Uploaded November 2018.
See individual countries for updates.
Alcohol
Re-populating December 2024
TTB’s Final Rule Defining American Single Malt as a Distinct Category
TTB Use of Social Media in the Advertising of Alcohol
Craft Brewing Business November 6, 2024
Influencers, Alcohol Brands & Deceptive Advertising Regulations
Greenspoon Marder LLP May 14, 2024
What is "Advertising" Under the DISCUS Code?
Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC. Dec 28, 2023
The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS), American Craft Spirits Association (ACSA) and American Distilled Spirits Alliance (ADSA), today increased the adult demographic placement standard in their respective codes to reflect the 2020 U.S. Census data showing that 73.8 percent of the U.S. population is 21 years of age and older. Discus link here; commentary here from Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC/ Lex June 2, 2023
FTC Takes Total Wine to Fed Court re CID
FTC October 20, 2023
Is "Hit & Run" an Appropriate Name for a Rum?
Global Advertising Lawyers Alliance (GALA) May 31, 2023
NAD and Pernod Ricard May 17 2023
DISCUS Calls Out Skrewball Whiskey for Multiple Violations of its Advertising Code
Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC/ Lex October 25, 2022
The regulatory regime in the U.S. is not exactly lenient, but by comparison to some of the draconian environments in Europe and thanks largely to the first amendment, the rules are reasonably manageable. The FTC 'has long encouraged the alcohol industry to adopt and comply with self-regulatory standards to reduce the extent to which alcohol advertising targets teens, whether by placement or content.' From the FTC's Alcohol advertising regulation, a consumer-facing site. Further, 'most alcohol advertisers have pledged to comply with one of three voluntary self-regulatory codes designed to limit targeting of teens. Among other provisions, these codes direct that .... ad content should not appeal primarily to people under 21. For more information about the codes visit the websites for the Distilled Advertising Council of the United States, the Beer Institute, and the Wine Institute' (see below). Another official or, at any rate government agency, source of (limited) rules is the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau’s (TTB) regulations under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act (FAA Act) shown here under the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR; see part 5). Rules are relatively 'narrow' and include those for advertiser identification, alcohol content and truthfulness. The self-regulatory codes set out below are, as you might expect, both more specific and expansive; click on the links or see our later content section. Be aware also of Alcoholic beverage control states and see Alcohol laws of the United States by state. While state regulation obviously has an impact on retailing and pricing/ tax and will also have some 'responsibility' requirements, the key codes to observe and that cover the necessary bases are below.
THE BEER INSTITUTE ADVERTISING AND MARKETING CODE
Updated September 2023. Recent highlights:
Basic principles (from the code)
The principles above are supplemented by extensive guidelines on both content and placement, shown in our content section B and channel section C, or click on the linked code
DISTILLED SPIRITS COUNCIL OF THE UNITED STATES
Code of Responsible Practices May 2023.
Scope The Code applies to all activities undertaken by DISCUS members to advertise and market
distilled spirits, malt beverage, and wine brands, as well as non-DISCUS member activities
to advertise and market distilled spirits. These activities include brand advertising, consumer
communications, promotional events, packaging, labels, sponsorships, product placements,
and distribution and sales materials.
Discus is the Daddy of self-regulators in spirits advertising, the most widely observed and respected and around since the end of prohibition to do some of its own. The code has a familiar look to it for those with experience of its European counterparts, with the emphasis on avoidance of under-age drinkers in content and placement and a heavy emphasis on social responsibility. Annex A delivers Responsible Digital Marketing Guidelines and Appendix B a detailed Responsible Media Buying Guidelines. Scope includes product placement and promotional events and 'Responsible drinking statements should be included in beverage alcohol advertising, marketing materials, and promotional events where practicable.' (normally just 'Drink Responsibly'). Discus offers 'confidential guidance on code compliance.'
AMERICAN DISTILLED SPIRITS ALLIANCE
Statement of Responsible Practices
Highlights
Encourage safe and sensible approaches to consumption.
Exclude or avoid representing activities that might lead to overconsumption or potentially harmful consequences.
Make no claim of enhanced physical or intellectual ability or personal or social achievement.
We are committed to eliminating underage consumption of beverage alcohol.
THE AMERICAN CRAFT SPIRITS ASSOCIATION (ACSA)
Code of Responsible Practices for Craft Spirits Advertising and Marketing 2022
To all intents and purposes, effectively the Discus Code above
WINE INSTITUTE'S CODE OF ADVERTISING STANDARDS
Revised and adopted in June 2011
Highlights
Each of the codes for the sectors covered above, i.e. beer, spirits and wine, include specific placement and buying rules by channel with the emphasis, as you might expect, on the avoidance of under LDAs. Rules are set out in our channel section C, or click on the linked codes above. Advertisers and agencies should also be aware of the 'general' channel rules, i.e. those that apply to all sectors, alcohol included. While the alcohol ad codes are pretty rigorous, some e.g. consent and information requirements in data processing and electronic communications may extend beyond those in the codes. Privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors.
in addition to observing the rules set out in these pages for the various forms of alcoholic beverages, advertising also should respect the 'general' rules, i.e. those that apply to all sectors, alcohol included. Such rules cover the likes of e.g. environmental claims, Diversity and inclusion, Influencers, endorsements et al as well as the core statutory legislation in the U.S. and can be found under the General rules header of this database. The most significant influences in general rules are the FTC Act - you can find the act itself here and its purpose and background here - and in self-regulation the Better Business Bureau's (BBB) Advertising Code. The real regulatory action is from the BBB unit The National Advertising Division, widely known as NAD, which 'has become the leading voice in providing guidance for truthful and transparent advertising.' Essential for understanding environmental claims rules are 'the 'Green Guides', which are from October 2012 and in the process of update.
Recent cases (slimmed)
Evian and 'carbon neutral'. Loeb & Loeb Jan 16, 2024
NYAG and JBS Foods Katten March 4, 2024*
Court Dismisses Greenwashing Action v Nike
Katten Muchin Rosenman/ Lex April 3, 2024
Goodness, nutrition, puffery GALA Apr16, 2024
A different take on MIU. GALA Apr 23, 2024
Lily is not 100% pure. NAD/ BBB Apr 15, 2024
'All Natural' not misleading Mintz May 3, 2024
FTC guidance on MIU July 2024
The legal battle over 'natural' Proskauer June 19, 2024
CarShield, Ice-T & the FTC. 7/31/24. Commercial here
NAD, Comcast & AT&T. 7/30/24. Commercial here
More on MIU. GALA/ Lex September 13, 2024
New ICC Code Sept 19, 2024; key changes here
NAD & Welch's Fruit Snacks. BBB Sept 30, 2024
Ad above here (may be taken down)
NY and 'certified.' FKK&S October 10, 2024
NAD & Finish #1 Recommended Oct 16, 2024
Venables MIU claims Nov 4, 2024 (audio)
Top 5 challenged claims 2024. Venable 10/17
Stay ADvised Issue 20 Davis Wright Tremaine Cases Welch's Fruit Snacks', Wheat Thins, Invitation Homes, AI various
NAD October case summaries Nov 12, 2024
When is a product beauty shot too beautiful?
FKK&S November 21, 2024. TBC (to be continued)
NAD/BBB decisions to 12/20/24 (US dating) Cases CARU/JustPlay, DSSRC Olive tree & Reliv NAD Oral Essential MIU, Zuru/ Rascals & MillieMoon, Kreyol Essence influencer
NAD November case report Dec 11, 2024
FDA final decision defines 'healthy' nutrient content
Venable on the above Dec 20, 2024
* Recommended read
Trump Presidency and Mandatory Climate Reporting
Seyfarth Shaw November 6, 2024
NY Court Dismisses NYAG's Green Lawsuit v. Pepsi
GALA November 6, 2024
FTC International Monthly Issued 11/28/24
Coca-Cola back in the dock. FKK&S Sept 2, 2024
FTC final rule bans fake reviews & testimonials 8/14
6 ways the Google antitrust ruling could change the internet
Washington Post August 7, 2024
AI
FTC Announces Operation AI Comply 9/25/24
AI in advertising. Venable LLP/ Lex June 2024
FCC proposes $8Mil fine forTelecom Co & political consultant
Venable/ Lex June 3, 2024
Disclosures Using AI-Generated Actors/Voices
Loeb & Loeb May 9, 2024
CARU and AI in ads and data Hunton May 6, 2024
Venables' Advertising Law Toolkit Feb 2024*
Comprehensive and comprehensible
Key Priorities for 2024. InfoLawGroup LLP. Jan 10, 2024
Top Sustainability Trends to Watch in 2024
Wilmer Hale Feb 20, 2024
What Advertising Law Issues Should You Prioritize in 2024?
Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz. December 26, 2023
If you're reading this through 'international' eyes, i.e. you have some experience of other countries' advertising regulatory systems, we think it's fair to suggest - broadly and somewhat simplistically speaking - that if there's a line that separates self-regulation on the one hand and legislation on the other as the principal influences in advertising's oversight, then the U.S. system sits on or around that line, rather as Germany does, whereas many other European countries fall primarily into the self-regulatory 'camp'. In other words, both regulatory mechanisms are important and influential and both need to be understood, but in the case of the biggest (in terms of household spending) consumer market in the world there are inevitably some complexities arising from a) the federal system, which means, in the idiom, a bunch of state laws that are often the first to be activated in the event of a dispute b) the highly significant role of the Federal Trade Commission which somewhat 'looms' above all other players and c) the generally more litigious environment in U.S. commerce. So, while the U.S. is generally business-friendly, it's also a place where you need to keep your wits and lawyers around you.
There are three main pieces of federal legislation that govern marketing and advertising issues:
I. The Lanham Act. First in force on July 5, 1947. This is the federal statute that governs trademarks, service marks, and unfair competition. Also known as the Trademark Act and the emphasis is in that legal territory. The act is in four chapters: 1) The principal register, i.e. the main register of trademarks held by by the US Patent and Trademark Office 2) the supplemental register, which are trademarks that don't yet qualify for the principal register 3) general provisions and 4) the Madrid Protocol, the principal system for the registration of trademarks in multiple jurisdictions. For our purposes the key clauses are under Section 43a, now known as 15 U.S.C. §§ 1124–1125, extracted is 'any person who...(B) in commercial advertising or promotion, misrepresents the nature, characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of his or her or another person’s goods, services, or commercial activities, shall be liable in a civil action by any person who believes that he or she is or is likely to be damaged by such act. The Wikipedia entry is here and 9 Key Questions About Lanham Act False Advertising Suits, courtesy of Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel/ ALM, is helpful.
II. The FTC Act. You can find the act itself here and its purpose and background here; the key section for our purposes is S5, which prohibits 'unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.' Such terms and their parallel state counterparts regulate e.g. environmental claims in advertising. The advertising/ marketing section of the FTC's business guidance is essential reading as is the Division of Advertising Practices (the division that 'enforces the nation’s “truth-in-advertising” laws, which require advertisers to tell the truth and to back up their claims with reliable, objective evidence') and Competition and Consumer Protection Guidance Documents for more specific category-based issues and papers. These are 'administrative interpretations of the statutes and rules administered by the Commission, and they are advisory in nature.'
III. The Dodd-Frank consumer protection act, known as the Dodd-Frank but the full title is actually the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection act; the consumer protection element is related to 'abusive financial services practices.' The act itself is here and its Wikipedia entry, for those of us who like things as simple as possible, here.
In addition to federal laws, each state has its own unfair competition law to prohibit false and misleading advertising. Examples are California's Unfair Competition Law and False Advertising Law; some explanation and cases here from Klein Moynihan Turco LLP/ Lex March 22, 2023. See also ICLG's Consumer Protection Laws and Regulations 2023
ANA Children’s Advertising and Privacy Roundup*
Baker Hostetler November 19, 2024
UK And US Issue Joint Statement On Children's Privacy
Sheppard Mullin November 13, 2024
Marketing to Children (audio) Venable
Ad Law ToolKit Season 2, Episode 7 Nov 12, 2024
House Advances Children’s Privacy Bills. Hunton Sept 27, 2024
FTC Concerns over Marketing to Kids - It’s Not Just COPPA Anymore
BakerHostetler July 10, 2024. Important case & debate
From the FTC business guidance: 'If you advertise directly to children or market kid-related products to their parents, it’s important to comply with truth-in-advertising standards. Check out the FTC's resources about COPPA, the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, December 2022 commentary from K&L Gates/ Lex here and an update August 17, 2023 from Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP here. The FTC also has a special page about food advertising to children and adolescents.' The full FTC children's section, which contains some important advice and reports of FTC activities in this space is here. The FTC highlight the International Consumer Protection Enforcement Network (ICPEN), a network of consumer protection agencies from over 60 countries, which developed Best Practice Principles for Marketing Practices Directed Towards Children Online (June 2020). See also the FTC's COPPA FAQs. Another significant influence in this context is The Children’s Advertising Review Unit of BBB National Programs (CARU), who publish guidelines which are 'widely recognized industry standards; their Compliance Warning regarding the use of AI in children's advertising and data is here - May 1, 2024. How is advertising to kids different? (audio July 12, 2023) from BBB National Programs 'discusses the nuances of monitoring this evolving marketplace.' The Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative (CFBAI) is another of the BBB's national programs; its participants undertake to advertise only products that meet CFBAI’s Uniform Nutrition Criteria - 2021 annual report here. Sitting alongside that programme is the CCAI, the Children’s Confection Advertising Initiative, whose participants publicly commit not to engage in child-directed advertising and not to advertise in elementary schools. A useful summary of issues in this children's rules territory is from Davis+Gilbert/ GALA December 7, 2023.
Some cases, commentary and news
Enhanced Child/ Teen Privacy Laws Should Put Businesses on Alert
Venable LLP/ Lex May 23, 2024
The Evolution of Advertising in the Children’s Space
BBB National Programs. May 14, 2024. Audio
What Every Company Should Know about Child & Teen Privacy in 2024
Venable LLP/ Lex March 15, 2024
KOSA & COPPA Updates. Keller & Heckman/ Lex March 6, 2024
Federal Children’s Privacy Requirements to Be Updated*
Squire, Patton Boggs Feb 27, 2024
Explainer: COPPA Rule Proposed Changes; BBB Jan 3, 2024
LA County takes on plastics makers; NY dismissal signals hurdles
DLA Piper November 19, 2024 (see below)
NY Court Dismisses NYAG's Green Lawsuit v. Pepsi
GALA November 6, 2024
Venables on green claims (podcast) October 25, 2024
Understanding Green Claims in Advertising Loeb & Loeb Oct 3, 2024
Greenwashing Lawsuit against Airline Preempted Under ADA*
Reed Smith/ Lex August 23, 2024
Coca-Cola back in the dock. FKK&S September 2, 2024
DLA Piper's Aug 2024 Environmental Advertising Claims Guide includes the US
The legislation most frequently engaged in what is busy legal territory is Section 5 of the FTC Act, or its state counterparts. The core related (non-binding, but frequentlyreferenced in actions) guidance is FTC's Guides for the Use of Environmental Marketing Claims, aka the 'Green Guides', which are from October 2012 and in the process of update. Helpful commentary and guidance on the issue here from Holland and Knight June 29, 2023.
