How prominent does a disclaimer or disclosure have to be in other kinds of ads?
Advertisers can’t use fine print to contradict other statements in an ad or to clear up misimpressions that the ad would leave otherwise. For example, if an ad for a diet product claims “Lose 10 pounds in one week without dieting,” the fine-print statement “Diet and exercise required” is insufficient to remedy the deceptive claim in the ad. When a disclosure or disclaimer is necessary to prevent an ad from being deceptive, it must be clear and prominent enough for reasonable consumers to see it, hear it, and understand it. Although there is no hard-and-fast rule about the size of type or the length of time a disclosure must appear on TV, the FTC often has taken action when a disclaimer or disclosure is too small, flashes across the screen too quickly, is buried in other information, or is otherwise hard for consumers to understand.
When the disclosure of qualifying information is necessary to prevent an ad from being deceptive, the information should be presented clearly and conspicuously so that consumers can actually notice and understand it. A fine-print disclosure at the bottom of a print ad, a disclaimer buried in a body of text unrelated to the claim being qualified, a brief video superscript in a television ad, or a disclaimer that is easily missed on a website are not likely to be effective. Nor can advertisers use fine print to contradict other statements in an ad or to clear up misimpressions that the ad would leave otherwise. For example, if an ad for a diet product claims “Lose 10 pounds in one week without dieting,” the fine-print statement “Diet and exercise required” is insufficient to remedy the deceptive claim in the ad. To ensure that disclosures are effective, advertisers should use clear and unambiguous language, place any qualifying information close to the claim being qualified, and avoid us
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