Advertising Law
Advertising Law
Advertising Law
Advertising Law
• Advertising laws are aimed at protecting
consumers by requiring advertisers to be
truthful about their products and to be able to
substantiate their claims.
• All businesses must comply with advertising
and marketing laws, and failure to do so could
result in costly lawsuits and civil penalties.
Advertising Law
• So before you start an advertising campaign,
it's important you understand some basic
rules.
– Advertising must be truthful and non-deceptive
– Advertisers must have evidence to back up their
claims
– Advertisements cannot be unfair
In order to enforce an ethical regulating
code, the Advertising Standards Council
of India was set up.
ASCI Guidelines
• To ensure the truthfulness and honesty of representations and
claims made by advertisements and to safe guard against
misleading advertising
• To ensure that advertisement are not offensive to generally
accepted standards of public decency
• To safeguard against indiscriminate use of advertising for
promotion of products which are regarded as hazardous to society
or to individuals to a degree or of a type which is unacceptable to
society at large
• To ensure that advertisements observe fairness in competition so
that the consumers need to be informed on choices in the market
places and canons of generally accepted competitive behaviour in
business are both served.
ASCI
• Advertising Standards Council of India is a self
regulatory voluntary organization of the
advertising industry.
Role & Function
• The Role and Functioning of the ASCI & its CCC
(Consumer Complaints Council) in dealing
with complaints received from consumers and
Industry, against advertisements which are
considered as:
– False, Misleading, Indecent, Illegal, leading to
Unsafe practices, or Unfair to competition, and
consequently in contravention of the ASCI Code
for Self-Regulation in Advertising.
Comparative Advtg Law
In this backdrop, the Delhi High Court
summarized the law on the subject in the case
of Reckitt & Colman v. Kiwi TTK , as follows:
• A tradesman is entitled to declare his goods to
be the best in the world, even though the
declaration is untrue.
• He can also say that his goods are better than
his competitor’s, even though such statement
is untrue.
CA Law
• For the purpose of saying that his goods are the
best in the world or his goods are better than his
competitor’s he can even compare the
advantages of his goods over the goods of others.
• He, however, cannot while saying his goods are
better than his competitors', say that his
competitors' goods are bad. If he says so, he
really slanders the goods of his competitors. In
other words he defames his competitors and
their goods, which is not permissible.
CA Law
• If there is no defamation to the goods or to
the manufacturer of such goods no action lies,
but if there is such defamation an action lies
and if an action lies for recovery of damages
for defamation, then the Court is also
competent to grant an order of injunction
restraining repetition of such defamation.
Concept of Disparagement
• Section 36 A of the MRTP Act purports that
unfair trade practices are those which lead to
disparagement of the goods, services or trade
of another person.
• The term “disparagement” has not been
defined in any statute, but judicial
pronouncements have adopted its dictionary
meaning.
Concept of Disparagement
• As per The New International Webster’s'
Comprehensive Dictionary, disparagement
means, to speak of slightingly, undervalue, to
bring discredit or dishonor upon, the act of
depreciating, derogation, a condition of low
estimation or valuation, a reproach, disgrace,
an unjust classing or comparison with that
which is of less worth, and degradation
CA Law
On surrogate advertising
ASCI Code
• Section 6 of the said code states: ‘Advertisements for
products whose advertising is prohibited or
restricted by law or by this code must not circumvent
such restrictions by purporting to be advertisements
for other products the advertising of which is not
prohibited or restricted by law or by this code. In
judging whether or not any particular advertisement
is an indirect advertisement for product whose
advertising is restricted or prohibited, due attention
shall be paid to the following:
ASCI Code
(a) Visual content of the advertisement must depict
only the product being advertised and not the
prohibited or restricted product in any form or
manner.
(b) The advertisement must not make any direct or
indirect reference to the prohibited or restricted
products.
(c) The advertisement must not create any nuances
or phrases promoting prohibited products.’
Interpretation of the ASCI Code
Interpretation
It specifically prohibits surrogate advertising and
lays down guidelines which qualifies it to be so,
Namely:
– Whether the legal product under a tobacco brand,
sought to be advertised, has been produced in
reasonable quantities or not.
– Whether in the disputed advertisement, there are any
direct/indirect clues to the promotion of the restricted
product i.e. tobacco or not.
The Prohibition of Publication or
Telecast of Vulgar, Obscene and
Surrogate Advertisements and Re-
mix songs by Print and Electronic
Media Bill, 2004
Print and Electronic Media Bill, 2004
• The bill hasn’t yet seen the light of the day
• For the first time, a legal definition of
‘surrogate advertisements’ has been
attempted through Section 2(d), which states:
‘an advertisement which shows a substitute
product in the guise of the real one which
otherwise cannot be legally advertised
through the print and electronic media.’
Print and Electronic Media Bill, 2004
• Section 3 prohibits the publication by print
media and telecasting of surrogate
advertisements and provides that violators of
the said provisions shall be punished
accordingly.
"Let's gear our advertising to sell goods,
but let's recognize also that advertising
has a broad social responsibility."
- Leo Burnett
Advertising Law