ABA Section of Antitrust Law Consumer Protection Update January 2013 Presented by
Transcription
ABA Section of Antitrust Law Consumer Protection Update January 2013 Presented by
ABA Section of Antitrust Law Consumer Protection Update January 2013 Presented by Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, LLP Carol Brani Richard J. Caira, Jr. Jocelyn A. Fina • FTC Developments • State AG Developments • Private Litigation • Lanham Act Litigation • National Advertising Division Actions FTC Developments Resolution of Google Investigations On January 3, the Federal Trade Commission: • Closed its investigation into Google’s alleged anti-competitive business practices harmful to the online search advertising industry without taking action. • Released for public comment proposed consent order with Motorola Mobility LLC that would resolve and settle allegations of unfair competition and unfair acts/practices relating to Motorola’s licensing of SEPs for smartphones, gaming consoles and wireless LAN standards. Google – Enforcement Background • Online Search Conduct Dominance Search Bias Advertiser Restrictions • SEPs (Standard Essential Patents) Motorola Acquisition - Scope of Patent Portfolio Standard- Setting Process/SSOs - Commitments to FRAND (fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory) Sought injunctions and ITC exclusion orders against willing licensees, harmed competition Google – What’s Next? • Search: Voluntary Sanctions (Letter from Google) vs. Consent Order (Enforceable Settlement) • SEPs: Terms of Proposed Consent Order • Status of EU Investigation & Competition Concerns • Implications for Search • Implications for SEPs Retailers: Textile Enforcement News • Also on January 3, Sears ($475K), Amazon ($450K), Macy’s ($250K) and Leon Max, Inc. (Max Studio brand)($80K) agreed to pay penalties totaling $1.26MM for allegedly labeling rayon apparel as made from bamboo. • Each retailer ignored warning letters from the FTC delivered in 2010. • Labels failed to comply with the Textile Act and Textile Rules • In addition to fines, 5 years of compliance monitoring, including ongoing notice and reporting requirements relating to any change in ownership/control of defendant or any entity it controls and other topics. Finally, for Retailers that import textile, wool and fur products: Note the FTC’s 1/3 Enforcement Policy Statement regarding the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act, the Wool Products Labeling Act & the Fur Products Labeling Act. Enforcement Policy Statement The FTC will not initiate an enforcement action for falsely marketing a textile, wool, or fur product if the retailer: (1) cannot legally obtain a continuing or separate guaranty; (2) does not embellish or misrepresent claims the manufacturer provides; and (3) does not market the product as a private label product. However: if the retailer knew or should have known that the marketing claim was false, the FTC enforcement policy does not apply. Consumer Mortgage Assistance Scam – The Freedom Companies • • • On January 8th, the FTC announced a settlement with 8 defendants -Freedom Companies Marketing, Inc. , its 2 principals and 5 other companies controlled by the same individuals – relating to a mortgage assistance scam that targeted Spanish-speaking US homeowners who were behind in their mortgage payments or facing foreclosure. The defendants, based in the Dominican Republic, falsely claimed to be affiliated with or approved by lenders or the federal gov’t, promised to dramatically lower homeowner’s monthly mortgage payments in exchange for upfront fees. They collected more than $2MM in fees over a 3-year period, but failed to provide the promised services in violation of the FTC Act and the Mortgage Assistance Relief Services Rules (the “MARS Rule”). Settlement: Bars defendants from (a) marketing mortgage assistance relief products or services, or (b) making misleading claims about any product, service, plan, or program. First FCRA Case Involving a Mobile App Filiquarian Publishing, Choice Level LLC and their CEO, Joshua Linsk settled claims that they violated the FCRA (Fair Credit Reporting Act) by operating as a consumer reporting agency but not ensuring that the information they sold was accurate or would be used only for legal purposes. Their mobile app sold criminal record reports. •http://www.ftc.gov/os/caselist/1123195/index.shtm POM Wonderful – Unsupported Health Claims • • • On January 10, 2013, the Commission issued its final order in the POM Wonderful advertising matter, upheld 2012 ruling by Chief Administrative Law Judge D. Michael Chappell that POM violated the FTC Act by making false and deceptive claims in 19 ads that its juice and dietary supplement products aid in the prevention and treatment of heart disease, prostate