Can You Make a "Recyclable" Claim if Recycling Facilities Accept the Product, But Don't Actually Recycle it? linked here is a helpful example from Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz August 10, 2022, then countered in October 2022 by What Does "Recyclable" Really Mean? Court's Recent Opinion Diverges From FTC Guidance, the Northern District of Illinois holding that 'recyclable' does not require an understanding of the ability to recycle, just whether the product can be. Some consistency from the Northern District of California over a potential class action lawsuit against Coke's 100% recyclable claims (courtesy of GALA July 31, 2023) and an ongoing case against Colgate reported by Davis Wright Tremaine September 14, 2023 and more recently FKK&S commentary Feb 11, 2024. California's October 2021 SB343 bill re environmental advertising and criteria for recycling claims, including the use of the chasing arrows' symbol, is supported in January 2024 by CalRecycle's 'material characterization study' - commentary and access to the study here from GALA. The SEC, whose principal role is to protect investors, recently settled a greenwashing action against Keurig/ Dr. Pepper whose annual reports did not fully disclose recyclabilty aspects of its K-cup pods, as reported here by Proskauer Rose/ Lex September 17, 2024.
Voluntary Carbon Markets Joint Policy Statement and Principles. Covington/ Lex commentary here May 31, 2024
Back to California: New California Law Requires Disclosures When Making Certain Environmental Claims from Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz/ Lex October 20, 2023 relates to 'net zero' or 'carbon neutral' claims and the supporting information that must be carried on websites from January 1, 2024. See update above and Making Green Claims? Keep in Mind New State Laws from Venable/ Lex Feb 5, 2024. Is Farm-Raised Fish "Sustainably Sourced"? from FKK&S September 2022 includes an important discussion on the use of the 'sustainable' term (not defined/ described in the Green Guides) and New Court Decision Regarding "Carbon Neutral" Advertising from Loeb & Loeb Jan 16, 2024 is in similarly sensitive territory and potentially deep water for Evian - maybe not so deep; earlier GALA commentary on the same case here and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius perspective here Feb 8, 2024.
Self-regulatory measures include a section 36 on environmental and provenance claims, the former of which reads 'Advertisers should avoid broad, unqualified environmental claims such as “green,” or “eco-friendly.” Other claims such as “degradable,” “recycled,” and “non-toxic,” should only be used when substantiated and properly qualified. See relevant Weiman cleaning products 'eco-friendly' and 'non-toxic' claims case here March 15, 2023 from BBB. Environmental certifications and seals of approval may be used if properly issued. Additional disclosures are needed if not issued by an independent third-party. Click here for specifics.
FTC final rule bans fake reviews & testimonials FTC 8/14
Venable on the above here 8/16
FTC Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising
FTC's Endorsement Guides: What People Are Asking
FTC Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers
Some more commentary, guidance and rulings
FTC fines car cos $10M; calls out influencers and endorsers
Venable LLP/ Lex August 6, 2024
Cameo Multistate Settlement re Endorsements. GALA July 28, 2024
BBB Can you read the fine print? Audio. July 10, 2024
Endorsement Guides - a year later. Hall Render July 17, 2024
Updated Endorsement Guides: 10 Key Takeaways. InfoLawGroup LLP
The BBB Advertising Code, set out in our following content section B, carries a number of rules related to comparisons, especially articles 2-5 and 12, 13 on price issues and articles 27 on superiority claims, comparatives, disparagement, 28 on objective superlative claims, and 29: subjective claims – puffery.
Some commentary and cases
Challenging Competitors’ Advertising. Venable April 15, 2024
NAD & Gatorade & BodyArmor Baker Hostetler Feb 14, 2024
Trash Talking Your Competitors: How Far Can You Go?
Trash Talk: Part 2. FKK&S Dec 1 and 5, 2023
NAD and Dr. Squatch. BBB/ NAD December 5, 2023
Court Downs Comparative Advertising and Copyright Claim, Follows with a Made in USA Chaser*
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP August 16, 2023
NAD 2024 recap Sept 19, 2024 Baker Hostetler
There's a robust, well-resourced self-regulatory organisation (SRO), the Better Business Bureau, an independent, non-profit organisation which operates in much the same way as most SROs in Europe, albeit the BBB scope is broader than those; their advertising programmes are here. BBB publish a significant Advertising Code set out in our content section B, but the real action is from their unit The National Advertising Division, widely known as NAD, which 'has become the leading voice in providing guidance for truthful and transparent advertising.' Their database of decisions is under the auspices of BBB National Programs, which provides summaries of all case decisions from the National Advertising Division (NAD), National Advertising Review Board (NARB), Children’s Advertising Review Unit (CARU), Direct Selling Self-Regulatory Council (DSSRC), and Digital Advertising Accountability Program (DAAP). This piece - Nuts and Bolts of NAD Proceedings from Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP November 16, 2022 - is a helpful insight to how NAD works and the same firm's Hot Topics in Advertising Claim Substantiation of April 23, 2024 reports on a session with BBB that focused on NAD processes, sustainability and substantiation testing issues.
'Diversity washing' is the new greenwashing
Cooley Pubco/ Lex January 23, 2023
Expanding Accountability for DEIB in National Advertising
BBB National Programs Inc. September 2022
The above is helpful input to this issue as it includes reference to much of the research and debate around this sensitive topic. The National Advertising Division, part of the BBB's national programmes, has been consulting with regulators around the world including the ASA in the U.K. and 'beginning today, September 19, 2022, NAD joins CARU in holding advertisers accountable for advertising that portrays or encourages misleading and harmful social stereotyping, prejudice, or discrimination.' CARU (the Children's Advertising Review Unit, another of BBB's programmes) has recently begun monitoring child-directed advertising under their (relatively) new guidelines (published August 2021) and in that context now hold advertisers accountable for advertising that portrays or encourages misleading and harmful social stereotyping, prejudice, or discrimination. This Primark case related to gender sterotyping presentation on kids' clothes; this Moose Toys case finds that the advertiser presented both gender and racial stereotyping. NAD’s procedures are now revised to expressly recognise that its responsibility to analyse questions involving the truth or accuracy of national advertising includes “national advertising that is misleading or inaccurate due to its portrayal or encouragement of negative harmful social stereotyping, prejudice, or discrimination.” Commentary from GALA here. Latest NAD case related to Magic Tavern's 'Project Makeover' videogame here, courtesy of BBB July 28, 2023 and Terri Seligman of FKK&S restrained commentary on it here. The advertiser was required to take steps to request removal of ad content from third party unaffiliated websites.
This section to be built over coming weeks; ready Q3 2024. Meanwhile:
Some Last-Minute Advertising Tips for Black Friday
Frankfurt Kurnit Nov 27, 2024
Olympics Advertising - Don’t be Ambushed by Rule 40
Knobbe Martens July 18, 2024
The FTC Weighs In Again on “Up To” Claims
FKK&S July 9, 2024
When Great Promotion Ideas Go Wrong: The Aftermath
FKK&S May 10, 2024
Basics of Prize Promotions and Cause-Related Marketing
Presentation by Venable LLP Feb 7, 2024
Advanced Sweepstakes and Promotions
Venable LLP/ Lex March 5, 2024
Federal Agencies Increase Focus on Pricing Enforcement
Venable September 19, 2024
Drip Pricing, Surcharging, and the Push for “Total Price” Disclosures
Venable LLP May 17, 2024
Planning to advertise a fictitious former price? FKK&S May 15, 2024
California's Price Transparency Law. In force July 1, 2024
Venable's commentary on above May 15, 2024
Q&A: online advertising in USA
Linklaters LLP September 24, 2024
Ad Watchers: The best subject in advertising law: Is it puffery?
BBB National Programs Inc June 5 2024. Audio
Stay ADvised: Brand Protection & Advertising Law News. Davis Wright Tremaine LLP May 4, 2023
Above carries some interesting stuff on review sites, pricing and even NAD processes
In brief: prohibited and controlled advertising in USA. Crowell & Moring LLP/ Lex March 12, 2024
From the same company, same date Misleading advertising in the U.S.A.
Do you have a 'reasonable basis' for your advertising claims? Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC. November 29, 2022
Key Takeaways | Advertising and Marketing. McDermott Will & Emery/ Lex Feb 22, 2023
Covers basic requirements, social media engagement, consumer reviews and promotions
Advertising & Marketing in the USA Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz April 20, 2022
Email marketing in the crosshairs. Venable Oct 8, 2024 (audio)
FTC Issues Report on Data Practices of Social
Media and Video Streaming Services. Venable Sept 25, 2024
Legal and Privacy Considerations for Targeted Marketing
Wilson Elser September 3, 2024
A new path for Privacy Sandbox on the web July 22, 2024
Meta’s Ad-Free Subscription Violates Competition Law
Adam Satariano NYT July 1, 2024
Above bullets courtesy of Crowell & Moring LLP March 28, 2023, except the final bullets from the BBB and Gibson Dunn
DLA Piper Global Influencer guide Coke's aspirational claims are not actionable FKK&S/ Lex November 20, 2022 Meta’s Ad Practices Ruled Illegal Under E.U. Law. Jan Proposal for a Directive on Green Claims Cheat sheet EU Digital Acts April 23, 2023 Green Initiatives mainly in Europe April 2023 Our assembly of some key EU 'green' requirements A brief guide to EU institutions. April 25, 2023 Self-regulation globally. FKK&S April 27, 2023 EASA Influencer Disclosure pan-Europe July 2023 EU Influencer Legal Hub. Posted October 2023 |
Council Influencer conclusions May 14, 2024 Bird & Bird on the above May 31, 2024 IAB Europe commitments, policy principles 2024-29 Osborne Clarke Aug 29 commentary on above here IMCO September 2024 newsletter Sept 30, 2024 Emerging Advertising Law Issues in Asia Pacific GALA September 24, 2024 (Aus, India, Japan, NZ) Quarterly report from Global Advocate Nov 22, 2024 Markets UK, France, Neths, China, EU EASA Policy Newsletter November 22, 2024 Topics Health/alcohol/ WHO, Digital agenda, AVMSD & minors, Online harm, AI EASA Policy newsletter Dec 2024 Topics New staffing in EC structures, Polish presidency, In-game marketing, Green Claims, ADR GALA Year in Review Dec 10, 2024 Countries Canada South Africa, Slovakia, Mexico, Turkey, India |
* Recommended read
New ICC Code September 19, 2024
Press release here and key changes here
French trans November 7, 2024, SW here
EU to re-open, merge CSRD, CS3D & Taxonomy
REP November 20, 2024
TEMU challenged by CPC network (FR)
EC Digital Fitness Check published Oct 3, 2024
Lewis Silkin on above here (scroll down)
Recycling claims mislead consumers:
legal analysis for EU & UK markets Client Earth Oct 2, 2024
AI
The AI Convention CSC Sept 12, 2024 here
EASA newsletter update AI legislation Aug 2024
AI is Everywhere - What about advertising?
BBB National Programs Aug 7, 2024 (audio)
AI Global Regulatory Update. Eversheds Sutherland Feb 22, 2024
EU AI Act: first regulation on artificial intelligence. June 2023
Visual summary of the EU's AI Act's risk levels here
Round up of recent green claims. RPC Dec 10, 2024
Greenwashing Regulations in the Fashion Industry
White & Case Nov 25, 2024. FR, UK, US, DE, AUS
Greenwashing in the EU, France and the UK
Addleshaw Goddard/ Lex November 11, 2024
Hague Court of Appeal: Shell win 2nd round v Milieudefensie
Burges Salmon November 14, 2024 (see below)
Stichting Milieudefensie v. Shell. Freshfields November 6, 2024
There's an almost constant barrage of new and developing rules and regulations all around the world on this issue and especially in Europe, which is where we start. We think it's helpful first to distinguish between 'consumer' rules i.e. those that apply to business-to-consumer communications, and 'corporate' rules, which are those that apply to corporate 'ESG' reporting and financial services sector to investors, though the former ad rules will also apply to the financial sector when they advertise (the corporate reporting and due diligence rules don't per se apply in advertising, but we include them later so as to complete 'the green picture'). Anyway, consumer rules first as that's where most of our interests lie. In Europe, you need to be aware in particular of two directives driving the commercial communications elements of the 'Green deal' agenda:
1. The 'Empco' Directive 2024/825, full title and directive here, which was in force from March 2024, meaning that member states have until September 2026 to implement. Basically, and for our purposes, the Directive is an amendment of the seminal UCPD 2005/29/EC which forms the cornerstone of consumer protection rules in Europe. New environmentally-specific clauses are added to the 'blacklist' and e.g self-certification is banned. There's a good summary here from Taylor Wessing. Clauses are placed in our following content section B.
2. The Green Claims Directive. The Commission pages on the proposed new law, which has new requirements for substantiation and verification of green claims, are here. The European Parliament is expected to reach final agreement before the end of 2024 update here Dec 10, 2024 from IMCO Internal Market and Consumer protection European Parliamentary Committee; there's likely to be an extended implementation period. A good June 2024 summary here from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and EASA's update from December 2024 here
Navigating the increasing scrutiny of green claims
Slaughter and May November 19, 2024. EU, UK. Audio
Standards for Claims of “Carbon Neutral” and “Climate Friendly”
Formosan Brothers October 4, 2024
UK / EU / International ESG Regulation monthly round-up
Hogan Lovells July 2024 pub'd Aug 9, 2024
Katjes 'Climate Neutral' & Green Claims Globally
Herbert Smith Freehills/ Lex July 10, 2024
Update Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive Transposition
Ropes & Gray December 20, 2024
CSDDD FAQs Proskauer October 4, 2024
FAQs on the implementation of the EU corporate sustainability reporting rules
From the Commission August 7, 2024. Ropes & Gray unpack them here
As this aspect of the green deal is not directly ad-related and as there's so much ground to cover, we've linked the information here
This analysis of the four key directives from White & Case July 8, 2024 is helpful in explaining their roles and see also Regulation Across Jurisdictions from Sidley Austin July 17, 2024
Understanding consumer law when conducting influencer marketing
campaigns in the EU and UK. BCLP October 7, 2024
This is a high profile and somewhat controversial (in regulatory terms) marketing technique that’s deployed right across the world. Most jurisdictions, in Europe at any rate, publish specific rules or guidelines, be they from statutory consumer protection authorities increasingly involved or, more frequently, self-regulatory organisations. The big and consistent issue is obviously identification when a post is an ad, when it's been incentivised in some way; less consistent is the way that authorities require that identification to be made, so check the rules/ guidelines in each country. A number including the US and Canada, Belgium, France, Italy, The Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Australia and China have been assembled by the admirable DLA Piper in their Global Influencer Guide published 2022. For other international rules/ guidelines see ICPEN's Guidelines for Digital Influencers, which dates back to 2016 and the IAB's 2018 Content & Native Disclosure Good Practice Guidelines. August 7, 2024 GALA discuss ARPP's (French self-reg organisation) Certificate of Responsible Influence here and EASA's (the European self-regulatory network) expansion of that is set out here.
The European Commission got interested some time ago and has issued various edicts/ hubs/ guidelines, as is its wont:
The Commission publish The Influencer Legal hub 'These resources are for anyone making money through creating social media content.' and 'The information in the Influencer Legal Hub reflects the position of the Consumer Protection Cooperation Network which adopted the 5 Key Principles on Social Media Marketing Disclosures.' On May 14, 2024, the EU Council approved ‘Conclusions on ways to support influencers as online content creators in the EU.’ Bird&Bird on that here June 12.
