verizon Wireless U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Div. AT&T requests a TRO against use of the “maps”
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AT&T Claims Consumers interpret the maps as “no service” 3G is not a different kind of service, it’s just faster The total experience of the ad leaves the impression that AT&T service is “out of touch” Mall intercept study 53% said AT&T has no coverage in blank space 30% in “control” agreed
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Verizon’s Responses The ads are literally true. The ads are not misleading. AT&T’s “evidence” only addresses one ad. AT&T’s “evidence” is not valid. Survey not limited to Smartphone users Questions poorly designed Control ad inconsistently designed
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