cancer and erectile dysfunction. Health claims were not supported by competent and reliable evidence. Both parties had appealed ALJ’s May 21, 2012 ruling. Appeal reviewed by Commission. POM Health Claims • • • Commission unanimously upheld ALJ’s finding that POM made deceptive, unsubstantiated claims and increased the number of deceptive ads from 19 to 36. POM prohibited from making any health claim in its ads for any products unless the claim is supported by 2 randomized, well-controlled, human clinical trials. Commission rejected proposed FTC request that FDA preapprove any disease treatment or prevention claims in future ads. POM has 60 days to file a petition for review of the Commission Opinion and Final Order with the US Circuit Court of Appeals, has announced it will appeal. Rejects requiring food manufacturers to meet the same standards as pharmaceutical manufacturers. In the Matter of POM Wonderful LLC and Roll International Corp., companies, and Stewart A. Resnick, Lynda Rae Resnick, and Matthew Tupper, individually and as officers of the companies FTC File No. 082-3122 Other Key Enforcement Actions Unauthorized Phone Charges. On January 17th, the FTC filed a compliant against American Evoice Ltd. and a sought a motion for preliminary injunction to shut down its alleged $70MM cramming business. Billed hundreds of consumers on their phone bills for unauthorized charges. • The FTC alleged that the defendants violated the Federal Trade Commission Act by: • unfairly billing consumers for services they did not authorize; and • deceptively representing that consumers were obligated to pay for the services. • The FTC also alleged that defendants channeled their illegal proceeds to Bibliologic, and that the purported non-profit organization has no right to the funds and must disgorge them to the FTC. • For more details and the compliant, access http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2013/01/evoice.shtm Data Breach/Privacy Claims. Operator of a leading cord blood bank, Cbr Systems, Inc. settled FTC charges stemming from a data breach that exposed social security #s, credit/debit card numbers of 300,000 consumers. Because the data breach resulted from the failure to use reasonable and appropriate procedures for handling personal information, notwithstanding assurances in its Privacy Policy, Cbr’s Privacy Policy claims were deceptive as per the FTC. • For proposed settlement and the complaint, access http://www.ftc.gov/os/caselist/1123120/ State Attorney General Developments California Issues Privacy On The Go • • On January 10, 2013, CA Attorney General, Kamala D. Harris reached agreement with six of the largest mobile applications platform companies (Amazon, Apple, Google, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, Research in Motion and Facebook) for best privacy practices for mobile applications. These companies agreed to a set of recommended principles designed to improve privacy protections in the mobile environment and to bring the industry in line with CA privacy laws, including the California Online Privacy Protection Act. – – • • • • Recommends mobile apps that collect personal information to have a privacy policy and to make that privacy policy available to consumers on the app platform, before they download the app. Recommends a “surprise minimization” approach; i.e., supplementing the general privacy policy with enhanced measures to alert users and avoid collecting personally identifiable data from users that are not needed for an app’s basic functionality. Report includes recommendations for app developers, app platform providers, mobile ad networks, operating system developers and mobile carriers. The recommended practices are designed to urge app developers to be transparent about their data practices, limit data collection and retention, provide users meaningful choices and hold all industry actors accountable for privacy. These recommended practice should be seen as a minimum standard for mobile apps used throughout the US. The full text of Privacy on the Go can be found at: http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/pdfs/privacy/privacy_on_the_go.pdf Response to Privacy on the Go • • • • A coalition of seven advertising and marketing industry groups (including, the American Association of Advertising Agencies, the Association of National Advertisers, the Direct Marketing Association, the Interactive Advertising Bureau and the National Business Coalition on E-Commerce and Privacy) responded to Privacy on the Go, in a letter dated January 10, 2013, which stated that the guidelines extend beyond existing requirements under California law and Federal law and are “not grounded in any apparent legal authority.” The letter states that the industry groups believe that