In the US, the key rule maker is the FTC (Federal Trade Commission, a government agency), which issues a number of guidelines, the most important of which are:
Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising
Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers
FTC Requirements For Influencers: Guidelines and Rules
Termly Feb 2, 2024 published FTC Requirements For Influencers: Guidelines and Rules, a good summary by platform
In self-regulation, the National Advertising Division (NAD) of the Better Business Bureau (BBB) make available a number of cases here; the BBB's ad code is here, clause 30 Testimonials and Endorsements. The key issue, defined by FTC and deployed by NAD, is any 'material connection' between advertiser and influencer and the adequacy of its disclosure, which must be 'clear and conspicuous.' See the US 'general rules' database on this website for more.
ASCI's June 2021 Guidelines for Influencer advertising in digital media (link to a downloadable pdf). Additionally, from the CCPA's Guidelines for Prevention of Misleading Advertisements and Endorsements 2022 (CCPA guidelines): 14. Disclosure of material connection (the same term used by ASCI). 'Where there exists a connection between the endorser and the trader, manufacturer or advertiser of the endorsed product that might materially affect the value or credibility of the endorsement and the connection is not reasonably expected by the audience, such connection shall be fully disclosed in making the endorsement.' In January 2023 the Department of Consumer Affairs, who administer the Consumer Protection Act, issued 'Endorsement know-hows' on when and how to disclose a 'material relationship.' Commentary from SS Rana/ Lex here. Additional Influencer Guidelines for Health and Wellness Celebrities, Influencers and Virtual Influencers August 10, 2023 by the Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) is here. Summary of Influencer rules from Kan & Krishme/ GALA December 7, 2023 is here.
The latest ICC Code was published September 18, 2024
The code is structured in two main sections: General Provisions and Chapters. General Provisions sets out fundamental principles and other broad concepts that apply to all marketing in all media. Code chapters apply to specific marketing areas, including Sales Promotions (A) Sponsorship (B) Direct Marketing & Digital Marketing Communications (C) Environmental Claims in Marketing Communications (D) and a new chapter Teens and Children (E). The Code 'should also be read in conjunction with other current ICC codes, principles and framework interpretations in the area of marketing and advertising':
ICC Guide for Responsible Mobile Marketing Communications
Mobile supplement to the ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Interest Based Advertising
ICC Framework for Responsible Marketing Communications of Alcohol
ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Online Behavioural Advertising
ICC Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communications (2021)
ICC Framework for Responsible Food and Beverage Marketing Communication
Key rules are set out in the following content section B and channel section C, as applicable
Lawyer commentary
Kids and Teens Online Safety and Privacy Roundtable
Baker Mckenzie July 26, 2023. Canada UK and USA. Video
EU: Two Key Decisions Highlight Issues When Handling Children's Data
Collyer Bristow/Lex 21 June, 2023
The rules are both 'horizontal', i.e. they apply across product sectors, and the ICC also publish 'vertical' sector-specific framework rules such as those for Alcohol, or Food and Beverages (as linked above). While these rules are referenced in the sections that follow, we don't extract them in full as these product sectors are covered by specific databases on this website. These sector rules in particular need to be read with a) the general rules that apply to all product sectors and b) the specific legislation and self-regulation that frequently surrounds regulation-sensitive sectors. Channel rules from the ICC Code, such as those for OBA, are shown within the relevant sub-heads under our channel section C, together with the applicable European legislation.
Issue or channel | Key European legislation and clauses |
Cookies |
The EU ‘Cookies Directive’ 2009/136/EC
articles 5 and 7, which amended the E-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC
|
Electronic coms. Consent and Information |
Articles 5 (3) and 13
|
E-commerce; related electronic communications
|
Directive on electronic commerce 2000/31/EC of 8 June 2000 on certain legal aspects of information society services: http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2000/31/oj
Articles 5 and 6
|
Marketing Communications |
Directive 2005/29/EC on unfair business-to-consumer commercial practices
Articles 6, 7, 14 (amendments re comparative advertising), Annex I
December 2021 Commission guidance. See Omnibus Directive below; also amended by the Empco Directive see Environmental Claims section
|
Audiovisual media |
Directive 2010/13/EU concerning the provision of audiovisual media services (Audiovisual Media Services Directive; consolidated version) Directive 2018/1808 extended some rules into especially video-sharing platforms |
Data Processing |
Regulation 2016/679/EU on the processing of personal data (GDPR) |
Two relatively recent arrivals in EU digital platform regulation are the Digital Markets Act (implemented May 2023), aka Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 and its implementing provisions; Commission explanatory pages here and the Digital Services Act, pages here (implemented Feb 2024 for all platforms) aka Regulation 2022 (EU) 2022/2065. The first, as the name implies, is the EU's means of reining in the major digital 'gatekeepers' to ensure 'fairer and more contestable' markets. Somewhat obviously, the rules are aimed at platforms rather than advertisers and agencies, though there are implications for behaviourally targeted advertising. The DSA's main goal 'is to prevent illegal and harmful activities online and the spread of disinformation.' Loosely, this is the EU's Online Safety Act.
Shaping The Future Of Tech: Latest Updates On The Digital Markets Act
Quinn Emanuel/ Lex October 10, 2024
Rules for data processing, consent and information in digital communications in Europe are shown above under the Directives table and in our channel section
See the US general rules on this database for privacy/ processing rules in that jurisdiction. Below are some key legal commentaries on this topic
Data Privacy Insights To Take into 2025. BakerHostetler Dec 19, 2024
Countries: Australia, Canada, European Union, United Kingdom, USA
Meta to offer less personalized ads in Europe. Reuters Nov 12, 2024
Data Protection & Privacy: EU overview. Hunton Andrews Kurth July 3, 2024*
Consent or pay: one rule for some (large online platforms),
another rule for everyone else? Weil Gotshal & Manges 30/8/24
Meta’s Ad-Free Subscription Violates Competition Law
Adam Satariano NYT July 1, 2024
EDPB Opinion 8/2024 on Pay or Consent April 17. Lexia May 8
EDAA launches new solution to DSA ad transparency requirements
Report from the Commission to the European parliament and the Council on implementation
June 18, 2024. Commentary from Lewis Silikin July 9, 2024 here (See third entry)
Directive 2019/2161, known as the Omnibus Directive but more formally as (deep breath) Directive (EU) 2019/2161 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 November 2019 amending Council Directive 93/13/EEC and Directives 98/6/EC, 2005/29/EC and 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the better enforcement and modernisation of Union consumer protection rules sets out new information requirements for search rankings and consumer reviews, new pricing information in the context of automated decision-making and profiling of consumer behaviour, and price reduction information under the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC. More directly related to this database, and potentially significant for multinational advertisers, is the clause that amends article 6 (misleading actions) of the UCPD adding ‘(c) any marketing of a good, in one Member State, as being identical to a good marketed in other Member States, while that good has significantly different composition or characteristics, unless justified by legitimate and objective factors’. Recitals related to this clause, which provide some context, are here. Helpful October 2021 explanatory piece on the Omnibus Directive from A&L Goodbody via Lex here. Provisions were supposed to have been transposed and in force in member states by May 28, 2022, though there were several delays, now resolved.
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Sections B and C below set out the rules that are relevant to marketing communications from the directives above, together with the self-regulatory measures referenced under point 1 in this overview.
As this is reference work rather than current, we have made it available in back-up here
Advertising, Media and Brands Global Hot Topics Squire Patton Boggs Sept 16, 2024
1. BEER
1.1. Appeal to under LDAs
1.2. Influencers and digital media
1.3. Performance/ enhancement/ health claims
1.4. Indecency and sex and nudity
1.5. Religion and disparagement
1.6. College marketing
2. SPIRITS
2.1. Adult audiences and underage persons
2.2. Social responsibility
2.3. Examples of inappropriate content
3. WINE
3.1. Responsible content
3.2. Performance/ enhancement/ health claims
3.3. Appeal to under LDAs
3.4. Activities, cures, comparisons
3.5. Degradation, objectification, social issues
The Beer Institute Advertising and Marketing Code Updated September 2023
Below are the key extracts; for reasons of space, we have not included e.g. definitions.
Some of the sub-heads are ours
Channel, i.e. placement, rules are shown in our channel section C
Guidelines
a. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not portray, encourage, or condone drunk driving.
b. Although beer advertising and marketing materials may show beer being consumed (where permitted by media standards), advertising and marketing materials should not depict situations where beer is being consumed rapidly, excessively, involuntarily, as part of a drinking game, or because of a dare.
c. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not portray persons lacking control over their behavior, movement, or speech because of consuming beer or in any way suggest that such conduct is acceptable.
d. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not portray or imply illegal activity of any kind by an individual before, during, or after the individual consumes, purchases, or is served beer unless the portrayal or implication of illegal activity is a basic element or feature of a parody or spoof and is readily identifiable as such.
e. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not portray beer drinking before or during activities, which, for safety reasons, require a high degree of alertness or coordination.
f. Retail outlets where beer is served or sold portrayed in advertising should not be depicted as unkempt or unmanaged.
a. In considering whether beer advertising and marketing materials appeal primarily to persons below the legal drinking age, Brewers should consider all elements of the advertising and marketing materials, including but not limited to the following:
• Symbols
• Language
• Music
• Gestures
• Public figures
• Cartoon characters
• Groups or organizations
b. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not depict Santa Claus
c. Beer advertising and marketing materials will meet the following criteria:
i. Placements in magazines, newspapers, on television, radio, Digital Media, and through Social Media Influencers may only be made where the audience for the placement is expected to be at least 73.8% adults of legal drinking age. A placement will comply with this standard if the audience composition data, reviewed before the placement, meets, or exceeds the above percentage.
ii. A Brewer will take reasonable steps to restrict access to those users who have confirmed they are of legal drinking age on all Brewer-owned or controlled websites, branded social media channels, and other Digital Media, including downloadable content. Confirmation may vary depending upon available technology but includes either: 1) disclosure of a user’s full birth date or other method of active confirmation (i.e. age-gating) before viewing an advertisement by or communicating with a Brewer; or 2) restriction of the site to users of legal drinking age through registration.
iii. In addition to confirming that users are of legal drinking age, where practicable, a Brewer will post reminders at appropriate locations on all Brewer-owned or controlled websites, branded social media channels, and other Digital Media, including downloadable content, that the Brewer’s products are intended only for those of legal purchase age. Content that can be shared with others directly from the Brewer’s website or a Brewer-controlled third-party Digital Media site will also include a reminder that such content should not be shared with persons below the legal drinking age.
iv. A Brewer will require Social Media Influencers posting beer-branded content on social media platforms to implement age-gating measures, if available on such platforms, to restrict persons below the legal drinking age from accessing that beer-branded marketing and advertising. A brewer will also require Social Media Influencers to comply with the content-related guidelines of this Code.
v. “Digital Media” means all digital media programming, including but not limited to internet sites, mobile sites, commercial marketing e-mails, downloadable content, SMS and MMS messaging, social media sites, digitally-screened radio and television, and mobile applications.
vi. “Social Media Influencer” is a person who posts beer-branded content on a social media platform at a Brewer’s request. To avoid doubt, athletes, entertainers, celebrities, and other public figures generally recognizable to their intended audience are Social Media Influencers under the Code when they post beer-branded content at a Brewer’s request on social media platforms.
Placement audits, monitoring and parents
These paras placed under our channel section C
g. Models and actors employed to appear in beer advertising and marketing materials should be at least 25 years old, substantiated by proper identification, and reasonably appear to be of legal drinking age.
h. Public figures, such as athletes, entertainers, celebrities, and Social Media Influencers, who are generally recognizable to their intended audience may appear in beer advertising and marketing if they are of legal drinking age, reasonably appear to be of legal drinking age, and do not appeal primarily to persons below the legal drinking age.
i. Beer should not be advertised or marketed at any event where most of the audience is reasonably expected to be below the legal drinking age. This guideline does not prevent Brewers from placing advertising and marketing materials at or near facilities that are used primarily for adult-oriented events, but which occasionally may be used for an event where most attendees are below the legal drinking age.
j. No beer identification, including logos, trademarks, or names should be used or licensed for use on clothing, toys, games or game equipment, or other materials intended for use primarily by persons below the legal drinking age.
k. Advertising and marketing materials for the alcohol variant of any non-alcohol product, including but not limited to packaging, should be readily distinguishable from the advertising and marketing materials of the non-alcohol product to not confuse consumers about the alcohol nature of the alcohol variant. Advertising and marketing materials, including but not limited to displays, signage, and sampling, should not feature both the non-alcohol product and the alcohol variant
a. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not convey the impression that a beer has special or unique qualities if, in fact, it does not.
b. Beer advertising and marketing materials should make no scientifically unsubstantiated health claims.
c. Beer advertising and marketing materials may portray beer as a part of personal and social interactions and experiences, and a brand may be portrayed in appropriate surroundings as a superior choice to complement a particular occasion or activity. Beer advertising and marketing materials should not, however, claim or represent that individuals cannot obtain social, professional, educational, athletic, or financial success or status without beer consumption.
d. Beer advertising or marketing materials should not claim or represent that individuals cannot solve social, personal, or physical problems without beer consumption.
a. Should not contain language or images that are lewd or indecent in the context presented and the medium in which the material appears.
b. May contain romantic or flirtatious interactions but should not portray sexually explicit activity due to consuming beer.
a. Comparisons or claims distinguishing competing beers should be factual.
b. Beer advertising and marketing materials should never suggest that competing beers contain objectionable additives or ingredients.
a. On-campus promotions/sponsorships
i. Brewer sponsored events: Brewer sponsorship of on-campus events or promotions at on-campus licensed retail establishments will be limited to events conducted in accord with this Code, state law, and applicable institutional policies. In their content and implementation, company on-campus promotions and sponsorships will not encourage the irresponsible, excessive, underage, or otherwise illegal consumption of beer.
ii. Branded products: Beer-branded promotional products such as key chains, clothing, posters, or other tangible goods designed to promote specific beer brands, are intended only for adults of legal drinking age. Distribution of these items will therefore take place only at licensed retail establishments or where distribution is limited to those of legal drinking age, and otherwise conforms to applicable laws and institutional policies.
iii. Tastings: Tasting events at which product samples are provided should occur at licensed retail establishments or where distribution is limited to those of legal drinking age, or otherwise conforms to applicable laws and institutional policies
b. Brewer sales representatives
Brewer sales representatives who undertake sales calls on or near a college campus will be adults of legal drinking age and will conduct sales activities in conformity with this Code.
The Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS)
Code of Responsible Practices for Beverage Alcohol Advertising and Marketing May 2023 update.
The Code applies to all activities undertaken by DISCUS members to advertise and market distilled spirits, malt beverage, and wine brands, as well as non-DISCUS member activities to advertise and market distilled spirits. These activities include brand advertising, consumer communications, promotional events, packaging, labels, sponsorships, product placements, and distribution and sales materials.
