If you don't live in Illinois you probably have nothing to fear.
Yet.
If you don't live in Illinois you probably have nothing to fear.
I'm one of the people who isn't on the list yet, but waiting to see if I'm one of the 'ABC 1-500" This claim makes sense, but can it be 100% confirmed.
I'd like to resume my campaigns, they are and have been 100% FTC and Harpo compliant, but do I start before I know for sure if i'm on that list or not?
Looking forward to replies...
If you don't live in Illinois you probably have nothing to fear.
not true. there's 2 different suits filed, the one by oprah/oz has been filed in Federal court in NY.
not true. there's 2 different suits filed, the one by oprah/oz has been filed in Federal court in NY.
Azoogle saying bye bye to money or something.
Those rules make perfect sense to me, there are more ways to promote websites than just review sites, flogs, or farticles. I hope one good thing to come out of this is that affiliates who do nothing but jack landing pages die off.
It does not. And your reasoning as to why it does has nothing to do with what Azoogle supposedly is trying to achieve. But carry on.
Must not use falsified consumer testimonials or postings.
Must not use photos of celebrities or falsified endorsements.
Must not use altered pictures and represent that those pictures are of actual consumers.
Must not use fake blogs or fake news sites to promote content.
Must not use of the word “FREE” on anything that is not completely free. ‘Free’, ‘Try it Free’, ‘Free Sample’, etc. are not acceptable.
Must not have a “comments” section without a “reply” or “post” option.
Those guidelines seem like common sense to me. Fake celeb endorsements, before/after pictures, testimonials, and false representation is something that the FTC has repeatedly been able to win in court. I'd rather have the networks making making the rules instead of waiting for the FTC to start handing out lawsuits and injunctions. They already raided the offices of Vantex so they're obviously on the trail.
FWM's CEO Brian Weiss was not available to comment, a company spokeswoman said Aug. 20. But in an interview earlier this summer, Weiss told BusinessWeek that he didn't write his own ads. Instead, he said, he worked through networks of "affiliates," which he paid to spread the word about FWM's products through Google (GOOG), Yahoo! (YHOO), and other sites. Weiss said that his employees kept an eye out for inappropriate celebrity endorsements and he asked the affiliates to pull those ads. He declined to name the ad affiliates FWM uses, because "we don't want our competitors to know who we deal with."
Affiliate marketers are companies or individuals who devise Internet ad campaigns and spread them through programs such as Google AdWords. Through AdWords, companies bid on their placement in searches and sponsored links, and pay only when Web surfers click on their ads. The program is Google's bread and butter, accounting for most of its $22 billion in revenues last year. And the popularity of AdWords is likely to grow even more, now that Google is making it easier for advertisers to capitalize on Oprah and other trademarked names. On June 15, Google announced a new policy allowing companies to cite registered trademarks in ads, even if they don't own those trademarks
Here's a gem, sorry if it's a repost:
Oprah Winfrey Sues Resveratrol Seller - BusinessWeek
These companies aren't going to even think twice -- it's all the affiliate's fault. Odd they had no beef with the deceptive and false advertising for the past 12-18 months, only now do they have an issue.
If you don't live in Illinois you probably have nothing to fear.
Ah, the notable absence of Panama...
Hello friends,
Before I remember say pray to Lord Vishnu that government of America no take away your acai monies. Perhaps should pray to Lord Vishnu Oprah and doctor no take away your acai monies to.
Good luck bros
Sure. Now just tell me what the layout/design of the landing page and comments have to do with any of that. I can do any of those things using any design. And using a blog-type of page will not automatically get you sued by the FTC and AG.
Huh? Read the 53 page lawsuit.
I'm sure they mentioned the layouts within the context of flogs and farticles that don't follow their other guidelines (endorsements, photos, testimonials etc), I doubt they care about your HTML and CSS.