Privacy on the Go “will chill innovation in the marketplace, cost jobs, harm California’s economy, and deprive consumers of the benefits of mobile applications, products, and services.” The groups also noted that the guidelines do not include the perspective or input of the industry associations and were never presented for public review and comment. The full text of this letter can be found at: http://gaia.adage.com/images/bin/pdf/TradeGroupLettertoCA1.10.13.pdf Maryland AG Forms Internet Privacy Unit • • • • On January 28, 2013, Maryland Attorney General, Doug Gansler, announced the formation of a new unit within his office to focus on protecting the privacy of online users. The unit will monitor companies to ensure they are in compliance with state and federal consumer protection laws, including COPPA. The unit also will examine “weaknesses in online privacy policies” and work alongside major industry stakeholders and privacy advocates to provide outreach and education to businesses and consumers to broaden awareness about privacy rights so they are more equipped to manage online privacy challenges. Additionally, the unit will pursue enforcement actions “where appropriate” to ensure consumers’ privacy is protected. FTC, NY and FL Attorney General File Suit Against Telemarketing Scheme • • • • • • In Federal Trade Commission et al v. Tax Club, Inc. et al, No. 1:13-cv-00210, (S.D., New York, filed January 9, 2013), the FTC, New York and Florida filed suit to shut down an alleged $200 million telemarketing scheme to deceive customers interested in working at home or setting up Internet businesses. According to the complaint, the defendants charged customers thousands of dollars for nonexistent small-business development services, customized tax advice, personalized business planning and business credit development services. The complaint alleges that the defendants violated the FTC Act by falsely claiming affiliation with companies that recently sold customers a business development product or service, misrepresented the cost of the services or a customer’s earning potential and falsely claimed to be able to provide individualized business services. The complaint alleges that the defendants violated the FTC’s Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act by misrepresenting their services and failing to disclose promptly their identity, the call’s purpose and the nature of their services. The complaint also alleges that defendants violated the NY and FL consumer protection laws. The federal court signed the order requiring the defendants to stop their deceptive practices pending further litigation. Private Litigation Consumer Class Actions Brand-Name Drug Manufacture Liable for Injuries from Generic Drug • • • – In Wyeth, Inc. v. Weeks, (2013 Ala. LEXIS 2, Jan. 11, 2013), the Alabama Supreme Court held that a brand-name manufacturer of a pharmaceutical drug could be held liable for fraud or misrepresentation (by misstatement or omission) based on statements made in connection with the manufacture or distribution of a brand-name drug in an action brought by a plaintiff claiming physical injuries from a generic form of the drug manufactured and distributed by a different company. Plaintiff became sick after ingesting the generic form of a brand-name drug and claimed defendant had a duty to warn plaintiff about the risks of using the drug. The Court stated that a brand-name drug manufacturer “could reasonably foresee that a physician prescribing a brand-name drug (or a generic drug) to a patient would rely on the warning drafted by the brand-name manufacturer even if the patient ultimately consumed the generic version of the drug.” The Court relied on the US Supreme Court’s decision in PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 131 S. Ct. 2567 (2011), which found that federal regulations prohibit generic manufacturers from changing warning labels on generic drugs • Because a generic drug’s label must be the same as the brand-name drug, the court argued: [I]t is not fundamentally unfair to hold the brand-name manufacturer liable for warnings on a product it did not produce because the manufacturing process is irrelevant to misrepresentation theories based, not on manufacturing defects in the product itself, but on information and warning deficiencies, when those alleged misrepresentations were drafted by the brand-name manufacturer and merely repeated by the generic manufacturer. Lack of Standing in Suit Filed Against Netflix for False Advertising • • • In Cullen v. Netflix, Inc., (No. 5:11-CV-01199, January 10, 2013), the US District Court for the Northern District of California granted defendant’s motion to dismiss without leave to amend plaintiff’s class action complaint. Plaintiff alleged defendant made