DISQUS

David Risley: Disclose or Pay Us $11,000, Says FTC

  • Justin Wright · 2 months ago
    I highly agree. I don't think the FTC is going to have a clue on how to regulate this. What scares me more is if they try doing it in all the wrong ways. What's the end result going to be for us bloggers?

    However, I do think it's a good practice to share this information with your readers, regardless of the new law. Then again most people can spot a paid review from a mile away.
  • Christian Russell · 2 months ago
    Ha, the government tracking down non-disclosure on behalf of all us poor consumers who can't detect it for ourselves. Bless their little hearts :)
  • Christian Russell · 2 months ago
    Is it necessary? Ha. Yes, for them. they need to stick their fingers in, because it means revenue, right? But can they actually ENFORCE this? I don't see any way possible. I compare it to the RIAA trying to bust college kids for having music downloads on their hard drive. Yeah right, that's gonna fly.

    You're absolutely right...the internet is already killer at weeding out these idiots who are just in it to make a buck. We need regulation, which is why we regulate the heck out of it already.
  • Mihnea Parascan @WinnerMindset · 2 months ago
    I totally agree with you on the gov issue.

    "ALL GOVERNMENTS LEFT ALL OF THE PEOPLE DOWN ALL OF THE TIME"

    but what can you do? They have GUNS!!!
  • Justin Wright · 2 months ago
    That guns comment made me picture a 13 year old blogger sitting in the basement, when out of no where they come in and blow his door down with guns drawn about not disclosing a link in one of his posts.
  • gregellison · 2 months ago
    It is going to be interesting to see what the paid posting companies are going to do when some of them don't require disclosure, but now they have to. Greg Ellison
  • Gordie · 2 months ago
    One of the few times it's good not to be an American. Will they police blogs on American servers run from overseas?
  • Dave Doolin · 2 months ago
    They will prosecute the American(s) involved, yes.
  • Dave Doolin · 2 months ago
    If that's how they want to play it, it becomes meaningless. If everyone ends up making the same statement of material connection, the consumer is in the same predicament: "Who to trust?"

    This is like those people who say that linkedin recommendations should not be reciprocated.

    Ok.

    Then what?

    We're moving back to the monkey tribe, reputation isn't everything, it's the only thing.
  • Steve · 2 months ago
    The paid for post advertisers set the rules and the bloggers had to obey even though they wanted to disclose. This is a very good thing for blogs.
  • Christian · 2 months ago
    I hope I understand your post right... Here in germany this is normal. Here in germany every affiliate-link needs to be marked as one! And a paid review needs to be marked as well. If you don't do this, you can get high payments from lawyers. At the moment you live in an marketing-paradise in the USA. Many things you do to earn money, will not work in germany. If you earn money with something here, you need to say it to your visitor: "Hey, this link is paid! -> I will earn money!". Your hidden marketing-actions to make money, will not work here... On the other side I think this is good for customers, because they should know, if a review is paid or not. Because paid-reviews are often partial. Just my two cents.
  • easisell · 2 months ago
    David it's not just you. I had a bunch of complaints on my Twitter feed yesterday about this. I don't think it's particularly necessary - I agree with you that the free market will handle it better. We don't need more rules, we need more freedom - we need more freedom of choice so that we can shape a better, more efficient world.

    At the end of the day, I've learned that the Federal Government isn't there to make life better. It's there to increase profits, power & restrict freedoms.
  • George R Perry · 2 months ago
    I think this could be dangerous. I'm not saying that people shouldn't disclose that they have a relationship with products that they're reviewing, but I think there are levels of relationship. I run a wine site, and while I have received free wine to review, the provider understands that just because they gave me the wine gratis doesn't mean I'm going to write a favorable review, but I always thank them for the wine at the end of the post regardless of my thoughts on it - does that count as disclosure to my readers or do I need to do something more? I think people will get in trouble because they thought they were covering themselves and it turns out they weren't, and will get hit with fines that they can't pay.
  • Blake @ Props Blog · 2 months ago
    The FTC really should just stay out of it since as you said, people who don't disclose affiliates don't last long anyway.

    I think as long as bloggers aren't required to disclose their exact compensation in their review post, I don't think it is a huge deal. Even then, I don't think it will come as a huge shock to most readers.

    TV networks aren't required to disclose how much each ad cost during the commercial, as long as bloggers say that it is a sponsored review, I don't think it's any different.
  • JR Griggs · 2 months ago
    Yeah I wrote a post about it too. I think the gov needs to worry more about disclosing there payoffs. But, to avoid problems I created a disclosure page for general items and I'll post paid or free items I review in the post.
  • Franck Silvestre · 2 months ago
    Yup, I do not make paid reviews on my blog (I recently reviewed a blog, but the owner didn't even know it).

    Thanks for letting us know this though.

    Franck
    the Body Guard marketer
  • Bruce Inouye · 2 months ago
    Hey David,

    I'm with you on this....NOT NECESSARY!

    Just like what you said, everything the US government does ends up in doo doo. I think this is "front and center" for our attention now and very soon, when all the dust settles, our government will look at some other group to regulate. Then the attention, and enforcement will die by the wayside. There is no way to enforce regulations on the millions of blogs and sites out there. That is the the reality. I wouldn't lose any sleep.

    But, I do think it is a good idea to have one more disclosure item at the bottom of our sites, maybe labeled "integrity." That could sit next to the "disclaimer", "privacy," and "TOS?"

    PS: I'm already seeing "additional disclosures" written below testimonials on some salesletter sites.
  • Mara · 2 months ago
    It's just you.
  • Anna · 2 months ago
    I think it's a great idea to force people to disclose when they're paid to say good things about a product. Not everyone is sophisticated enough to detect it from the words alone. The free market is NOT good at kicking out the scums who prey on innocents. After the past 18 months in the US, how can you argue that?

    Maybe the government won't be good at it. But they'll get better and better as they learn more.

    (And yes, if you take free wine with or without a promise of a good review, you are unethical. Studies have proven that people unconsciously make different decisions than when they have no exchange of valuables.)
  • CharlesSeymourJr · 2 months ago
    What I do is tell people in each post, and in my Use document on my sites, that I am being paid a commission if they purchase.

    This doesn't have to be "Hey wait... I'm only saying this because I'm being paid so don't listen to me!" It can be "be sure to make up your own mind on any product because even though I will be paid a small commission when someone purchases, you should always make up your own mind."

    I often say that EARLY in a post so that by the time someone is far along the purchase trail, my statement won't get in their way.

    But people respect us more when we tell them that we have a vested interest... and even if it weren't the law, wouldn't YOU want to know that someone is being paid if you purchase through their lead?

    Charlie Seymour Jr
    http://twitter.com/UltimateWAHDads
  • Crushable · 2 months ago
    From a broad perspective, it just comes from the fact that people are tech illiterate including the FTC. Trying to regulate internet marketing when you know nothing about it, as im sure it is the case with a bunch of 50 year old men on the ftc, is going to lead to poor outcomes, not the ones intended.

    cheers from SuperAwesomeDating
  • Jenny · 2 months ago
    The FTC is essentially declaring that any online content creator who generates income from e-commerce referrals is now subject to FTC authority.
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