In order to provide clarity and guidance, included herein is a non-exhaustive list of inappropriate content for beverage alcohol advertising and marketing materials that would violate the Code:
Wine Institute’s Code of Advertising Standards, adopted June 2011
3.1. Responsible content
a. The consumption of wine for the effects the alcohol content may produce.
b. Direct or indirect reference to alcohol content or extra strength, except as otherwise required by law or regulation.
c. Excessive drinking or persons who appear to be intoxicated or to be inappropriately uninhibited.
d. Any suggestion that excessive drinking or loss of control is amusing or a proper subject for amusement.
e. Any persons engaged in activities not normally associated with the moderate and responsible use of wine and a responsible lifestyle. Association of wine use in conjunction with feats of daring or activities requiring high degree of skill is specifically prohibited.
f. Wine in quantities inappropriate to the situation or inappropriate for moderate and responsible use.
g. Wine advertising should not depict or encourage illegal activity of any kind.
a. Wine shall not be presented as being essential to personal performance, social attainment, achievement, success or wealth.
b. The use of wine shall not be directly associated with social, physical or personal problem solving.
c. Wine shall not be presented as vital to social acceptability and popularity.
d. It shall not be suggested that wine is crucial for successful entertaining.
a. Show models and personalities as wine consumers in advertisements who are or appear to be under the legal drinking age. Such models shall be 25 years of age or older.
b. Use music, language, gestures, cartoon characters, or depictions, images, figures, or objects that are popular predominantly with children or otherwise specifically associated with or directed toward those below the legal drinking age, including the use of Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny.
c. Be presented as being related to the attainment of adulthood or associated with “rites of passage” to adulthood.
d. Suggest that wine is similar to another type of beverage or product (e.g., milk, soda, candy) having particular appeal to persons below the legal drinking age.
e. Use entertainment or sports celebrities having a particular appeal to persons below the legal drinking age. These selections should be substantiated by research demonstrating the basis for selection and periodically evaluated.
1. SELF-REGULATION
2. LEGISLATION
BBB Code of Advertising - Summary
Each section of the BBB Code of Advertising is summarized here to help you select the parts of the Code that apply to your specific situations. Please click at the end of a paragraph to access the entire section in detail or click here to go directly to the full text version
1. Basic Principles of the Code
Advertisements should be truthful, sincere offers to sell. Advertisers have a responsibility to have substantiation for all claims made and should be able to provide that substantiation upon request. All advertising that may mislead or deceive consumers should be avoided. Click here for specifics.
2. Comparative Price, Value and Savings Claims
When comparing prices to one’s own former selling price, current price of others, list prices, wholesale prices, or to items which are imperfect, it is important to make sure that consumers have all the necessary information to make an informed purchase. In addition, when offering a price match guarantee, the offer should be made in good faith, include all necessary information to take advantage of it and not place an unreasonable burden on the consumer who wants to take advantage of the offer. Click here for specifics.
3. Comparison with own former selling price
When comparisons are made to a former selling price, it must be to a bona fide price that has been offered for a reasonable time. If no sales had been made at that price, the advertiser must be sure that the markup on the higher priced product is similar to other products. Click here for specifics.
4. Comparison with current price of identical products or services sold by others
Advertisers must be reasonably certain that the compared to price does not appreciably exceed the price at which substantial sales for the identical product have been made. Click here for specifics.
5. Comparison with current price of comparable products or services sold by the advertiser or by others
Advertisers must be reasonably certain that the compared to price does not appreciably exceed the price at which substantial sales for the comparable product have been made. Click here for specifics.
6. List Prices
List prices comparisons may mislead the consumer where they are not to a price at which substantial sales of the product have occurred. An advertiser can use a list-price non-deceptively where it does not claim a savings, and includes certain disclosures. Click here for specifics.
7. Imperfects, Irregulars and Seconds
A price comparison to an imperfect product must include a clear disclosure, among others, that such comparison applies to the price of the product if perfect. Click here for specifics.
8. "Factory to you," "factory direct," "wholesaler," "wholesale price"
Such phrases are appropriate under certain circumstances. For example, the phrase “factory to you” can be used where the advertiser actually makes the product. The phrase “wholesale price” can be used if that price is comparable to the price charged by wholesalers. Click here for specifics.
9. Sales
Retailers can advertise “sales” where they are offering a significant reduction in price for a limited period of time. At the end of the sale period, retailers can, in good faith, convert the sale price to a new regular price if they no longer claim a savings. Click here for specifics.
10. "Emergency" or "Distress" sales
Emergency sales must be for a limited period of time, and only include products that are affected by the emergency. The reason given for the sale must be true. Advertisers stating they are closing out a particular product can do so where the advertiser will no longer carry that product. Click here for specifics.
11. "Up to" price savings claims
When advertising, for example, savings of "up to 40%," at least 10% of the items must be available at 40% off. Advertisers may want to include a disclosure of both the minimum and maximum savings available to provide more information to consumers. Click here for specifics.
12. Lowest Prices, Underselling claims
Advertisers should avoid making unqualified lowest prices claims. One appropriate qualification is to promise truthfully that the advertiser will meet or beat a lower price sold by others. Click here for specifics.
13. Price equalling, meeting competitors' prices
When advertisers offer a price match guarantee, the offer should be made in good faith, include all necessary information to take advantage of it, and not place unreasonable burdens on the consumer who wants to take advantage of the offer. Click here for specifics.
14. Free
Use of the word free includes a requirement, among others, that the “free” item actually is free. When offered with the purchase of another item, the free item should not be paid for by an increase in the regular price of the other item. Click here for specifics.
15. Trade-in Allowances
If an advertiser offers to accept a trade-in when a consumer purchases an item, the advertiser must disclose all terms for the offer clearly and conspicuously. Click here for specifics.
16. Credit
Offering credit to consumers comes with numerous requirements which must be met. In addition, if promising “easy credit,” or “guaranteed financing” or like terms, the consumer should receive what is promised. Click here for specifics.
17. Extra Charges
To avoid confusion, the existence of any extra charges (such as delivery, assembly, postage and handling, etc.) should be clearly and conspicuously disclosed in an advertisement in immediate conjunction with the price. Click here for specifics.
18. Negative Option Plans, Continuity Plans and Automatic Shipments
Advertisements for a product or service that include an offer to sell consumers additional goods or services under a negative option should disclose all material terms of the negative option. Advertisers should avoid making vague or unnecessarily long disclosures that might include contradictory language. Click here for specifics.
19. Bait Advertising and Selling
A “bait” offer is one where the advertiser does not intend to sell the product, but instead to lure the consumer in to switch them to another product, usually at a higher price. Advertisers should avoid such offers. Click here for specifics.
20. Warranties or Guarantees
When using the term “warranty” or “guarantee” the advertiser should clearly and conspicuously include a statement that the complete details of the warranty can be seen prior to the sale which could include putting it on the seller’s website. Advertisers should disclose any material limitations on a "satisfaction guarantee" or "money back guarantee" and define, for consumers, the meaning of claims such as "lifetime guarantee." Click here for specifics.
21. Layout and Illustrations
The illustrations and overall layout of advertising should enhance the consumer's understanding of the offers and accurately represent the featured products and services. Click here for specifics.
22. Asterisks
Asterisks can be used to provide additional information about the product or service. However, they should not be used to contradict or change the meaning of the original claim. Click here for specifics.
23. Abbreviations
Only commonly known abbreviations should be used in advertising. Click here for specifics.
24. Use or Condition Disclosures
Terms including “used,” “secondhand,” “rebuilt,” “reconditioned,” “as-is,” etc. have specific meaning. Advertisers should use them only in those circumstances and with appropriate disclosures. Click here for specifics.
25. "As-Is"
Advertisers must disclose clearly whenever they offer a product “as is.” Click here for specifics.
26. "Discontinued”
Advertisers must not describe products as “discontinued,” or by similar words unless the manufacturer has discontinued the product, or the retailer will discontinue offering it after clearing existing inventories. Click here for specifics.
27. Superiority Claims – Comparatives – Disparagement
Deceptively or falsely disparaging advertising of a competitor’s products or services must not be used. Comparisons should fairly reflect all aspects of the products or services equally. Click here for specifics.
28. Objective Superlative Claims
Claims that relate to tangible qualities and performance values of a product or service can be used when the advertiser has substantiation. An example of a claim requiring substantiation would be "#1 car sales in the city." Click here for specifics.
29. Subjective Claims – Puffery
Expressions of opinion or intangible qualities of a product or service do not need to be substantiated. Such claims include “we try harder” or “best food in the world.” Click here for specifics.
30. Testimonials and Endorsements
Advertisers should ensure that testimonials and endorsement are not misleading and represent the current opinion of the endorser. A consumer endorser’s experience should reflect what users generally achieve, unless there is a clear and conspicuous disclosure of what the expected results will be. Advertisers should not include claims in testimonials that they themselves cannot make and support. Click here for specifics.
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31. Rebates
Rebates are payments of money after the sale. Advertisers should clearly and conspicuously state the before-rebate cost as well as the amount of the rebate and include key terms that consumers need to know. Click here for specifics.
32. Business Name or Trade Style
Business names or trade styles should not contain words that would mislead the public. Words like “factory” or “wholesaler” should only be used under appropriate circumstances. Click here for specifics.
33. Contests and Games of Chance or Skill
Advertisers should publish clear, complete and concise contest rules and provide competent impartial judges to determine the winners. Contests that include the three elements of prize, chance and consideration (payment) are considered lotteries in violation of state and federal laws. Canadian law contains similar prohibitions. Click here for specifics.
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34. Claimed Results
Claims relating to performance and results should be backed up by reliable evidence. Click here for specifics.
35. Unassembled Products
Advertisers should disclose when merchandise requires partial or complete assembly by the consumer, e.g., "unassembled," "partial assembly required." Click here for specifics.
36. Environmental Benefit Claims
Advertisers should avoid broad, unqualified environmental claims such as “green,” or “eco-friendly.” Other claims such as “degradable,” “recycled,” and “non-toxic,” should only be used when substantiated and properly qualified. Environmental Certifications and seals of approval may be used if properly issued. Additional disclosures are needed if not issued by an independent third-party. Click here for specifics.
37. “Made in USA” Claims
"Made in USA," and similar terms used to describe the origin of a product must be truthful and substantiated. In general, all or virtually all of the product must be made in the USA. Qualified “Made in USA” claims can made be under certain circumstances and with appropriate disclosures. Click here for specifics.
38. “Product of Canada” and “Made in Canada” Claims
“Product of Canada," "Made in Canada" and similar terms used to describe the origin of a product must be truthful and substantiated. To make "Product of Canada” claims, virtually all of the product must be made in Canada. Where goods are partially made in Canada, “Made in Canada” claims can be made if appropriately qualified. Click here for specifics.
39. Native Advertising (Deceptively Formatted Advertisements)
Native Advertisements are created to resemble the design, style, and functionality of the media in which they are disseminated, which could make it difficult to distinguish between advertising and non-commercial content. Click here for specifics.
SELF-REGULATION; the 2024 ICC Code
1.1. General provisions
2.1. General provisions from the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (UCPD)
2.2 Specific pricing measures
2.2.1. Directive 98/6/EC - the Product Price Directive
2.2.2. Extracts from UCPD
2.4. The Empco Directive
2.5. The Green Claims Directive
1.1 General provisions
Basic principles (Art. 1)
Social responsibility (Art. 2)
Marketing communications should not:
Decency (Art. 3)
Honesty (Art. 4)
Truthfulness (Art. 5)
identification and transparency (Art. 7)
identity of the marketer (Art. 8)
Use of 'free' and 'guarantee' (Art. 10)
NEW ARTICLE
Presentation of the offer (Art. 11)
NEW ARTICLE
Automatic renewals (Art.12)
NEW ARTICLE
Use of “guarantee” (Art. 13)
Comparisons (Art. 14)
Exploitation of goodwill (Art. 15)
Imitation (Art. 16)
Denigration (Art. 17)
Testimonials (Art. 13)
Testimonials and endorsements; influencer marketing communications (Art. 18)
Portrayal or imitation of persons and references to personal property (Art. 19)
NEW ARTICLE
Children and teens (Art. 20)
For further specific rules, see Chapter E – Children and teens.
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Safety and health (Art. 21)
NEW ARTICLE
Environmental marketing communications should be so framed so as not to abuse to take advantage of consumers’ concern for the environment, nor exploit their possible lack of environmental knowledge;
D4. Comparisons
Article D6 – Claims regarding components and elements
D7. Certifications, signs and symbols
D6. Waste handling
D9. Responsibility
This sector has a separate database on this single topic. Access via the drop-down on the home page
We have not set out individual clauses below, therefore.
Applicable self-regulation
This sector has a separate database on this single topic. Access via the drop-down on the home page
Applicable self-regulation and legislation
This sector has a separate database on this single topic. Access via the drop-down on the home page of this website
Applicable self-regulation and legislation
Legislation
Article 22, AVMS Directive. Television advertising and teleshopping for alcoholic beverages shall comply with the following criteria:
2.1 General Provisions from the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC (UCPD)
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A02005L0029-20220528 (consolidated text 28/05/22)
Directive 2019/2161 amended the UCPD setting out some new information requirements for search rankings and consumer reviews, new pricing information in the context of automated decision-making and profiling of consumer behaviour (amending Directive 2011/83/EU, not shown below), and price reduction information under the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC. Potentially significant for multinational advertisers is the amerndment of article 6 of the UCPD, adding the clause (c) shown below in italics (as are other amends). Recitals related to this clause, which provide some context, are here. Helpful October 2021 explanatory piece on the Omnibus Directive from A&L Goodbody via Lex here.
Guidance
In December 2021, the European Commission issued Guidance on the interpretation and application of the UCPD, updating the 2016 version. This is a significant document that covers, for example, guidance on environmental claims, and references relevant case law from a number of countries. It is the definitive guidance on how to apply the most important consumer protection - as that relates to commercial communications - regulation in the EEA
Article 6. Misleading actions
1. A commercial practice shall be regarded as misleading if it contains false information and is therefore untruthful or in any way, including overall presentation, deceives or is likely to deceive the average consumer, even if the information is factually correct, in relation to one or more of the following elements, and in either case causes or is likely to cause him to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise:
(a) the existence or nature of the product;
(b) the main characteristics of the product, such as its availability, benefits, risks, execution, composition, accessories, after-sale customer assistance and complaint handling, method and date of manufacture or provision, delivery, fitness for purpose, usage, quantity, specification, geographical or commercial origin or the results to be expected from its use, or the results and material features of tests or checks carried out on the product;
(c) the extent of the trader's commitments, the motives for the commercial practice and the nature of the sales process, any statement or symbol in relation to direct or indirect sponsorship or approval of the trader or the product;
(d) the price or the manner in which the price is calculated, or the existence of a specific price advantage;
(e) the need for a service, part, replacement or repair;
(f) the nature, attributes and rights of the trader or his agent, such as his identity and assets, his qualifications, status, approval, affiliation or connection and ownership of industrial, commercial or intellectual property rights or his awards and distinctions;
(g) the consumer's rights, including the right to replacement or reimbursement under Directive 1999/44/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 May 1999 on certain aspects of the sale of consumer goods and associated guarantees (8), or the risks he may face.
2. A commercial practice shall also be regarded as misleading if, in its factual context, taking account of all its features and circumstances, it causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise, and it involves:
(a) any marketing of a product, including comparative advertising, which creates confusion with any products, trade marks, trade names or other distinguishing marks of a competitor;
(b) non-compliance by the trader with commitments contained in codes of conduct by which the trader has undertaken to be bound, where:
(i) the commitment is not aspirational but is firm and is capable of being verified, and
(ii) the trader indicates in a commercial practice that he is bound by the code.
(c) any marketing of a good, in one Member State, as being identical to a good marketed in other Member States, while that good has significantly different composition or characteristics, unless justified by legitimate and objective factors.
Article 7. Misleading omissions
1. A commercial practice shall be regarded as misleading if, in its factual context, taking account of all its features and circumstances and the limitations of the communication medium, it omits material information that the average consumer needs, according to the context, to take an informed transactional decision and thereby causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise.
2. It shall also be regarded as a misleading omission when, taking account of the matters described in paragraph 1, a trader hides or provides in an unclear, unintelligible, ambiguous or untimely manner such material information as referred to in that paragraph or fails to identify the commercial intent of the commercial practice if not already apparent from the context, and where, in either case, this causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise.