false, deceptive or misrepresentative statements in a 2011 blog on the Netflix website regarding the percentage of streamed videos that contained closed captioning subtitles and defendant’s intended efforts in the future to add more videos with subtitles and closed-captioning that violated CA’s Unfair Competition Law. Court found plaintiff had no standing: – – – – • • Plaintiff became a subscriber before the alleged false advertising. Plaintiff’s argument that false advertising caused plaintiff to maintain his subscription didn’t satisfy causation element of standing. Court held plaintiff’s false advertising claims were based on fraud, which must be argued with particularity, but the only fraud alleged by plaintiff is only a discrepancy between the way the parties calculate the percentage of online streaming content with closed captions. Court found plaintiff failed to state claims for which relief could be granted. Court found language used by defendant in ads was not fraud, deception, or misrepresentation that would rise to a violation of the CA Unfair Competition Law, False Advertising Law or Consumer Legal Remedies Act Plaintiff failed to show that a reasonable consumer would find the ads deceptive. Court Denies Class Certification in Skinnygirl Margarita Suit • • • • • In Christopher Rapcinsky v. Skinnygirl Cocktails, LLC (11 Civ. 6546, January 9, 2013) US District Court for the Southern District of New York denied class certification for plaintiff because plaintiff’s claims were not typical of those of the putative class. Plaintiff asserted defendant violated New York General Business Laws and New York Agriculture and Markets Law by falsely advertising its “Skinnygirl Margarita” is an “allnatural” margarita. Plaintiff moved to certify a class in Massachusetts and New York. Court found that because plaintiff purchased the product in Massachusetts, his purchases were not protected by New York Agriculture and Markets Law and so were not “typical” of a class asserting claims under New York law. Plaintiff asserted breach of warranty claim and cause of action for promissory estoppel, but the Court found that there was no reliance since plaintiff said he would have bought the product regardless of its price, and his belief with respect to the naturalness of the margarita was irrelevant since he bought the product to thank his wife for all she does in the home. Court Dismisses Florida Natural Orange Juice Suit Due to Lack of Injury • • In Veal v. Citrus World, Inc. (No. 2:12-CV-801, filed January 8, 2013), The US District Court for the Northern District of Alabama dismissed a putative class action lawsuit challenging the labeling of Florida’s Natural Orange Juice as “100% Orange Juice,” even though the product is “heavily processed, stored, and flavored before reaching market shelves.” Plaintiff sued for breach of contract and breach of express warranty. – – • • • Court found plaintiff failed to state an actual injury by purchasing the orange juice or that once he learned that the juice was not freshly-squeezed , he did not stop purchasing the product. Court rejected plaintiff’s argument that he suffered any concrete and particularized injury when he did not receive the benefit for the bargain – plaintiff paid for and received mass produced orange juice. Court noted that plaintiff did not assert a false advertising or misrepresentation claim. Court denied plaintiff’s motion to amend the complaint for a fourth time because “there is nothing in the labeling of Florida Natural orange juice that would in any way deceive a reasonable consumer into believing that the orange juice in question is anything but pasteurized orange juice.” Court stated that if viewed plaintiff counsel’s actions as “shopping for plaintiffs in an attempt to manufacture a claim.” “All Natural” Claim Not Preempted by Federal Regulations • • • • • In Larsen v. Trader Joe’s Co. (No. C 11-05188, filed January 9, 2013), the US District for the Northern District of California denied defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings for its Fresh Pressed Apple Juice in a nationwide putative class action lawsuit alleging false advertising with respect to marketing by defendant for “All Natural” products. Defendant’s juice is labeled “All Natural Pasteurized” and “100% Juice.” One ingredient listed on the label of the juice is ascorbic acid, a synthetic form of Vitamin C. Defendant argued federal regulations provide that ascorbic acid and vitamin C may be used synonymously on food labels and preempted plaintiff’s state law claims. The Court noted that just because the two products are chemically similar or even identical, this does not mean that they must be labeled identically in all respects. The Court further acknowledged that there is some value to consumers