Deceptive Patterns
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Federal Trade Commission v. Effen Ads, LLC

Jurisdiction
USA
Authority
United States District Court for the District of Utah
Date
30 Jun 2020
Case number
2:19-cv-00945
Outcome
$1.5 million in fines

Case summary

Effen Ads tricked users by sending spam emails that falsely claimed endorsements from news organizations and celebrities to promote fraudulent schemes.

Our analysis

Effen Ads, LLC and its owners collaborated with an affiliate marketing network, W4 LLC, to promote a fraudulent work-from-home scheme using spam emails sent to consumers. These emails falsely claimed to be from reputable news organizations like CNN or Fox News in the "from" lines and misleadingly suggested endorsements from well-known figures like Warren Buffett and Suze Orman in the "subject" lines.

- The case revealed that these deceptive emails directed recipients to websites featuring fabricated news stories and false celebrity endorsements. Upon clicking the links, consumers were redirected to websites promoting Effen Ads' work-from-home schemes, which operated under various brand names.

This deceptive practice not only violated Section 5(a)(1) of the CAN-SPAM Act, 15 U.S.C. § 7704(a)(1), but also relied on fake social proof to deceive consumers.

Outcome

Effen Ads has been ordered to pay more than $1.4 million and is prohibited from misrepresenting or assisting others in misrepresenting material facts, including claims involving celebrity endorsements, truthful endorsements, independent user endorsements, impartial reviews, typical consumer experiences, objective news reports, and independent product testing.

Parties

Federal Trade Commission and Effen Ads, LLC