3. Where the medium used to communicate the commercial practice imposes limitations of space or time, these limitations and any measures taken by the trader to make the information available to consumers by other means shall be taken into account in deciding whether information has been omitted.
4. In the case of an invitation to purchase, the following information shall be regarded as material, if not already apparent from the context:
(a) the main characteristics of the product, to an extent appropriate to the medium and the product;
(b) the geographical address and the identity of the trader, such as his trading name and, where applicable, the geographical address and the identity of the trader on whose behalf he is acting
(c) the price inclusive of taxes, or where the nature of the product means that the price cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the manner in which the price is calculated, as well as, where appropriate, all additional freight, delivery or postal charges or, where these charges cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the fact that such additional charges may be payable;
(d) the arrangements for payment, delivery, performance and the complaint handling policy, if they depart from the requirements of professional diligence;
(e) for products and transactions involving a right of withdrawal or cancellation, the existence of such a right;
(f) for products offered on online marketplaces, whether the third party offering the products is a trader or not, on the basis of the declaration of that third party to the provider of the online marketplace.
4a. When providing consumers with the possibility to search for products offered by different traders or by consumers on the basis of a query in the form of a keyword, phrase or other input, irrespective of where transactions are ultimately concluded, general information, made available in a specific section of the online interface that is directly and easily accessible from the page where the query results are presented, on the main parameters determining the ranking of products presented to the consumer as a result of the search query and the relative importance of those parameters, as opposed to other parameters, shall be regarded as material. This paragraph does not apply to providers of online search engines as defined in point (6) of Article 2 of Regulation (EU) 2019/1150 of the European Parliament and of the Council.
5. Information requirements established by Community law in relation to commercial communication including advertising or marketing, a non-exhaustive list of which is contained in Annex II, shall be regarded as material.
6. Where a trader provides access to consumer reviews of products, information about whether and how the trader ensures that the published reviews originate from consumers who have actually used or purchased the product shall be regarded as material.
Commercial practices which are in all circumstances considered unfair
Marcoms-relevant only; see Empco amends below
1. Claiming to be a signatory to a code of conduct when the trader is not.
2. Displaying a trust mark, quality mark or equivalent without having obtained the necessary authorisation.
3. Claiming that a code of conduct has an endorsement from a public or other body which it does not have.
4. Claiming that a trader (including his commercial practices) or a product has been approved, endorsed or authorised by a public or private body when he/ it has not or making such a claim without complying with the terms of the approval, endorsement or authorisation.
5. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price without disclosing the existence of any reasonable grounds the trader may have for believing that he will not be able to offer for supply or to procure another trader to supply, those products or equivalent products at that price for a period that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable having regard to the product, the scale of advertising of the product and the price offered (bait advertising).
6. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price and then:
(a) refusing to show the advertised item to consumers; or
(b) refusing to take orders for it or deliver it within a reasonable time; or
(c) demonstrating a defective sample of it,
with the intention of promoting a different product (bait and switch).
7. Falsely stating that a product will only be available for a very limited time, or that it will only be available on particular terms for a very limited time, in order to elicit an immediate decision and deprive consumers of sufficient opportunity or time to make an informed choice.
9. Stating or otherwise creating the impression that a product can legally be sold when it cannot.
10. Presenting rights given to consumers in law as a distinctive feature of the trader's offer.
11. Using editorial content in the media to promote a product where a trader has paid for the promotion without making that clear in the content or by images or sounds clearly identifiable by the consumer (advertorial). This is without prejudice to Council Directive 89/552/EEC (1).
11a. Providing search results in response to a consumer’s online search query without clearly disclosing any paid advertisement or payment specifically for achieving higher ranking of products within the search results.
13. Promoting a product similar to a product made by a particular manufacturer in such a manner as deliberately to mislead the consumer into believing that the product is made by that same manufacturer when it is not.
16. Claiming that products are able to facilitate winning in games of chance.
17. Falsely claiming that a product is able to cure illnesses, dysfunction or malformations.
18. Passing on materially inaccurate information on market conditions or on the possibility of finding the product with the intention of inducing the consumer to acquire the product at conditions less favourable than normal market conditions.
19. Claiming in a commercial practice to offer a competition or prize promotion without awarding the prizes described or a reasonable equivalent.
20. Describing a product as ‘gratis’, ‘free’, ‘without charge’ or similar if the consumer has to pay anything other than the unavoidable cost of responding to the commercial practice and collecting or paying for delivery of the item.
21. Including in marketing material an invoice or similar document seeking payment which gives the consumer the impression that he has already ordered the marketed product when he has not.
22. Falsely claiming or creating the impression that the trader is not acting for purposes relating to his trade, business, craft or profession, or falsely representing oneself as a consumer
23b. Stating that reviews of a product are submitted by consumers who have actually used or purchased the product without taking reasonable and proportionate steps to check that they originate from such consumers.
23c. Submitting or commissioning another legal or natural person to submit false consumer reviews or endorsements, or misrepresenting consumer reviews or social endorsements, in order to promote products.
26. Making persistent and unwanted solicitations by telephone, fax, e-mail or other remote media except in circumstances and to the extent justified under national law to enforce a contractual obligation. This is without prejudice to Article 10 of Directive 97/7/EC and Directives 95/46/EC (2) and 2002/58/EC.
28. Including in an advertisement a direct exhortation to children to buy advertised products or persuade their parents or other adults to buy advertised products for them. This provision is without prejudice to Article 16 of Directive 89/552/EEC on television broadcasting.
31. Creating the false impression that the consumer has already won, will win, or will on doing a particular act win, a prize or other equivalent benefit, when in fact either:
2.2.1. Directive 98/6/EC on consumer protection in the indication of the prices of products offered to consumers
Article 2
For the purposes of this Directive:
(a) selling price shall mean the final price for a unit of the product, or a given quantity of the product, including VAT and all other taxes;
(b) unit price shall mean the final price, including VAT and all other taxes, for one kilogramme, one litre, one metre, one square metre or one cubic metre of the product or a different single unit of quantity which is widely and customarily used in the Member State concerned in the marketing of specific products;
(c) products sold in bulk shall mean products which are not pre-packaged and are measured in the presence of the consumer;
(d) trader shall mean any natural or legal person who sells or offers for sale products which fall within his commercial or professional activity;
(e) consumer shall mean any natural person who buys a product for purposes that do not fall within the sphere of his commercial or professional activity.
Article 3
1. The selling price and the unit price shall be indicated for all products referred to in Article 1, the indication of the unit price being subject to the provisions of Article 5. The unit price need not be indicated if it is identical to the sales price.
2. Member States may decide not to apply paragraph 1 to:
3. For products sold in bulk, only the unit price must be indicated;
4. Any advertisement which mentions the selling price of products referred to in Article 1 shall also indicate the unit price subject to Article 5.
Article 4
1. The selling price and the unit price must be unambiguous, easily identifiable and clearly legible. Member States may provide that the maximum number of prices to be indicated be limited;
2. The unit price shall refer to a quantity declared in accordance with national and Community provisions.
Where national or Community provisions require the indication of the net weight and the net drained weight for certain pre-packed products, it shall be sufficient to indicate the unit price of the net drained weight.
Article 5
1. Member States may waive the obligation to indicate the unit price of products for which such indication would not be useful because of the products' nature or purpose or would be liable to create confusion.
2. With a view to implementing paragraph 1, Member States may, in the case of non-food products, establish a list of the products or product categories to which the obligation to indicate the unit price shall remain applicable.
Article 6a
1. Any announcement of a price reduction shall indicate the prior price applied by the trader for a determined period of time prior to the application of the price reduction.
2. The prior price means the lowest price applied by the trader during a period of time not shorter than 30 days prior to the application of the price reduction.
3. Member States may provide for different rules for goods which are liable to deteriorate or expire rapidly.
4. Where the product has been on the market for less than 30 days, Member States may also provide for a shorter period of time than the period specified in paragraph 2.
5. Member States may provide that, when the price reduction is progressively increased, the prior price is the price without the price reduction before the first application of the price reduction.
Article 6
Misleading actions
1. A commercial practice shall be regarded as misleading if it contains false information and is therefore untruthful or in any way, including overall presentation, deceives or is likely to deceive the average consumer, even if the information is factually correct, in relation to one or more of the following elements, and in either case causes or is likely to cause him to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise:
(d) the price or the manner in which the price is calculated, or the existence of a specific price advantage.
Article 7
Misleading omissions
4. In the case of an invitation to purchase, the following information shall be regarded as material, if not already apparent from the context:
(a) the main characteristics of the product, to an extent appropriate to the medium and the product;
(b) the geographical address and the identity of the trader, such as his trading name and, where applicable, the geographical address and the identity of the trader on whose behalf he is acting;
(c) the price inclusive of taxes, or where the nature of the product means that the price cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the manner in which the price is calculated, as well as, where appropriate, all additional freight, delivery or postal charges or, where these charges cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the fact that such additional charges may be payable.
Annex I
5. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price without disclosing the existence of any reasonable grounds the trader may have for believing that he will not be able to offer for supply or to procure another trader to supply, those products or equivalent products at that price for a period that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable having regard to the product, the scale of advertising of the product and the price offered (bait advertising).
6. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price and then:
(a) refusing to show the advertised item to consumers; or
(b) refusing to take orders for it or deliver it within a reasonable time; or
(c) demonstrating a defective sample of it,
with the intention of promoting a different product ('bait and switch').
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A02010L0013-20181218
Content rules excluding alcohol (see pt. 1.5 above) in audiovisual commercial communications
Article 9
The AVMS Directive includes some further new provisions from Directive 2018/1808 which may have implications for food and alcohol advertising in particular. See the extracted clauses here, in particular article 4
Article 1
Amendments to Directive 2005/29/EC
(1) in Article 2, the first paragraph is amended as follows: (b) the following points are added:
(2) Article 6 is amended as follows: (a) in paragraph 1, point (b) is replaced by the following:
(b) in paragraph 2, the following points are added:
(3) in Article 7, the following paragraph is added:
(4) Annex I is amended in accordance with the Annex to this Directive. Annex I to Directive 2005/29/EC is amended as follows:
(1) the following point is inserted:
(2) the following points are inserted:
(3) the following point is inserted:
‘
(4) the following points are inserted:
Taken from the Beer Institute Advertising and Marketing Code (2023)
In this section we show first some general channel rules, i.e. those that apply to all channels, followed by rules specific to the channel header
Auditing, monitoring and parents
From the Code's guidelines, Section 3. Placed in b/u here as requirements are essentially administrative
a. Case-by-Case Approval: Brewers will approve or reject product placement in specific projects or scenes on a case-by-case basis, based upon the information provided by the movie or television program’s producers.
b. Portrayal of drinking and driving: Brewers discourage the illegal or irresponsible consumption of their products in connection with driving. Consistent with that philosophy, Brewers will not approve product placement where the characters engage in illegal or irresponsible consumption of their products in connection with driving.
c. Underage drinking: Brewers discourage underage drinking and do not intend for their products to be purchased or consumed illegally by people below the legal drinking age. Consistent with that philosophy, Brewers will not approve a product placement that portrays the purchase or consumption of their products by persons below the legal drinking age.
d. Primary appeal to persons below the legal drinking age: Brewers discourage underage drinking and do not intend for their products to be purchased or consumed illegally by people below the legal drinking age. Consistent with that philosophy, Brewers will not approve product placement where the primary character(s) are below the legal drinking age or the primary theme(s) are, because of their content or presentation, specifically attractive to persons below the legal drinking age beyond the general attractiveness such themes have for persons of legal drinking age.
e. Portraying alcoholism/alcohol abuse: Brewers do not want their products to be abused. Consistent with that philosophy, Brewers will not approve product placement where characters use their products irresponsibly or abusively or where alcoholism is portrayed, unless the depiction supports a responsible-use message.
f. Measured media: Brewers will not request or approve a product placement in any measured media unless the placement is consistent with the Buying Guidelines that accompany this Code and at least 73.8% of the audience is reasonably expected to be adults of legal drinking age.
1. For (a) existing national network, syndicated and cable programs and (b) new or unmeasured national network syndicated and cable programs, Brewers will use national audience composition data for the program or daypart being bought.
2. For new or unmeasured national network, syndicated and cable programs, Brewers will use national audience composition data for comparable programs or dayparts.
3. For existing local programs, Brewers will use local or regional audience composition data for the program or daypart being bought or, if local or regional audience composition data is not available, national audience
composition data for the program or daypart being bought.
4. For new or unmeasured local programs, Brewers will use national audience composition data for comparable programs or daypart being bought.
For guidance on streaming television, refer to the Digital Media Guidelines section.
(These are placed under the Online Commercial Communications header)
i. AM Drive – Monday thru Friday 6:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
ii. Midday – Monday thru Friday 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
iii. PM Drive – Monday thru Friday 3:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
iv. Evening – Monday thru Friday 7:00 p.m. – 12:00 midnight
v. Monday through Friday 12:00 midnight – 6:00 a.m.
vi. Saturday & Sunday 6:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
vii. Saturday & Sunday 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
viii. Saturday & Sunday 3:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
ix. Saturday & Sunday 7:00 p.m. – 12:00 midnight
x. Saturday & Sunday 12:00 midnight – 6:00 a.m.
Each hour of any other time period, even if adjacent to one of the foregoing Nielsen standard dayparts or time periods, should be independently verified as LDA Compliant using Nielsen’s 21+ Composition Report.
A. Adult Audiences and Underage Persons
From 'Responsible Placement Provisions' of the 2023 DISCUS Code
Taken from the DISCUS Code 'Other Responsible Advertising provisions'
B. Product Placements
*From Appendix B - Responsible Media Buying Guidelines
Applicable to all media: [A] Media Placement and the 73.8% LPA Standard
[B] Compliance Standards Per Medium
i) Use of a syndicated data source: Purchase by program (or, if program specific data are unavailable, by daypart/timeslot) using nationwide “2+” audience composition data, such as national Nielsen data, based upon the last two quarters of such data.
ii) For new programs, data for similar programs or time periods should be referenced.
i) Scope: The radio buying guideline applies to all paid and bonus spots, including rotators, negotiated and agreed upon mentions, liners, tags, billboards, and any other type of announcement.
ii) Use of a syndicated data source: For audited radio stations, purchase by daypart using the Average Quarter Hour (AQH) Persons measurement in Nielsen Audio quarterly reports based upon the last two quarters of such data (where seasonal fluctuations are evident, prior year data also should be taken into account if available):
(a) Time periods in which radio spots may be placed shall be in the following Nielsen Audio standard dayparts or other time periods as specified below:
Per beer above
(b) More specific data than daypart can be used for audience composition such as, for example, narrowing the a.m. drive hours from 6:00 a.m.-10:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m.-10:00 a.m. to determine audience
composition.
(c) Any period of time adjacent to a Nielsen Audio standard daypart that is also purchased, provided that each additional hour independently satisfies the Code provision that 73.8% of the audience composition is LPA+.
(d) Any period of two or more consecutive hours, provided that each hour independently satisfies the Code provision that 73.8% of the audience composition is LPA+.
iii) Unmeasured stations: If the station is not measured by a syndicated data source (e.g., a new station or a station not measured by Nielsen Audio), data provided by the station regarding the target listenership audience or audience composition data from time periods for comparable stations in comparable markets.