and the market in knowing whether ingredients are synthetic or naturally occurring. The Court stated that defendant made no showing that the lack of an “All Natural” label would imply or suggest ascorbic acid was inferior in violation of federal regulations. Court Finds Lack of Injury in Jos. A. Bank False Promotions Case • • • • • In James Waldron, et al. v. Jos. A. Bank, (Case No. 12-cv-02060, filed January 28, 2013), U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey, the Court dismissed plaintiff’s claims that the defendant misrepresented the regular pricing of its merchandise since the merchandise was perpetually on “sale” and never sold at the regular price. Plaintiff’s argued that if a store’s merchandise is always on sale it’s not actually on sale, which means the retailer is deceiving customers into believing they are paying a discounted price. The Court found that the plaintiffs failed to show any real or immediate threat of injury as a result of defendant’s advertising. The Court stated that the plaintiffs failed to prove they lost money due to the retailer’s advertising practices or any specific unlawful conduct, which are requirements for claims brought under the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act. The Court noted that plaintiffs did not provide “any facts which demonstrate that the ‘sale’ price offered is identical to the true regular price of the merchandise and is thus a misrepresentation.” Court Lacks Subject Matter Jurisdiction in ConAgra Foods Case • • • • • In Wallace, et al. v. ConAgra Foods, Inc. (Case No. 12-01354, filed January 31, 2013), the U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota, dismissed a class action lawsuit claiming ConAgra Foods deceptively sells Hebrew National meat products as kosher. The Court held that the Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment bars the court from deciding the matter since “’kosher’ is intrinsically religious in nature. Plaintiffs claimed that ConAgra misled consumers because their meat processing services do not meet the standards necessary to label Hebrew National products as kosher. The Court found plaintiff’s allegations “highly disconcerting” but held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to rule in this case since civil judges are barred from resolving faith-based disputes. The Court stated that it could not “interpret doctrinal matters or tenets of faith.” The Court noted that its decision may leave consumers without a remedy. Subway “Footlong” Class Action Lawsuit Filed • Two Subway customers filed nationwide class-action lawsuits in January against Subway for fraudulent and deceptive advertising, sales and marketing practices regarding its “Footlong” subs: – – • • • • Nguyen Buren v. Doctor’s Associates, Inc. (Case No. 1:13-cv-00498, N.D. Illinois Eastern Division, filed January 22, 2013) Jason Leslie v. Doctor’s Associates, Inc. (Case No. 3:13-cv-00465-FLW-DEA, District of New Jersey, filed January 23, 2013) Both customers allege that Subway violated consumer protection statutes in all 50 states because the “Footlong” sandwich that each purchased from Subway was less than 11 inches long. The complaints allege that since a “Footlong” sandwich is less than 12 inches, customers pay more than they should in reliance on Subway’s ads. The complaints allege that Subway’s advertisements are deceptive and mislead customers to think they are getting a 12 inch sandwich when they are actually getting less than 12 inches. The complaints seek to enjoin Subway from using the allegedly deceptive ads and request restitution, actual damages, treble damages, punitive damages, attorneys fees and cost of the suit. Lanham Act False Advertising Claims/Decisions Apple Inc. v. Amazon.com Inc. 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 440 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 2, 2013) • • • Trademark infringement suit brought against Amazon by Apple for using the term “APP STORE” (in “Amazon App Store”) on a section of Amazon’s website where Android apps and Kindle Fire apps were made available included false advertising claims under the Lanham Act . During the first week of January, 2013, federal district judge in California granted Amazon’s motion for partial SJ, and dismissed Apple’s false advertising claim. No explicit false statement of fact required under Lanham Act false advertising claims, but if not false on its face, plaintiff must produce evidence (usually surveys, market research, etc.) showing that the claim at issue conveyed a deceptive message. Apple couldn’t produce such evidence, so claim dismissed. Rest of lawsuit continues. M-Edge Accessories LLC v. Amazon.com Inc. 