Advertising
and Marketing on the Internet
Rules of the Road
The Internet is connecting
advertisers and marketers to customers from Boston to Bali with
text, interactive graphics, video and audio. If you're thinking
about advertising on the Internet, remember that many of the same
rules that apply to other forms of advertising apply to
electronic marketing. These rules and guidelines protect
businesses and consumers - and help maintain the credibility of
the Internet as an advertising medium. The Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) has prepared this guide to give you an overview
of some of the laws it enforces.
Advertising
must tell the truth and not mislead consumers. |
In
addition, claims must be substantiated. |
GENERAL
OFFERS AND CLAIMS
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
The Federal Trade Commission Act
allows the FTC to act in the interest of all consumers to
prevent deceptive and unfair acts or practices. In interpreting
Section 5 of the Act, the Commission has determined that a
representation, omission or practice is deceptive if it is
likely to:
- mislead consumers and
- affect consumers' behavior or
decisions about the product or service.
In addition, an act or practice is
unfair if the injury it causes, or is likely to cause, is:
- substantial
- not outweighed by other
benefits and
- not reasonably avoidable.
The FTC Act prohibits unfair or
deceptive advertising in any medium. That is, advertising must
tell the truth and not mislead consumers. A claim can be
misleading if relevant information is left out or if the claim
implies something that's not true. For example, a lease
advertisement for an automobile that promotes "$0 Down"
may be misleading if significant and undisclosed charges are due
at lease signing.
In addition, claims must be substantiated,
especially when they concern health, safety, or performance. The
type of evidence may depend on the product, the claims, and what
experts believe necessary. If your ad specifies a certain level
of support for a claim - "tests show X" - you
must have at least that level of support.
Sellers are
responsible for claims they make about their products and
services. Third parties - such as advertising agencies or website
designers and catalog marketers - also may be liable for making
or disseminating deceptive representations if they participate in
the preparation or distribution of the advertising, or know about
the deceptive claims.
Advertising
agencies or website designers are responsible
for reviewing the information used to substantiate ad
claims. They may not simply rely on an advertiser's
assurance that the claims are substantiated. In
determining whether an ad agency should be held liable,
the FTC looks at the extent of the agency's participation
in the preparation of the challenged ad, and whether the
agency knew or should have known that the ad included
false or deceptive claims.
To protect
themselves, catalog marketers should ask for
material to back up claims rather than repeat what the
manufacturer says about the product. If the manufacturer
doesn't come forward with proof or turns over proof that
looks questionable, the catalog marketer should see a
yellow "caution light" and proceed
appropriately, especially when it comes to extravagant
performance claims, health or weight loss promises, or
earnings guarantees. In writing ad copy, catalogers
should stick to claims that can be supported. Most
important, catalog marketers should trust their instincts
when a product sounds too good to be true.
Other points to
consider:
Disclaimers
and disclosures must be clear and conspicuous.
That is, consumers must be able to notice, read or hear,
and understand the information. Still, a disclaimer or
disclosure alone usually is not enough to remedy a false
or deceptive claim.
Demonstrations
must show how the product will perform under normal use.
Refunds
must be made to dissatisfied consumers - if you promised
to make them.
Advertising
directed to children raises special issues. That's
because children may have greater difficulty evaluating
advertising claims and understanding the nature of the
information you provide. Sellers should take special care
not to misrepresent a product or its performance when
advertising to children. The Children's Advertising
Review Unit (CARU) of the Council of Better Business
Bureaus has published specific guidelines for children's
advertising that you may find helpful.
Dot
Com Disclosures: Information About Online Advertising, an FTC staff paper, provides additional
information for online advertisers. The paper discusses the
factors used to evaluate the clarity and conspicuousness of
required disclosures in online ads. It also discusses how certain
FTC rules and guides that use terms like "writing" or
"printed" apply to Internet activities and how
technologies such as email may be used to comply with certain
rules and guides.
PROTECTING
CONSUMERS PRIVACY ONLINE
The Internet provides
unprecedented opportunities for the collection and sharing of
information
from and about consumers. But studies show that consumers have
very strong concerns about the security and confidentiality of
their personal information in the online marketplace. Many
consumers also report being wary of engaging in online commerce,
in part because they fear that their personal information can be
misused.