From the Wine Institute’s Code of Advertising Standards
Responsible placement; channel-header relevant rules only
a. Appear in children or juvenile magazines, newspapers, television programs, radio programs or other media specifically oriented to persons below the legal drinking age.
b. Appear in any media where more than 26.2% of the audience is underage (determined by using reliable, up-to-date audience composition data).
a. Members shall be mindful that online advertising may be viewed by underaged individuals and shall take steps to ensure that online content remains consistent with provisions of this code.
a. Product placement decisions shall be made on a case-by-case basis based upon the information about the movie, television program, music video, or video game available at the time provided by the project’s producers;
b. Product placements shall not be made where the characters engage in illegal or irresponsible consumption of wine in connection with driving, where characters use wine irresponsibly or abusively, or where alcoholism is portrayed; and
c. Product placements shall not portray the purchase or consumption of wine by persons who are below the legal drinking age.
4. To the extent feasible, wine advertising shall not be placed in or directly adjacent to television or radio programs or print media that dramatize or glamorize over-consumption or inappropriate use of alcoholic beverages.
EASA Jan 2024 update on the AVMSD
Article B12: Media sponsorship
Note: The AVMS Directive is the source of rules for e.g. programme sponsorship and product placement. Observation of those rules is largely the responsibility of the media owners, so we don’t set them out below. They are available from the linked AVMS Directive (consolidated version following 2018/1808 amends, shown in italics below) and under our General sector. Clauses below are those most relevant to advertising content
1. Member States shall ensure that audiovisual commercial communications provided by media service providers under their jurisdiction comply with the following requirements:
2. Member States and the Commission shall encourage media service providers to develop codes of conduct regarding inappropriate audiovisual commercial communications, accompanying or included in children’s programmes, of foods and beverages containing nutrients and substances with a nutritional or physiological effect, in particular those such as fat, trans-fatty acids, salt/sodium and sugars, excessive intakes of which in the overall diet are not recommended. See 4. below
2. Audiovisual commercial communications for alcoholic beverages in on-demand audiovisual media services, with the exception of sponsorship and product placement, shall comply with the criteria set out in Article 22.
3. Member States shall encourage the use of co-regulation and the fostering of self-regulation through codes of conduct as provided for in Article 4a (1) regarding inappropriate audiovisual commercial communications for alcoholic beverages. Those codes shall aim to effectively reduce the exposure of minors to audiovisual commercial communications for alcoholic beverages.
4. Member States shall encourage the use of co-regulation and the fostering of self-regulation through codes of conduct as provided for in Article 4a (1) regarding inappropriate audiovisual commercial communications, accompanying or included in children's programmes, for foods and beverages containing nutrients and substances with a nutritional or physiological effect, in particular fat, trans-fatty acids, salt or sodium and sugars, of which excessive intakes in the overall diet are not recommended.
Those codes shall aim to effectively reduce the exposure of children to audiovisual commercial communications for such foods and beverages. They shall aim to provide that such audiovisual commercial communications do not emphasise the positive quality of the nutritional aspects of such foods and beverages.
5. Member States and the Commission may foster self-regulation, for the purposes of this Article, through Union codes of conduct as referred to in Article 4a (2).
Article 4a is found here
Cinema
Print guidelines
Outdoor signage
A. Adult Audiences and Underage Persons
From 'Responsible Placement Provisions' of the 2023 DISCUS Code
*From Appendix B - Responsible Media Buying Guidelines
Applicable to all media: [A] Media Placement and the 73.8% LPA Standard
[B] Compliance Standards Per Medium
3. Magazines
a) A demographic survey of subscribers should be conducted periodically for established magazines and for new magazines before consideration of an advertisement placement (and again for new magazines once the subscriber base has stabilized, for example, after initial subscribers have had an opportunity to renew).
b) Survey of magazine subscribers must be conducted by an independent third party research company using established research methods, such as the ABC Subscriber Study Audit requirements.
c) Survey supplier and date survey was conducted must be identified.
d) Sample should be at least 300 in-tab (tabulated) respondents with the sample frame fully reported,
e) Sample must be pulled on an nth name basis from all eligible names on the publication's full subscriber file for U.S. only. No complimentary copies, international, business addresses, demographic, or regional edition splits (unless these copies are also used for the advertising).
f) Subscribers, not other household members, should be asked to fill out and return the survey.
g) Actual age, year of birth, or check off for appropriate bracket of age are acceptable, as long as the age bracket identifies 21 as a starting point (for example, 21-34 versus 18-24).
h) Upon the receipt of the independent demographic survey, a potential advertiser will evaluate the audit in conjunction with other factors prior to purchasing an advertising placement, such as the content of the magazine, similar or comparable publications, the “pass along” rate and/ or circulation distribution of similar or comparable publications.
4. Newspapers
Responsible placement
(Channel-relevant rules only)
a. Appear in children or juvenile magazines, newspapers, television programs, radio programs or other media specifically oriented to persons below the legal drinking age.
b. Appear in any media where more than 26.2% of the audience is underage (determined by using reliable, up-to-date audience composition data).
c. Be placed on the premises of college and university campuses or in newspapers published by, or primarily for, a college or university. However, members may advertise in licensed retail establishments located on such campuses or may participate in programs organized by or for graduate or professional schools or alumni organizations.
a. Product placement decisions shall be made on a case-by-case basis based upon the information about the movie, television program, music video, or video game available at the time provided by the project’s producers;
b. Product placements shall not be made where the characters engage in illegal or irresponsible consumption of wine in connection with driving, where characters use wine irresponsibly or abusively, or where alcoholism is portrayed; and
c. Product placements shall not portray the purchase or consumption of wine by persons who are below the legal drinking age.
4. To the extent feasible, wine advertising shall not be placed in or directly adjacent to television or radio programs or print media that dramatize or glamorize over-consumption or inappropriate use of alcoholic beverages.
5. Wine advertising should not be placed on any outdoor stationary location within five hundred (500) linear feet of an established place of worship, an elementary school or secondary school except on a licensed premise.
6. Wine advertising should not be placed at events unless at least 70 percent of the audience who are intended to view the advertising is reasonably expected to be above the legal drinking age.
Applicable self-regulation and legislation
Refer to Content Section B for provisions; of particular relevance below:
Identity of the marketer (Art. 8)
Annex I of the UCPD
11. Using editorial content in the media to promote a product where a trader has paid for the promotion without making that clear in the content or by images or sounds clearly identifiable by the consumer (advertorial). This is without prejudice to Council Directive 89/552/EEC (1)
22. Falsely claiming or creating the impression that the trader is not acting for purposes relating to his trade, business, craft or profession, or falsely representing oneself as a consumer
...........................................
Article B12 ICC Code Media sponsorship
As will be seen below, this alcohol category and individual product sectors within it, carries some very specific placement rules. Nevertheless, two further aspects to this channel section should be borne in mind. The first is that in all cases, the content rules from the overview section A and content section B will apply in all channels (the codes' scope for all alcohol sectors is broad) and the second issue is that as well as these category rules, also applicable are the 'general' channel and content rules, i.e. those that apply to all sectors, alcohol included. These are found under the General rules header of this database, then USA.
Taken from the Beer Institute Advertising and Marketing Code (2023)
In this section we show first some general channel rules, i.e. those that apply to all channels, followed by those rules/ requirements specific to the channel header
Auditing, monitoring and parents
From the Code's guidelines, Section 3. Placed in b/u here as requirements are essentially administrative
From Appendix A of the 2023 DISCUS Code Responsible Digital Marketing Guidelines
Applicable to all channels: Media Placement and the 73.8% LPA Standard
Scope These Guidelines apply to branded digital marketing communications (paid and unpaid), including, but not limited to, communications on websites, such as social network sites and blogs, as well as mobile communications and applications.
[A] Basic Principles
i) Legal Age Users Only. User information can only be collected from those individuals who are of the legal purchase age. Prior to the collection of any information, the brand advertiser will require that individual to affirm that they are of legal purchase age.
ii) Opt-In and Opt-Out. The brand advertiser shall employ a mechanism for a user to “opt-in” before receiving a direct digital marketing communication and provide a mechanism to “opt-out” and discontinue receiving such direct communications.
iii) Collection and Use Notice. Clear information must be provided about collection and use of personal data.
iv) Privacy Statement. Users should be encouraged to read the privacy statement before submitting their information.
v) Data Security. Measures will be taken to keep user information secure and protected from loss or theft.
The following additional headers can be found in the DISCUS Code linkled above and here, under Responsible Media Buying Guidelines B8-11
7. Unmeasured Digital Media - Independent Measurement
8. Programmatic Marketing Directed to LPA+ Adults
9. Downloadable Applications
10. Podcasts
Digital Marketing Guidelines
Scope This Note applies to branded digital marketing communications (paid and unpaid) of Wine Institute members, including but not limited to communications on websites such as social network sites and blogs, as well as mobile communications and applications.
Basic Principles
Privacy policies govern the collection of personal information from adults of legal purchase age and encompass any direct digital marketing or advertising controlled by the brand whether conducted through a social networking site, website or other digital channel and must ensure the following:
a. Appear in children or juvenile magazines, newspapers, television programs, radio programs or other media specifically oriented to persons below the legal drinking age.
b. Appear in any media where more than 26.2% of the audience is underage (determined by using reliable, up-to-date audience composition data).
c. Be placed on the premises of college and university campuses or in newspapers published by, or primarily for, a college or university. However, members may advertise in licensed retail establishments located on such campuses or may participate in programs organized by or for graduate or professional schools or alumni organizations.
a. Members shall be mindful that online advertising may be viewed by underaged individuals and shall take steps to ensure that online content remains consistent with provisions of this code.
b. A member should employ an age affirmation mechanism on the homepage that restricts access only to viewers who affirm their legal drinking age before access to any area of the site. Any linkage to a member website page that bypasses its home page should include an age affirmation mechanism.
c. Member websites should employ a third party age verification mechanism that will verify the legal drinking age of online purchasers of wine at the point of purchase.
a. Product placement decisions shall be made on a case-by-case basis based upon the information about the movie, television program, music video, or video game available at the time provided by the project’s producers;
b. Product placements shall not be made where the characters engage in illegal or irresponsible consumption of wine in connection with driving, where characters use wine irresponsibly or abusively, or where alcoholism is portrayed; a
c. Product placements shall not portray the purchase or consumption of wine by persons who are below the legal drinking age.
4. To the extent feasible, wine advertising shall not be placed in or directly adjacent to television or radio programs or print media that dramatize or glamorize over-consumption or inappropriate use of alcoholic beverages.
2023 Social Media Advertising Landscape: An Update from a Senior FTC Official
Holland & Knight LLP April 18, 2023. References FTC formal guidance and 'tips'
OECD Report Highlights Concerns over 'Dark Patterns'. Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC/ Lex
This is a helpful explanation of the issue of dark patterns, what they are and why and how they transgress
Repository of European IAB’s Initiatives for Responsible Digital Advertising
IAB 30 September 2024. Topics Privacy, DSA, Influencer marketing, Qualid, Child Safety,
Commission's call for evidence on DSA minors protection guidelines; closed 30th Sept 2024
EASA on the above and two calls for tender August 8, 2024
Meta and self-regulation December 2023
This particular section provides the broad regulatory picture for the commercial digital environment. More specific channel rules such as those for email, OBA, Social Networks etc., follow. As the boundaries online can be less clear, and as a considerable amount of space online is advertiser-owned, there’s greater focus on the identification of advertising, as advertising is in remit (i.e. subject to the rules) online in owned and (some) earned space as well as paid
Online Deals Do's And Don'ts For Online Business Under EU Law
Logan & partners/ Mondaq November 28, 2023
Directive 2000/31/EC on electronic commerce
Regulation 2016/679/EU on the processing of personal data (GDPR)
Directive 2018/1808 amending AVMS Directive 2010/13/EU
Two relatively recent arrivals in EU digital platform regulation are the Digital Markets Act (implemented May 2023), aka Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 and its implementing provisions; Commission explanatory pages here and the Digital Services Act, pages here (implemented Feb 2024 for all platforms) aka Regulation 2022 (EU) 2022/2065. The first, as the name implies, is the EU's means of reining in the major digital 'gatekeepers' to ensure 'fairer and more contestable' markets. Somewhat obviously, the rules are aimed at platforms rather than advertisers and agencies, though there are implications for behaviourally targeted advertising. The DSA's main goal 'is to prevent illegal and harmful activities online and the spread of disinformation.' Loosely, this is the EU's Online Safety Act.
Chapter C ICC Code; Direct Marketing and Digital Marketing Communications (extracts)
2024 amends in italics; there are some 20 articles in this section of the code
C2. Identification and transparency
Article C3 – Presentation of the offer
The terms of offers should be presented in a transparent and understandable manner in accordance with Article 11 (Presentation of the Offer) of the General Provisions
C2. Identity of the marketer
Directive 2002/58/EC; Article 13
Unsolicited communications
* Now repealed; GDPR applies
General information to be provided
(a) The name of the service provider
(b) The geographic address at which the service provider is established
(c) The details of the service provider, including his electronic mail address, which allow him to be contacted rapidly and communicated with in a direct and effective manner
(d) Where the service provider is registered in a trade or similar public register, the trade register in which the service provider is entered and his registration number, or equivalent means of identification in that register
(e) Where the activity is subject to an authorisation scheme, the particulars of the relevant supervisory authority
(f) As concerns the regulated professions:
- any professional body or similar institution with which the service provider is registered
- the professional title and the Member State where it has been granted
- a reference to the applicable professional rules in the Member State of establishment and the means to access them
(g) Where the service provider undertakes an activity that is subject to VAT, the identification number referred to in Article 22(1) of the sixth Council Directive 77/388/EEC of 17 May 1977 on the harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to turnover taxes - Common system of value added tax: uniform basis of assessment(29)
Article 6
Information to be provided: In addition to other information requirements established by Community law, Member States shall ensure that commercial communications which are part of, or constitute, an information society service comply at least with the following conditions:
Article 7
Unsolicited commercial communication
Extends rules across online platforms (provided that the service qualifies as an audiovisual media service or video sharing platform); the key amends to the Directive's content rules are assembled here
For video sharing platforms, articles 28a and 28b in the Directive linked above apply. We recommend perusal. From a commercial communications perspective, the key new ingredients are that article 9 of the AVMSD applies (found here) and that video-sharing platform providers 'clearly inform users where programmes and user-generated videos contain audiovisual commercial communications' - where they are aware of those - and provide a facility for those uploading also to declare the presence of commercial communications
European Data Protection Board / Article 29 Working Party
EASA Digital Marketing Communications Best Practice Recommendation. This document:
12. Internet Privacy Policy
From the Responsible Digital Marketing Guidelines section of the 2023 DISCUS Code
i) Legal Age Users Only. User information can only be collected from those individuals who are of the legal purchase age. Prior to the collection of any information, the brand advertiser will require that individual to affirm that they are of legal purchase age.
ii) Opt-In and Opt-Out. The brand advertiser shall employ a mechanism for a user to “opt-in” before receiving a direct digital marketing communication and provide a mechanism to “opt-out” and discontinue receiving such direct communications.
iii) Collection and Use Notice. Clear information must be provided about collection and use of personal data.
iv) Privacy Statement. Users should be encouraged to read the privacy statement before submitting their information.
v) Data Security. Measures will be taken to keep user information secure and protected from loss or theft.