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 311 (D. Md. Jan. 2, 2013) • • • • Amazon produces Kindle e-reader and accessories. M-Edge produces Kindle ereader accessories. After relationship under various agreements soured, Amazon refrained from providing ample notice of new Kindle version to M-Edge (1 day notice). M-Edge products still shown on Amazon website in conjunction with Kindle products, however, with accompanying representation to consumers that M-Edge products “currently unavailable,” together with displays of competing Kindle accessories. Suit by M-Edge against Amazon based on numerous claims, including Lanham Act false advertising claims: (1) statements by Amazon to consumers that M-Edge products “currently unavailable” and (2) statements to customers (distributors) that effectively communicate that sale of a Kindle accessory requires approval from Amazon that hasn’t been given to M-Edge Under first prong of standard for false advertising claim, Court found both types of statements may be found to be misleading or false by implication in context, and that both were made in commercial advertising context – M-Edge made sufficient factual allegations to present plausible claim that consumers/customers could be found to have been misled by Amazon, and that M-Edge may have been or will be damaged Amazon’s motion to dismiss false advertising claims denied Generac Power Systems, Inc. v. Kohler Co. 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8422 (E.D. Wis. Jan. 22, 2013) • • • • • • • Motion for reconsideration brought by Generac after Court denied its motion for preliminary injunction based on false advertising claim. Generac alleged that Kohler (competitor in home generator business) included false statements in a Kohler marketing handbook that Generac generator lacks a low-speed diagnostic exercise. Court found that marketing handbook constitutes a “commercial advertisement” under Lanham Act. Also, statement at issue was literally false. Kohler stated that injunctive relief rendered moot because it stopped circulating the handbook at issue, the ones at issue disseminated to Kohler dealers were the only ones so disseminated, and new ones (without the false statement, but with the statement “replacement” for old one) were being shipped instead. Court: Generac established likelihood of prevailing on the merits of Lanham Act claim and irreparable harm therefore presumed. “It is always in the public’s interest to have the truth rather than falsehoods injected into the stream of commerce.” Harm posed to Generac by any existing copies of offending handbook outweighs harm Kohler may suffer through loss of reputation in its dealer network by informing those dealers why replacement was provided or directing them to destroy prior version, so motion for reconsideration granted. National Advertising Division Actions Serta, Inc. (iComfort® Sleep System) Case No. 5530; December 11, 2012 Challenger: Tempur-Pedic Management, Inc. • • • • • Comparative performance claims, superiority claims, establishment claims and implied claims made by Serta about its iComfort foam mattress lines challenged by Tempur-Pedic Serta made claims about its foam mattresses being cooler, dissipating heat better, being more breathable, being more supportive, and providing qualities that enable people to get a deeper, more restful sleep on its foam mattress, than Tempur-Pedic’s foam mattresses Serta pointed to tests it performed to substantiate its claims NAD: Tests fatally flawed, in that Serta did not perform them comparing entire mattresses against entire mattresses, in real-world circumstances (i.e., with bedding on the mattresses, with real people, etc.); rather, Serta performed tests on individual components of its mattresses – namely, pieces of the top foam layer only NAD conclusions and recommendations: – “An advertiser is responsible for all reasonable interpretations of its claims; not simply the messages it intended to convey” – Claims must convey a truthful, accurate and non-misleading message about the performance capabilities of the products and advertiser’s superior performance claims in comparison to competitor’s products – If Serta had instead advertised that its memory foam mattresses had certain qualities that Serta intended, or designed them to have (“monadic general claims”) – like being cool sleeping, having the ability to dissipate heat well, being breathable, being supportive, etc., then that would have been acceptable – Serta’s ads implied that its mattresses as a whole, not the simply the individual components, were better than its competition’s Fareportal, Inc. (CheapOair.com and CheapOstay.com) Case No. 5532; December 12, 2012 Challenger: Priceline.com, Inc. • • • • • • • Fareportal made pricing, discount, sale and implied claims on its website, in banner ads and in Google ads that flights purchased on its CheapOair.com