These consumer concerns present an
opportunity for you to build on consumer trust by implementing
effective voluntary industry-wide practices to protect consumers'
information privacy. The FTC has held a number of workshops for
industry, consumer groups and privacy advocates to explore
industry guidelines to protect consumers' privacy online.
In June 1998, the FTC issued Online Privacy: A Report to Congress. The Report noted that while over 85
percent of all websites collected personal information from
consumers, only 14 percent of the sites in the FTC's random
sample of commercial websites provided any notice to consumers of
the personal information they collect or how they use it. In May
2000, the FTC issued a follow-up report, Privacy Online: Fair
Information Practices in the Electronic Marketplace. While
the 2000 survey showed significant improvement in the percent of
websites that post at least some privacy disclosures, only 20
percent of the random sample sites were found to have implemented
four fair information practices: notice, choice, access and
security. Even when the survey looked at the percentage of sites
implementing the two critical practices of notice and choice,
only 41 percent of the random sample provided such privacy
disclosures. You can access the FTC's privacy report at www.ftc.gov.
The Children's
Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and the FTC's implementing Rule took
effect April 21, 2000. Commercial websites directed to children
under 13 years old or general audience sites that have actual
knowledge that they are collecting information from a child must
obtain parental permission before collecting such information.
The FTC also launched a special
site at www.ftc.gov/kidzprivacy to help children, parents and
site operators understand the provisions of COPPA and how the law
will affect them.
LAWS
ENFORCED BY THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Listed here are
some FTC laws about specific marketing practices and the
promotion of
products and services in specific industries. For copies of the
rules and commentaries relevant to your Internet enterprise,
contact: Consumer Response Center, Federal Trade Commission,
Washington, DC 20580; toll-free: 1-877-FTC-HELP (382-4357); TDD:
1-866-653-4261. Or visit the FTC at www.ftc.gov.
Business Opportunities
The Franchise and Business Opportunity Rule requires franchise
and business opportunity sellers to give consumers a detailed
disclosure document at least 10 days before the consumer pays any
money or legally commits to a purchase. The document must include:
- the names, addresses, and
telephone numbers of other purchasers;
- a fully-audited financial
statement of the seller;
- the background and experience
of the business's key executives;
- the cost of starting and
maintaining the business; and
- the responsibilities of the
seller and purchaser once the purchase is made.
In addition, companies that make
earnings representations must give consumers the written basis
for their claims, including the number and percentage of owners
who have done at least as well as claimed.
See Franchising and Business Opportunity Ventures.
Multi-level marketing (MLM)
MLM - also known as "network"
or "matrix" marketing - is a way of selling goods and
services through distributors. These plans typically promise that
people who sign up as distributors will get commissions two ways
- on their own sales and on the sales their recruits have made.
Pyramid schemes - a form of multi-level marketing -
involve paying commissions to distributors only for recruiting
new distributors. Pyramid schemes are illegal in most states
because the plans inevitably collapse when no new distributors
can be recruited. When a plan collapses, most people - except
those at the top of the pyramid - lose their money.
MLMs should pay commissions for the retail sales of goods or
services, not for recruiting new distributors. MLMs that involve
the sale of business opportunities or franchises, as defined by
the Franchise Rule, must comply with the Rule's requirements
about disclosing the number and percentage of existing
franchisees who have achieved the claimed results, as well as
cautionary language.
See Franchising and Business Opportunity Ventures.
Credit and Financial Issues
The Truth in Lending Act requires creditors who
deal with consumers to disclose information in writing about
finance charges and related aspects of credit transactions,
including finance charges expressed as an annual percentage rate.
In addition, the Act establishes a three-day right of rescission
in certain transactions involving the establishment of a security
interest in the consumer's principal dwelling (with certain
exclusions, such as interests taken in connection with the
purchase or initial construction of a dwelling). The Act also
establishes certain requirements for advertisers of credit terms.
The Fair Credit Billing Act
is important if you are a creditor billing customers for goods or
services. The Act requires you to acknowledge consumer billing
complaints promptly in writing and to investigate billing errors.
The Act prohibits creditors from taking actions that adversely
affect the consumer's credit standing until the investigation is
completed, and affords other consumer protections during disputes.
The Act also requires that creditors promptly post payments to
the consumer's account, and either refund overpayments or credit
them to the consumer's account.