Essentially per the DISCUS Code above
Washington's zombie digital rulemaking
Mark Scott of Politico. Feb 29, 2024
Executive Order to Protect Americans’ Sensitive Personal Data
Above from the WH Feb 28, 2024
FTC Announces Agenda for 2024 PrivacyCon. Feb 27, 2024
Annual event on a wide range of privacy and data security research online on March 6
The Future Of Behavioral Advertising In Europe And The United States
InfoLawGroup LLP/ Lex. November 20, 2023
Some news for financial institutions
CFPB Advertising Rule: New Liability for Digital Marketing “Service Providers”; Klein Moynihan Turco LLP August 2022 (related to financial institutions only)
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is a U.S. government agency charged with ensuring that consumers are treated fairly by banks, lenders, and other financial institutions. In connection with this directive, the CFPB has turned its attention to financial firms that use targeted advertising to reach consumers. The recently issued CFPB Advertising – interpretive rule – identifies the circumstances in which digital marketing companies may be held accountable for violating federal consumer financial protection laws. According to the CFPB’s Advertising rule, “[d]igital marketers that are involved in the identification or selection of prospective customers or the selection or placement of content to affect consumer behavior are typically service providers for purposes of the law [emphasis added].” Once considered a “service provider,” marketers are then exposed to a new range of potential regulatory liability.
Meta to offer less personalized ads in Europe. Reuters Nov 12, 2024
Consent or pay: one rule for some (large online platforms),
another rule for everyone else? Weil Gotshal & Manges 30/8/24
A new path for Privacy Sandbox on the web July 22, 2024
Third party cookie plans for Chrome. WFA view here
Meta’s Ad-Free Subscription Violates Competition Law
Adam Satariano NYT July 1, 2024
EDPB Opinion 8/2024 on Pay or Consent April 17. Lexia May 8
Applicable legislation, self-regulation and guidance
Note that legislation is implemented in member states, sometimes with nuance
European Commission Data Protection website:
https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/law-topic/data-protection_en
IAB Europe published in May 2020 the Guide to the Post Third-Party Cookie Era
And in July 2021 the Guide to Contextual Advertising
Commission's 'Cookie Pledge' pages here; includes draft pledging principles and December 2023 EDPB opinion on compliance with e-Privacy Directive and GDPR
As of 25 May 2018 the Article 29 Working Party ceased to exist and has been replaced by the European Data Protection Board (EDPB). Article 29 WP documents remain valid
Directive on privacy and electronic communications 2002/58/EC as amended by Directive 2009/136/EC
GDPR
Meta must limit data for personalised ads
BBC October 4, 2024. Hunton Oct 15
EDAA launches new solution to DSA ad transparency requirements
EDPB ban on Meta processing personal data for behavioural advertising
DAC Beachcroft/ Lex December 6, 2023. EDPB here
Privacy Challenges For Digital Advertising, Particularly In Europe
Squire Patton Boggs 22 November, 2023
Applicable regulation and opinion
Article 29 Working Party* documents
*As of 25 May 2018 the Article 29 Working Party ceased to exist and has been replaced by the European Data Protection Board (EDPB). Article 29 WP documents remain valid
Venable's Ad Law on Telemarketing and Texting
Audio. April 16, 2024
Email Marketing Law and Google’s New Email Delivery Restrictions
Klein Moynihan Turco LLP October 17, 2023
CAN-SPAM: Alive and Well After All These Years
FKK&S August 14, 2023 covers Experian settlement
Direct Marketing of Goods and Services in EU
ICLG April 2024. Clear and informative and (EN)
2024 GDMA International email benchmark
Posted June 2024
Directive 2002/58/EC; Article 13
Unsolicited communications
* Repealed; GDPR applies
- any professional body or similar institution with which the service provider is registered
- the professional title and the Member State where it has been granted
- a reference to the applicable professional rules in the Member State of establishment and the means to access them
The same principle that applies in paid space also applies in non-paid such as marketers’ own websites and SNS spaces: if the communication from the owner is advertising, it’s ‘in remit’, i.e. covered by the rules. Clearly, much of a brand website may not be advertising, but it's important to understand what may 'qualify', and different countries have different definitions. In this international context the most relevant definition is from the ICC Code: ‘any communications produced directly by or on behalf of marketers intended primarily to promote products or to influence consumer behaviour’. The other aspect of this environment that can be subject to regulatory issues is that of 'dialogue' between brand owners and consumers, where Consent and Information requirements may apply; see our General rules sector for specifics
ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (EN 2024); Chapter C Direct Marketing and Digital Marketing Communications
Directive 2002/58/EC on privacy and electronic communications
Directive 2000/31/EC on electronic commerce
Directive 2005/29/EC on unfair commercial practices (UCPD)
Directive 2018/1808 amending AVMS Directive 2010/13/EU (AVMSD)
EASA Best Practice Recommendation on Digital Marketing Communications 2023
Directive 2002/58/EC on Privacy and Electronic communications; Article 13
Unsolicited communications
5. Information requirements established by Community law in relation to commercial communication including advertising or marketing, a non-exhaustive list of which is contained in Annex II, shall be regarded as material
Extends rules across online platforms (provided that the service qualifies as an audiovisual media service or video sharing platform); the key amends to the Directive's content rules are assembled here
For video sharing platforms, articles 28a and 28b in the Directive linked above apply. We recommend perusal. From a commercial communications perspective, the key new ingredients are that article 9 of the AVMSD applies (found here) and that video-sharing platform providers 'clearly inform users where programmes and user-generated videos contain audiovisual commercial communications' - where they are aware of those - and provide a facility for those uploading also to declare the presence of commercial commnications
EU Guidance/ opinion documents
Native Advertising: A guide for Businesses
Enforcement Policy Statement on Deceptively Formatted Advertisements December 2015
Key extract from the Guide (but you should read the whole caboodle)
III. How to make clear and prominent disclosures in native advertising
39. Native Advertising (Deceptively Formatted Advertisements)
Native Advertisements are created to resemble the design, style, and functionality of the media in which they are disseminated, which could make it difficult to distinguish between advertising and non-commercial content. Native ads may appear on a page next to non-advertising content on news or content aggregator sites, social media platforms, or messaging apps. In other instances, native ads are embedded in entertainment programming, such as professionally produced and user-generated videos on social media. In still other instances native ads appear in email, infographics, images, animations, and video games.
* To be clear and conspicuous, such disclosures must, at a minimum, be prominent and visible enough for consumers to readily notice them
Also known as sponsored or branded content, this is online and offline advertising designed to fit in with its ‘habitat’, to give consumers a visually consistent experience. IAB Europe's How to Comply with EU Rules Applicable to Online Native Advertising provides some categories of native ads, some good practice recommendations, and a summary of EU rules. General rules, i.e. those that apply to all product sectors, are immediately below
ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (EN 2024)
Directive 2005/29/EC on Unfair Commercial Practices (UCPD)
IAB Europe Guidance (as above in intro): How to Comply with EU Rules Applicable to Online Native Advertising (December 2016) here
And in December 2021 IAB Europe's Guide to Native Advertising provides 'up-to-date insight into native ad formats and best practices for buyers.'
Identification and transparency (Art. 7)
Identity of the marketer (Art. 8)
Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC, Annex I
Commercial practices which are in all circumstances considered unfair
11. Using editorial content in the media to promote a product where a trader has paid for the promotion without making that clear in the content or by images or sounds clearly identifiable by the consumer (advertorial). This is without prejudice to Council Directive 89/552/EEC
22. Falsely claiming or creating the impression that the trader is not acting for purposes relating to his trade, business, craft or profession, or falsely representing oneself as a consumer
Following feedback, we no longer cover telemarketing
Following feedback, we no longer cover Telemarketing
You’re a Mean One, Mr. Mail Order Rule
BakerHostetler December 18, 2024
Applicable self-regulation and legislation
As Direct Mail will frequently include offers, when trhat's the case the provisions related to 'Invitations to Purchase' in the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive may apply. Extracts are:
4. In the case of an invitation to purchase, the following information shall be regarded as material, if not already apparent from the context:
5. Information requirements established by Community law in relation to commercial communication including advertising or marketing, a non-exhaustive list of which is contained in Annex II, shall be regarded as material
Guidelines on consent under Regulation 2016/679 (May 2020)
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Guidelines for advertising in the Olympic & Paralympic Games
Finnegan July 24, 2024
Ring! Ring! Ring! Ring! Ring! It’s the Olympics Calling!
Broadcast Law Blog from David Oxenford July 23, 2024
Olympics Advertising - Don’t be Ambushed by Rule 40
Knobbe Martens July 18, 2024
Pilot Project Relaxes Olympic Games' Rule For Participating Brands
Marks & Clerk July 19, 2024
Paris Olympics & Paralympics - Part 2: What could possibly go wrong?
Squire Patton Boggs july 16, 2024
GUIDE: The Olympic Games 2024 - Beating around le ambush
Lewis Silkin 25 January, 2024
B1: Principles governing sponsorship
B2: Autonomy and self-determination
B3: Imitation and confusion
B4: 'Ambushing' of sponsored properties
B5: Respect for the sponsorship property and the sponsor
B6: The sponsorship audience
B7: Data capture/ data sharing
B8: Artistic and historical objects
B9: Social and environmental sponsorship
B10: Charities and humanitarian sponsorship
B11: Multiple sponsorship
This website was created to provide international rules on marketing communications; it does not claim authority on specific Sales Promotions (SP) regulation, especially retail legislation. However, in the course of extensive research in marketing, relevant rules will be included. National self-regulatory codes and consumer protection legislation, for example, are checked for any provisions that affect SP and included below. Content in SP material is likely to be subject to the rules set out in the earlier section B as well as more specific requirements related to pricing, promotional conditions etc. .
ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (EN 2024), Chapter A Sales Promotion, Chapter C Direct Marketing
For promotions and contests on social media, refer to Own Websites channel; SNS
Directive 2005/29/EC on Unfair Commercial Practices (UCPD)
Directive 98/6/EC on the Prices of Products offered to Consumers
ICC Code Chapter A Sales Promotion
Clauses are from the 2024 edition of the Code
A1: Principles governing sales promotions
A2: Transparency and terms of the offer
Sales promotions should be transparent. This means that the terms of the offer should be easily identifiable, accessible and straightforward for the consumer, inclusive of any restrictions and limitations. Measures should be taken to avoid exaggerating the value of any promotional item or obscuring or minimising the price of the main product.
A3: Presentation
Sales promotions should not be designed or presented in a manner that is likely to be misleading about value, nature or participation process.
A4: Administration of promotions
Sales promotions should be administered using appropriate resources and supervision and should incorporate proper safeguards to ensure that the offer’s administration aligns with the reasonable expectations of consumers. In particular:
A5: Safety and suitability
A6: Presentation to consumers
Sales promotions should be presented so that consumers are informed beforehand of any conditions likely to influence their decision to purchase. Consumers should be able to easily access the terms and other essential information, in particular when accepting the offer. Information should include, where relevant and having regard to the medium used:
Promotions claiming to support a charitable cause should not exaggerate the contribution derived from the campaign. Consumers should be informed, before purchasing the promoted product, how much of the price will be allocated for the cause or the total donation amount.
Free entry claims should be used only if the consumer’s path to access is charged at a standard rate, meaning the consumer will not incur any communication cost beyond the maximum of that rate. If a premium rate is applied, this should be clearly disclosed.
Where a sales promotion includes a prize promotion, the following information should be given to consumers, and be available prior to participation and not conditional on purchasing the main product:
The remaining articles of this chapter, A7 to A10 inclusive, are not included for reasons of space. They can be found in the 2024 ICC Code here. These cover:
A7. Presentation to Intermediaries
A8. Particular Obligations of Promoters
A9. Particular Obligations of Intermediaries
A10. Responsibility
As promotional activity will often include e.g. special pricing measures, we have extracted from the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC those clauses from Annex I (practices which are in all circumstances considered unfair) most relevant to promotional scenarios
5. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price without disclosing the existence of any reasonable grounds the trader may have for believing that he will not be able to offer for supply or to procure another trader to supply, those products or equivalent products at that price for a period that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable having regard to the product, the scale of advertising of the product and the price offered (bait advertising)
6. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price and then:
(a) refusing to show the advertised item to consumers; or
(b) refusing to take orders for it or deliver it within a reasonable time or
(c) demonstrating a defective sample of it, with the intention of promoting a different product (bait and switch)
7. Falsely stating that a product will only be available for a very limited time, or that it will only be available on particular terms for a very limited time, in order to elicit an immediate decision and deprive consumers of sufficient opportunity or time to make an informed choice
15. Claiming that the trader is about to cease trading or move premises when he is not
16. Claiming that products are able to facilitate winning in games of chance
19. Claiming in a commercial practice to offer a competition or prize promotion without awarding the prizes described or a reasonable equivalent
20. Describing a product as ‘gratis’, ‘free’, ‘without charge’ or similar if the consumer has to pay anything other than the unavoidable cost of responding to the commercial practice and collecting or paying for delivery of the item
31. Creating the false impression that the consumer has already won, will win, or will on doing a particular act win, a prize or other equivalent benefit, when in fact either:
there is no prize or other equivalent benefit, or
taking any action in relation to claiming the prize or other equivalent benefit is subject to the consumer paying money or incurring a cost
Article 1
The purpose of this Directive is to stipulate indication of the selling price and the price per unit of measurement of products offered by traders to consumers in order to improve consumer information and to facilitate comparison of prices
Article 2
For the purposes of this Directive:
(a) selling price shall mean the final price for a unit of the product, or a given quantity of the product, including VAT and all other taxes;
(b) unit price shall mean the final price, including VAT and all other taxes, for one kilogramme, one litre, one metre, one square metre or one cubic metre of the product or a different single unit of quantity which is widely and customarily used in the Member State concerned in the marketing of specific products
(c) products sold in bulk shall mean products which are not pre-packaged and are measured in the presence of the consumer
(d) trader shall mean any natural or legal person who sells or offers for sale products which fall within his commercial or professional activity
(e) consumer shall mean any natural person who buys a product for purposes that do not fall within the sphere of his commercial or professional activity
Article 3
— products supplied in the course of the provision of a service
— sales by auction and sales of works of art and antiques
Article 4
Where national or Community provisions require the indication of the net weight and the net drained weight for certain pre-packed products, it shall be sufficient to indicate the unit price of the net drained weight
Article 5
Article 6a
1. Any announcement of a price reduction shall indicate the prior price applied by the trader for a determined period of time prior to the application of the price reduction
2. The prior price means the lowest price applied by the trader during a period of time not shorter than 30 days prior to the application of the price reduction
3. Member States may provide for different rules for goods which are liable to deteriorate or expire rapidly
4. Where the product has been on the market for less than 30 days, Member States may also provide for a shorter period of time than the period specified in paragraph 2
5. Member States may provide that, when the price reduction is progressively increased, the prior price is the price without the price reduction before the first application of the price reduction
The ICAS Global SRO database
https://icas.global/srodatabase/
EASA (European Advertising Standards Alliance)
https://www.easa-alliance.org/
EASA membership
https://www.easa-alliance.org/members/
Link to Best Practice Recommendations
https://www.easa-alliance.org/publication/best-practice-recommendations/
EASA Digital Marketing Communications Best Practice Recommendation
EASA Best Practice Recommendation on Online Behavioural Advertising
https://www.easa-alliance.org/publications/easa-best-practice-recommendation-on-oba-2021/
EASA Best Practice Recommendation on Influencer Marketing
ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code 2024. In September 2024, the International Chamber of Commerce introduced the newly revised Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (the Code). From the website: '11th Code revision – significant changes: The rapid evolution of technology and technologically enhanced marketing communications and techniques means that producing responsible marketing communications that are trusted in a digital world has continued to be important for companies in preserving their ‘license to operate’. For this reason, the 11th revision addresses both the Code’s usability and its applicability to technology enhanced marketing communications and techniques. It sets a gold standard for modern rule-making in our digital world by addressing the role of people, organisations, software and machines. Significant changes include:
This Code revision has been informed by the latest industry rules and legal developments around the world, such as in the area of consumer protection, privacy and fair competition. The Code is designed to establish a sound ethical framework to govern marketing practices worldwide based on twin goals of fostering consumer fairness and trust, and the freedom of commercial communications.' The Code is organised into General Provisions and individual chapters Sales Promotion (A), Sponsorship (B), Direct Marketing and Digital Marketing Communications (C), Environmental Claims in Marketing Communication (D) and Children and Teens (E). Translation of the code is under way as at September 2024. Earlier translations of the former (2018) code can be found here.
https://iccwbo.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2024/09/ICC_2024_MarketingCode_2024.pdf (EN)
Additional guides and frameworks (all EN)
ICC Guide for Responsible Mobile Marketing Communications
Mobile supplement to the ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Interest Based Advertising
ICC Framework for Responsible Marketing Communications of Alcohol
ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Online Behavioural Advertising
ICC Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communications
ICC Framework for Responsible Food and Beverage Marketing Communication
ICC Guidance on Native Advertising
ICC toolkits
IAB Europe
IAB (Interactive Advertising Bureau) Europe: Its mission is to 'protect, prove, promote and professionalise' Europe's online advertising, media, research and analytics industries. Together with its members, companies and national trade associations, IAB Europe represents over 5,500 organisations with national membership including 27 National IABs and partner associations in Europe.