and CheapOstay.com websites Save up to 65%; Get an extra $15 off – Hurry – Book now, etc. Discounts based on its competitors’ the least purchased, highest price-category, unrestricted international fares Dollar amount savings discovered to actually be the amount of booking fees charged in many cases Offers never expired in reality, as immediately after one expired, Fareportal would advertise essentially the same savings and to “Hurry now” Implied claim: websites offer the best and lowest rates, so no reason to comparison shop NAD recommendations: – “Well-established that the unqualified term “sale” may be used in advertising only if there is a significant reduction from the advertiser’s usual and customary price of merchandise offered and the sale is for a limited period of time. If the sale exceeds 30 days, advertisers should be prepared to substantiate that the offering is indeed a valid reduction and hasn’t become their regular price.” – Modify “up to” savings claims to avoid conveying the unsupported message that the comparison is as to its competitors’ discounted fares and clearly and conspicuously disclose in immediate proximity that the basis is instead a comparison to applicable classes of domestic and international unrestricted fully refundable published fares (Fareportal concerned with space for disclaimers in banner ads, however) – Discontinue advertising routine prices as “sale” prices and that if it wants to do so for limited periods of time, it should more clearly and conspicuously that the discount is limited to the amount of the booking fee, as well as the expiration date – Avoid referencing in close proximity discounts that are automatically applied (“instant savings”) together with discounts requiring consumers to manually enter promo codes (caused confusion, and consumers possibly not knowing to enter the promo codes) – Refrain from using terms such as “hurry,” “book now” and “last minute deal” for promos that don’t immediately expire Reynolds Consumer Products (Hefty® Slider Bags) Case No. 5484C; December 19, 2012 (Compliance Report) Challenger: S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. • • • • • Reynolds advertised that its Hefty Slider zipper bag seals were “2X Stronger” than S.C. Johnson’s Ziploc bag seals in terms of resistance to popping open (comparative performance claims; superiority claims; efficacy claims; establishment claims; implied claims) NAD previously decided that insufficient substantiation for “2X stronger” claim, even though sufficient substantiation for superior performance claim (i.e., “stronger seal” than Ziploc bags) when bags shaken, dropped or stacked – Discontinue “2x stronger” claim – Okay to claim superior performance IF qualified with clear and conspicuous disclaimer in close proximity that is stronger “when shaken, dropped or stacked” S.C. Johnson later claimed that Reynolds didn’t comply and actually began expanding use of the “2X stronger” claim on certain new promotional packaging, on its website and on in-store displays, and that disclaimers not prominent enough on new packaging Reynolds agreed to modify new packaging by making “when shaken, dropped or stacked” disclaimers more prominent (in either the headline or first sentence) NAD recommendations: – No further action required on old packaging in light of assurances that it would be discontinued in December, 2012, or on promotional Daytona 500 packaging in light of assurances that it was modified appropriately – Complimented Reynolds on good faith showing by it by providing artwork for proposed revised new packaging to S.C. Johnson in September, 2012 – ample opportunity to raise any objections or concerns at that time prior to Reynolds’ production of the new packaging (and NAD thus disappointed that S.C. Johnson waited almost 2 months to challenge rather than discuss with Reynolds) – Appreciates Reynolds’ efforts to modify new packaging; no further action required Kraft Foods, Inc. (Gevalia Kaffe for Tassimo) Case No. 5542; January 3, 2013 Challenger: Starbucks Corporation • • • • • Claims made in advertising and on product packaging: – Express: “NEW! If you like Starbucks ______ Blend, try this!” – Implied: Each variety of Gevalia Kaffe tastes the same or similar to the Starbucks blend of coffee identified Background: exclusive agreement in 1998 between Starbucks and Kraft for Starbucks Tassimo pods (ONLY single cup brewing system offering Starbucks coffee); contract terminated in 2010 Asterisk in each claim: Starbucks is Starbucks trademark; Starbucks coffee not manufactured or distributed by Kraft Starbucks supported its challenge with consumer perception survey evidence, found by NAD to be appropriate NAD recommendations: – “An advertiser must support all reasonable interpretations of its advertising