The Advertising Law Blog provides commentary and news on developing legal issues in advertising, promotional marketing, Internet, and privacy law. This blog is sponsored by the Advertising, Marketing & Promotions group at Olshan. The practice is geared to servicing the needs of the advertising, promotional marketing, and digital industries with a commitment to providing personal, efficient and effective legal service.

Significant developments in the FTC’s treatment of endorsements and reviews occurred this year. In June, the FTC finalized its revised Endorsement Guides. In addition to adding a definition of “clear and conspicuous,” explaining the potential liability advertisers, endorsers and intermediaries, and highlighting child-directed advertising as an area of specific concern, the revised guides include a new principle regarding procuring, suppressing, boosting, organizing, publishing, upvoting, downvoting, or editing consumer reviews that can alter how consumers interpret a product. In addition to the revised Endorsement Guides, the FTC has proposed a new rule that would specifically address deceptive practices involving consumer reviews. Further, it has continued to pursue enforcement actions against advertisers that utilize such consumer reviews in what the FTC purports to be a deceptive manner. For example, this year the FTC reached a settlement with room and roommate-finder platform, Roomster, in relation to charges that the company bought fake reviews to encourage consumers to pay for the platform. The FTC’s rulemaking process will continue into 2024, and we expect that the FTC will continue to prioritize this issue through both the rulemaking process and potential enforcement efforts.

Both federal and state legislators and regulators continue to focus on auto-renewal/continuous service programs, particularly emphasizing the necessity of online cancellation for orders initiated via the Internet. In March 2023, the FTC aimed to modernize its “negative option rule,” aligning it with state laws and increasingly common continuity programs. The proposed FTC Rule Concerning Recurring Subscriptions and Other Negative Option Plans would mandate  disclosure of continuity program terms and cancellation processes before acquiring a consumer's billing ...

Public comments to the FTC now extended until February 7, 2024

Chair of Olshan’s Intellectual Property Law Group and Co-Chair of the firm’s Brand Management & Protection Group Mary Grieco and Olshan Co-Managing partner, Chair of the firm's Advertising, Marketing & Promotion's Group and Co-Chair of the firm’s Brand Management & Protection Group Andrew Lustigman published a Law360 (subscription required) article entitled “Open Issues At The USPTO And Beyond After Biden AI Order” In the article, they discuss how President Biden’s Executive Order relating to AI could potentially make it harder for businesses to protect AI-created inventions.

Chair of Olshan’s Intellectual Property Law Group and Co-Chair of the firm’s Brand Management & Protection Group Mary Grieco and Olshan Co-Managing partner, Chair of the firm's Advertising, Marketing & Promotion's Group and Co-Chair of the firm’s Brand Management & Protection Group Andrew Lustigman published a New York Law Journal (subscription required) guest column entitled “Will Biden’s AI Executive Order Give Clarity on the Issue of Inventorship?” concerning President Biden's AI Executive Order and how AI output will be categorized as intellectual property.

New law takes effect just prior to the holidays

On December 10, 2023, a new law takes effect in New York that will mandate a grace period that will allow consumers three months to use up their credit card rewards points prior to a change in their loyalty program. New York General Business Law § 520-e was enacted in 2021 with a delayed effective date. The new law provides that before a credit card rewards program can be modified, cancelled or terminated, the consumer must be provided with at least 90 days’ notice of the forthcoming change and therefore an equally long window of opportunity to “redeem, exchange, or otherwise use” the previously accumulated points. The notice must go out no later than 45 days after the change has been decided upon by the credit card issuer.

It has been de rigueur to void Québec when offering a sweepstakes to Canadian residents due to its historically onerous registration requirements. While Québec still has strong language requirements, and Canada prohibits pure chance promotions, the Province of Québec will no longer require registration of publicity contests with the Régie des alcools, des courses et des jeux (the “Régie”).

McDonald’s and Wendy’s defeat lawsuit over burger depictions

Recently, we blogged about a lawsuit that accused Arby’s of false advertising by serving roast beef and brisket sandwiches that contained significantly less meat than what was depicted in advertisements. Arby’s may be breathing a sigh of relief right now because McDonald’s and Wendy’s have just prevailed in a similar lawsuit that targeted the depictions of their burgers.

Coffee seller’s motion to dismiss class action denied by court

In a recent legal battle, Starbucks became the center of a lawsuit filed by plaintiffs who are alleging deceptive advertising practices related to beverage and food items sold in their stores. The case, combined with the court’s recent ruling denying Starbuck’s motion to dismiss, raises questions about the transparency of product labeling and the expectations of consumers when it comes to the accuracy of product names.

Andrew Lustigman, Chair of Olshan's Advertising, Marketing & Promotion's Group and Co-Chair of the firm’s Brand Management & Protection Group, was quoted in a Corporate Counsel article (subscription required) on the ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that the Biden administration had likely violated the First Amendment for “coercing” social media platforms to take down “disfavored” content from their sites that it deemed to be misinformation about topics such as COVID-19 or the 2020 elections.

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