The Fair Credit Reporting
Act requires that consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) -
such as credit bureaus and resellers of consumer reports - that
provide information to creditors, insurers, employers, and
others, do so with due regard for the confidentiality, accuracy,
and legitimate use of such data. When those parties take adverse
action on the basis of information in a credit report, they must
identify the CRA that provided the report so that the consumer
can learn how to get a copy to verify or contest its accuracy and
completeness. Creditors and others may not knowingly provide
false information to CRAs, which are required to maintain
reasonable procedures to ensure the maximum possible accuracy of
their data.
The Equal Credit Opportunity
Act prohibits lenders from discriminating on the basis of
race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age,
receipt of public assistance income, or an applicant's good faith
exercise of any rights under the Consumer Credit Protection Act.
The ECOA requires creditors to provide applicants with the
reasons credit was denied if the applicant asks.
The Electronic Fund Transfer
Act establishes the rights, liabilities, and
responsibilities of participants in electronic fund transfer
systems. The EFTA requires participants to adopt certain
practices when they deal with transaction accounting and
preauthorized transfers and error resolution, and sets liability
limits for losses caused by unauthorized transfers.
The Consumer Leasing Act regulates
personal property leases that exceed four months and are made to
consumers for personal, family, or household purposes. The
statute requires that certain lease costs and terms be disclosed,
imposes limitations on the size of penalties for delinquency or
default and on the size of residual liabilities, and in some
instances, requires certain disclosures in lease advertising.
Environmental Claims
It's deceptive to misrepresent - directly or indirectly - that a
product offers a general environmental benefit. Your ads should
qualify broad environmental claims - or avoid them altogether -
to prevent deception about the specific nature of the benefit. In
addition, your ads shouldn't imply significant environmental
benefits if the benefit isn't significant. Say a trash bag is
labeled "recyclable" without qualification. Because
trash bags ordinarily are not separated from other trash for
recycling at a landfill or incinerator, it is unlikely that they
will be used again. Technically, the bag may be "recyclable,"
but the claim is deceptive because it asserts an environmental
benefit where there is no significant or meaningful benefit.
Free Products
A product that's advertised as free if another is purchased -
"buy one, get one" - indicates that the consumer will
pay nothing for the one item and no more than the regular price
for the other. Ads like these should describe all the terms and
conditions of the free offer clearly and prominently.
Jewelry
The FTC's Jewelry Guides tell you how to make
accurate and truthful claims about jewelry you offer for sale.
The Guides cover claims made for gold, silver, platinum, pewter,
diamonds, gemstones, and pearls and define how certain common
terms may be used in ads. For example, the Guides explain when a
product can be called "gold plated" or when a diamond
can be called "flawless."
The Guides also describe information that sellers should disclose
in their ads so that consumers are not misled. For example, if
you sell synthetic or imitation gemstones, you must tell the
consumer that the gemstone is not natural. In addition, you
should tell consumers if the pearls that you are selling are
cultured or imitation, so that consumers are not misled about the
type of pearl being offered.
See Guides for the Jewelry, Precious Metals and Pewter
Industries.
Mail and Telephone Orders
According to the Mail or Telephone Order Merchandise Rule,
you must have a reasonable basis for stating or implying that a
product can be shipped within a certain time. If your ad doesn't
include a shipping statement, you must have a reasonable basis to
believe you can ship within 30 days.
If you can't ship when promised, you must notify the customer of
the delay and the right to cancel. For definite delays of up to
30 days, you may treat the customer's silence as agreement to the
delay. For longer or indefinite delays, and second and subsequent
delays, you must get the customer's consent. If you don't, you
must promptly refund all the money the customer paid you without
being asked.
You can give updated shipping information over the phone if your
Internet ad prompts customers to call to place an order. This
information may differ from what you said or implied about the
shipping time in your ad. The updated phone information
supersedes any shipping representation made in your ad, but you
still must have a reasonable basis for the update.
See Complying with the FTCs Mail or Telephone
Order Merchandise Rule
Negative Option Offers
The Negative Option Rule applies to sellers of
subscription plans who ship merchandise like books or compact
discs to consumers who have agreed in advance to become
subscribers. The Rule requires ads to clearly and conspicuously
disclose material information about the terms of the plan.
Further, once consumers agree to enroll, the company must notify
them before shipping to allow them to decline the merchandise.