claims.” – Tried to determine whether claims merely invited consumers to try a Gevalia blend or an implied claim about the taste of the Gevalia blend compared to a Starbucks blend – Determined that survey was appropriate, conducted properly, and that the claims implied that the Gevalia coffee tasted the same as or better than the Starbucks coffee – Discontinue or modify claims (Kraft decided to replace claims at issue) Sea Foam Sales Co. (Motor Treatment/fuel system additive/oil additive) Case No. 5540; January 7, 2013 Challenger: ITW Global Brands • • • • • Print and online product performance claims Helps clean carburetors, fuel injection systems, oil system components, etc., helps reduce emissions, helps lubricate engine parts, etc. Sea Foam provided ASTM and lab testing data in support of its claims NAD evaluated whether such test data met standard of competent and reliable scientific evidence required for product performance claims NAD recommendations: – “Product performance claims must be supported by competent and reliable scientific evidence.” – Most claims supported and okay – Small sample sizes and inconsistent testing methods and procedures of field tests insufficiently reliable to support claims – Lab testing okay for cleaning claims except for claim indicating that by using Sea Foam, mechanics can more accurately diagnose problems (recommended that claim be discontinued) and for lubrication and fuel stabilization claims Envirocon Technologies, Inc. (Lemi® Shine Performance Booster and Lemi® Shine Rinse Agent) Case No. 5543; January 9, 2013 Challenger: NAD • • • • • Envirocon made performance and ingredient claims in print and broadcast advertising and on product packaging for its Lemi Shine products for use in dishwashers Express claims: “Only thing that works”; “Outshines the competition” (part of trademark); Natural active ingredient”; etc. Implied claim: Products are natural or “green” products. Advertiser contended that “It’s the only thing that works” claim was puffery (NAD found it not to be – rather, it’s an objectively provable superiority claim linked to specific performance attributes; no testing data provided to support claim, either NAD recommendations: – “The registration and promotion of a trademark does not obviate the need for the advertiser to have a reasonable basis to use this trademarked expression when it appears as an advertising claim.” – Discontinue “It’s the only thing that works” – Claims included as part of trademark must still be substantiated (in this case: “Outshines the competition” – should be discontinued, as unsupported superior performance claim – Modify unqualified “all natural detergent additive” claim to disclose the ingredients (real fruit acids and natural citrus oils) Summers Laboratories, Inc. (Triple Paste Medicated Diaper Rash Ointment) Press Release; February 1, 2013 Challenger: Johnson & Johnson Consumer Companies, Inc. • • • • • Claim made by Summers for its diaper rash ointment “Recommended by pediatricians and dermatologists when other treatments fail” NAD recommended that claim be discontinued on product packaging and elsewhere. Summers produced survey evidence to support the above claim, but the NAD found survey flawed by absence of randomized survey population, leading nature of questions, lack of ability to verify authenticity of responses, and third and final question asking how respondents would like their monetary incentive paid – as a $1 coupon plus product sample or a $2 coupon with no sample. Summers asserted that decision was in error and in contrast with prior FTC rulings, and that its claims were in full compliance with such rulings. NAD referred matter to the FTC for further review after Summers declined to abide by NAD’s recommendation to discontinue claim. Vitamins and Dietary Supplements: Additional NAD Decisions for Your Review … • Barlow Herbal Specialties, LLC (LDM-100 dietary supplements) Case No. 5421C; December 7, 2012 (Compliance Report) Challenger: NAD, through the Council for Responsible Nutrition • Proactive Life, LLC (Diabetes Support dietary supplement) Case No. 5535; December 20, 2012 (advertiser agreed to permanently discontinue all challenged claims) Challenger: NAD, through the Council for Responsible Nutrition • Nature’s Answer, LLC (Bio-Strath dietary supplement) Case No. 5536; December 20, 2012 (substantively similar to Ampersand case) Challenger: NAD, through the Council for Responsible Nutrition • Ampersand Industries, LLC (Trimedisyn Prenatal Vitamin) Case No. 5539; December 31, 2012 (administratively closed) Challenger: NAD, through the Council for Responsible Nutrition Carol Brani (919) 755-8139 [email protected] Questions? Richard J. Caira, Jr. (919) 484-2315 [email protected] Jocelyn A. Fina (919) 484-2330 [email protected]