'The Gold Standard is open to all IAB UK members who buy and sell digital media. It improves the digital advertising experience, helps compliance with the GDPR and ePrivacy law, tackles ad fraud and upholds brand safety':
https://www.iabuk.com/goldstandard
February 2022. EU Regulators Rule Ad Tech Industry's TCF Framework Violates GDPR from GALA/ Mondaq. From that: 'The Belgian Data Protection Authority (DPA) has ruled that the Transparency and Consent Framework (TCF) adopted by Europe's ad tech industry violates the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Further story here
IAB Europe published in May 2020 the Guide to the Post Third-Party Cookie Era and in July 2021 the Guide to Contextual Advertising
IAB Europe's December 2021 Guide to Native Advertising provides 'up-to-date insight into native ad formats and key considerations and best practices for buyers.'
ICAS
From their website: 'The International Council for Advertising Self-Regulation (ICAS) is a global platform which promotes effective advertising self-regulation. ICAS members include Self-Regulatory Organizations (SROs) and other national, regional and international bodies working to ensure that advertising and marketing communications are legal, honest, truthful and decent.' In December 2021, ICAS published the fourth edition of its Global SRO Database and Factbook.
EASA: European Advertising Standards Alliance
Best Practice Recommendation on Digital Marketing Communications (updated 2023): EASA revised its Best Practice Recommendation (BPR) on Digital Marketing Communications in 2023 to ensure advertising standards remain effective and relevant when it comes to 'the ever-changing digital landscape and interactive marketing techniques'. Emphasis is placed on the need for all marketing communications to be easily identifiable for consumers, no matter where or how they are displayed:
EASA Best Practice Recommendation on OBA (Revised Oct. 2021): provides for a pan-european, industry-wide self-regulatory standard for online behavioural advertising. The Mobile Addendum in 2016 extended the types of data relevant to OBA Self-Regulation, to include cross-application data, location data, and personal device data. The BPR incorporates (in sections 2 and 3) and complements IAB Europe’s self-regulatory Framework for OBA:
https://www.easa-alliance.org/publications/easa-best-practice-recommendation-on-oba-2021/
EASA Best Practice Recommendation on Influencer Marketing 2023. From the document: The EASA Best Practice Recommendation on Influencer Marketing aims to look at the key elements of influencer marketing techniques and assist SROs in creating their own national guidance by showcasing already existing national guidance on this topic across the SR networks and elaborating the different elements a guidance should address and define. EASA recognises that, subject to local parameters SROs may vary in their national practices and choose to go beyond what is suggested in this document or design and implement alternative strategies and guidelines to ensure that influencer marketing abides by the national advertising codes and is honest, decent and truthful and can be thus trusted by consumers.
The EDAA has been established by a cross-industry coalition of European-level associations with an interest in delivering a responsible European Self-Regulatory Programme for OBA in the form of pan-European standards The EDAA essentially administers this programme; their principal purpose is to licence the OBA Icon to companies. It is also responsible for integrating businesses on the Consumer Choice platform - www.youronlinechoices.eu and ensuring credible compliance and enforcement procedures are in place through EDAA-approved Certification Providers who deliver a ‘Trust Seal’. It also coordinates closely with EASA and national SRO’s for consumer complaint handling
FEDMA
FEDMA (Federation of European Direct and Interactive Marketing) is a Brussels-based, pan-European association representing twenty-one national DMA’s and corporate members
https://www.fedma.org/
THE EU PLEDGE
The EU Pledge, enhanced July 2021 effective January 2022, is a voluntary initiative by leading Food and Beverage companies, accounting for over 80% of food and soft drink advertising expenditure in the EU, to change food and soft drink advertising to children under the age of thirteen in the European Union. It consists of three main commitments:
The EU Pledge Implementation guidance, in detail and by medium, is here. The Pledge is consistent with the International Food & Beverage Alliance (IFBA)’s 2021 Global Responsible Marketing policy.
WFA
https://wfanet.org/about-wfa/who-we-are
‘WFA is the only global organisation representing the common interests of marketers. It is the voice of marketers worldwide, representing 90% of global marketing communications spend – roughly US$900 billion per annum. WFA champions more effective and sustainable marketing communications.’
Planet Pledge is a CMO-led framework designed to galvanise action from marketers within our membership to promote and reinforce attitudes and behaviours which will help the world meet the challenges laid out in the UN SDGs (Sustainable development goals).
https://wfanet.org/leadership/planet-pledge
The Responsible Marketing Pact (RMP) aims to reduce minors’ exposure to alcohol marketing, limit the appeal of alcohol marketing to minors, and strive to ensure minors’ social media experience is free from alcohol ads.
Channel Regulations and Directives
Regulation 2016/679 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force on May 25 2018, and is accompanied by Directive 2016/680, which is largely concerned with supervising procedures, and which should have been transposed into member states’ legislation by 6th May 2018
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2016/679/oj
The Article 29 Working Party was established under article 29 (hence the name) of Directive 95/46/EC on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (Personal Data Protection Directive). It has an advisory status and acts independently of the European Commission. The arrival of the GDPR heralded the demise/re-working of A29WP, and its replacement by the European Data Protection Board:
All documents from the former Article 29 Working Party remain available on this newsroom
Article 29 Working Party archives from 1997 to November 2016:
http://ec.europa.eu/justice/article-29/documentation/index_en.htm.
More recent documents:
Opinion 5/2019 on the interplay between the ePrivacy Directive and the GDPR. Adopted on 12 March 2019
Privacy/ cookies
Directive 2002/58/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 July 2002 concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector (Directive on privacy and electronic communications, the ‘e-Privacy Directive’). This Directive ‘provides for the harmonisation of the national provisions required to ensure an equivalent level of protection of fundamental rights and freedoms, and in particular the right to privacy and confidentiality, with respect to the processing of personal data in the electronic communication sector.’ The directive was amended by Directive 2009/136/EC; the ‘Cookie directive’, provisions found under article 5.3 of the E-Privacy Directive. Article 13 for Consent and ‘soft opt-in’ requirements
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/58
The ‘Cookie Directive’ 2009/136/EC amending Directive 2002/58/EC concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32009L0136
Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council concerning the respect for private life and the protection of personal data in electronic communications and repealing Directive 2002/58/EC (Regulation on Privacy and Electronic Communications):
https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-6087-2021-INIT/en/pdf
Statement on the ePrivacy Regulation and the future role of Supervisory Authorities and the EDPB. Adopted on 19 November 2020:
https://edpb.europa.eu/sites/default/files/files/file1/edpb_statement_20201119_eprivacy_regulation_en.pdf
February 2022 Clifford Chance/ Lex E-Privacy check-in: where we are, and where we're headed
March 2022 Härting Rechtsanwälte/ Lex ePrivacy Regulation: EU Council agrees on the draft
Directive 2000/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2000 on certain legal aspects of information society services, in particular electronic commerce, in the Internal Market ('Directive on electronic commerce'). ‘information society services’ are defined as ‘any service normally provided for remuneration, at a distance, by electronic means and at the individual request of a recipient of services.’ Article 5 covers general information to be provided by the ‘service provider’, which information should be made ‘easily, directly and permanently accessible to the recipients of the service’. The Directive sets out the information requirements for commercial communications which are part of, or constitute, an information society service under article 6.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=CELEX:32000L0031
Directive 98/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 February 1998 on consumer protection in the indication of the prices of products offered to consumers. The purpose of this Directive is to stipulate indication of the selling price and the price per unit of measurement of products offered by traders to consumers in order to improve consumer information and to facilitate comparison of prices (Article 1). For the purposes of this Directive, selling price shall mean the final price for a unit of the product, or a given quantity of the product, including VAT and all other taxes (Article 2a). While this legislation seems prima facie most suited to ‘goods on shelves’ as it requires unit prices (the final price, including VAT and all other taxes, for one kilogramme, one litre, one metre, one square metre or one cubic metre of the product), the Directive was used as the basis for a significant ECJ judgement on car pricing in advertising. Some amendments to Directive 98/6/EC related to price reduction information are provided in Directive 2019/2161 linked below.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=celex:31998L0006
Directive 2005/29/EC of The European Parliament and of The Council of 11 May 2005 concerning unfair business-to-consumer commercial practices in the internal market and amending Council Directive 84/450/EEC, Directives 97/7/EC, 98/27/EC and 2002/65/EC and Regulation (EC) No 2006/2004 (the ‘Unfair Commercial Practices Directive’ – UCPD). This is the European legislation that most impacts marketing and advertising in Europe. Some amendments to Directive 2005/29/EC are provided in Directive 2019/2161 linked below; these are supposed to be transposed by November 2021 and in force in member states by May 2022.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2005/29/oj
Guidance: December 2021, the European Commission issued Guidance on the interpretation and application of the UCPD, updating the 2016 version.
The Omnibus Directive
Directive (EU) 2019/2161 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 November 2019 amending Council Directive 93/13/EEC and Directives 98/6/EC, 2005/29/EC and 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the better enforcement and modernisation of Union consumer protection rules. This directive, which 'aims to strengthen consumer rights through enhanced enforcement measures and increased transparency requirements', sets out some new information requirements related to search rankings and consumer reviews under the UCPD 2005/29/EC, new pricing information under Directive 2011/83/EU in the context of automated decision-making and profiling of consumer behaviour, and price reduction information under the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC. More directly related to this database, and potentially significant for multinational advertisers, is the clause that amends article 6 (misleading actions) of the UCPD adding ‘(c) any marketing of a good, in one Member State, as being identical to a good marketed in other Member States, while that good has significantly different composition or characteristics, unless justified by legitimate and objective factors’. Recitals related to this clause, which provide some context, are here. Helpful explanatory piece on the Omnibus Directive 2019/2161 from A&L Goodbody via Lexology here. Provisions were supposed to be transposed by November 2021 and in force in member states by May 2022; some delays but all in place end 2022.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2019/2161/oj
Comparative advertising
Directive 2006/114/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2006 concerning misleading and comparative advertising (codified version):
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32006L0114
Directive 2010/13/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 10 March 2010 on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States concerning the provision of audiovisual media services: the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, or AVMSD. This is the codified version of the much-amended Directive 89/552/EEC and represents the core European broadcast legislation, providing significant structural and content rules, applied largely consistently across member states. From a marcoms perspective, the core articles are 9 (Discrimination, safety, the environment, minors and some prohibitions), 10 (Sponsorship), 11 (Product Placement) and 22 (Alcoholic beverages rules).
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=CELEX%3A32010L0013
Directive (EU) 2018/1808 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 November 2018 amending Directive 2010/13/EU on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States concerning the provision of audiovisual media services (Audiovisual Media Services Directive) in view of changing market realities. The background to this significant development of the AVMSD is here and there's a helpful piece from Simmons and Simmons LLP/ Lexology here. In broad terms, the Directive addresses the changes in media consumption in recent years and pays particular attention to the protection of minors in that context, extending rules to e.g. shared content on SNS. There are ‘strengthened provisions to protect children from inappropriate audiovisual commercial communications for foods high in fat, salt and sodium and sugars, including by encouraging codes of conduct at EU level, where necessary’. See article 4a. Rules for alcoholic beverages are extended to on-demand audiovisual media services, but those provisions (social/ sexual success etc.) are not amended. Another significant aspect is the introduction of rules for video-sharing platforms in particular under articles 28a and 28b; new rules include the identification of commercial communications where known. The Directive entered into force 18th December 2018; member states are required to have transposed into national law by 19th September 2020.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2018/1808/oj
EU Regulation 1924/2006 on nutrition and health claims made on foods. The annex to the Regulation contains the nutritional claims and the conditions under which they can be made for individual products. More information on the Regulation is here, and the Regulation itself is found in full from the link below:
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:02006R1924-20121129&from=EN
Regulation 432/2012 establishing a list of permitted health claims made on foods, other than those referring to the reduction of disease risk and to children’s development and health. This Regulation carries an updated annex with the complete list of approved health (as opposed to nutrition) claims and their conditions of use:
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=CELEX%3A32012R0432
Regulation 1169/2011 on the provision of food information to consumers. While this Regulation is largely to do with labelling, it also incorporates a number of broad requirements for advertising, largely to do with misleadingness, set out under Article 7:
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32011R1169&from=EN
Regulation 609/2013 on food intended for infants and young children, food for special medical purposes, and total diet replacement for weight control:
eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=celex%3A32013R0609
The Digital Services Act
Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 October 2022 on a Single Market For Digital Services and amending Directive 2000/31/EC (Digital Services Act). European Commission pages on the DSA are here. Wikipedia entry is here. Helpful legal commentary, which also addresses the Digital Markets Act, is from DLA Piper/ Lex February 2023: Online advertising: A regulatory patchwork under construction. Key marcoms issues for advertisers/ platforms are the identification of advertising material and parameters used for its targeting and the prohibition of advertising based on profiling that uses using special data categories such as religious belief, health data sexual orientation etc. (art.26), or if the platform has reason to believe the recipient is a minor (art. 28). The Regulation applies from February 2024.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32022R2065
The Digital Markets Act
Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 September 2022 on contestable and fair markets in the digital sector and amending Directives (EU) 2019/1937 and (EU) 2020/1828 (Digital Markets Act). European Commission pages are here; from those: 'Some large online platforms act as "gatekeepers" in digital markets. The Digital Markets Act aims to ensure that these platforms behave in a fair way online.Together with the Digital Services Act, the Digital Markets Act is one of the centrepieces of the European digital strategy.' Wikipedia entry is here. Article 2a prohibits the processing, for the purpose of providing online advertising services, personal data of end users using services of third parties that make use of core platform services of the gatekeeper, unless the end user has been presented with the specific choice and has given consent within the meaning of Article 4, point (11), and Article 7 of Regulation (EU) 2016/679. The Regulation entered into force on 1st November 2022 and applied on 2nd May, 2023. Gatekeepers will be identified and they will have to comply by 6th March 2024 at the latest.
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/1925