Even if an automatic shipment or continuity program doesn't fall
within the specifics of the Rule, companies should be careful to
clearly disclose the terms and conditions of the plan before
billing consumers or charging their credit cards.
900 Numbers
The 900-Number Rule requires that ads for pay-per-call
services disclose the cost of the call. Ads for services that
promote sweepstakes or games of chance, provide information about
a federal program (but are not sponsored by a federal agency), or
target individuals under 18 years of age require additional
disclosures. Ads for 900-numbers cannot be directed to children
under 12 unless the ads deal with a bona fide education service,
as defined by the Rule.
See Complying with the 900-Number Rule.
Telemarketing
Advertisements promoting credit repair, promising loans for a fee
in advance, or touting investment opportunities may trigger
application of the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule if
the ad allows consumers to order goods or services by telephone.
In general, this Rule does not apply to general media
advertisements. If you're advertising credit repair, advance fee
loans, or investment opportunities, or offering to recover money
paid in previous telemarketing transactions, however, the Rule
likely applies to you. Among other things, the Rule requires that
certain disclosures be made before a customer pays for the goods
or services. The Rule also prohibits material misrepresentations.
See Complying with the Telemarketing Sales Rule.
Testimonials and Endorsements
Testimonials and endorsements must reflect the typical
experiences of consumers, unless the ad clearly and conspicuously
states otherwise. A statement that not all consumers will get the
same results is not enough to qualify a claim. Testimonials and
endorsements can't be used to make a claim that the advertiser
itself cannot substantiate.
Connections between an endorser and the company that are unclear
or unexpected to a customer also must be disclosed, whether they
have to do with a financial arrangement for a favorable
endorsement, a position with the company, or stock ownership.
Expert endorsements must be based on appropriate tests or
evaluations performed by people that have mastered the subject
matter.
See FTC Guides Concerning Use of Endorsements
and Testimonials in Advertising.
Warranties and Guarantees
Warranties
The Rule on Pre-Sale Availability of Written
Warranty Terms requires that warranties be available
before purchase for consumer products that cost more than $15. If
your ad mentions a warranty on a product that can be purchased by
mail, phone or computer, it must tell consumers how to get a copy
of the warranty.
See Pre-Sale Availability of Written Warranty
Terms Rule.
Guarantees
If your ad uses phrases like "satisfaction guaranteed"
or "money-back guarantee," you must be willing to give
full refunds for any reason. You also must tell the consumer the
terms of the offer.
See Guides for the Advertising of Warranties
and Guarantees, A Businesspersons Guide to Federal
Warranty Law, and Consumer Product Warranties.
Wool and Textile Products
The Textile and Wool Acts require you to disclose
country of origin information in catalogs and other mail order
advertising and in Internet ads that sell textile and wool
products. The description of each advertised item must include a
statement that it was made in the U.S.A., imported or both. A
general statement in your ads that all products are either made
in the U.S.A. or imported is not adequate.
Ads that say or imply anything about fiber content must disclose
the generic fiber names (as assigned by the FTC) in order of
predominance by weight. This requirement applies to all ads,
whether or not they solicit direct sales. It is not necessary to
state the percentage of each fiber, but fibers present in an
amount less than 5 percent should be listed as "other fiber(s)."
(There is an exception to the 5 percent requirement for fibers
that have a functional significance even in an amount less than 5
percent.)
See Textile Fiber Products Identification Act and Calling It Cotton: Labeling and Advertising
Cotton Products.
Made in the U.S.A.
A product has to be "all or virtually all made in the United
States" for it to be advertised or labeled as "Made in
the U.S.A."
See Enforcement Policy Statement on U.S. Origin
Claims.
NON-COMPLIANCE
The FTC periodically joins with
other law enforcement agencies to monitor the Internet for
potentially false or deceptive online advertising claims.
If your
advertisements don't comply with the law, you could face
enforcement actions or civil lawsuits. For advertisers under the
FTC's jurisdiction, that could mean:
orders to
cease and desist, with fines up to $11,000 per violation
should they occur.
injunctions
by federal district courts. Violations of some Commission
rules also could result in civil penalties of up to $11,000
per violation. Violations of court orders could result in
civil or criminal contempt proceedings.
in some
instances, refunds to consumers for actual damages in
civil lawsuits.
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