Most Deceptive Ads of 2024
Here were some of the worst ads TINA.org investigated this year.
In November 2017, a class-action lawsuit was filed against Biogenesis for allegedly falsely promoting its liquid vitamin B supplements as containing a specific amount of vitamin B12 per serving when, according to the complaint, the supplements do not provide the amount stated on the product labels because the supplements begin to degrade after they are opened resulting in the amount of vitamin B12 in the supplement becoming negligible and ineffective. In addition, plaintiffs claim that the company deceptively markets that some products contain Methylocbalamin (MeCO) – a form of vitamin B12 that is allegedly more appealing to consumers but less stable than other forms of the vitamin – without also telling consumers that they do not get the benefits once the MeCo form of vitamin B12 is degraded to a negligible amount. (Welk et al v. Nutraceutical Corp. d/b/a Biogenesis Nutraceuticals, Inc. d/b/a Nutrabiogenesis d/b/a Biogenesis, Case No. 17-cv-2266, S. D. CA.)
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Here were some of the worst ads TINA.org investigated this year.
Rudolph’s Fame Spells Trouble at the North Pole in This Mockumentary Ad For The Norwegian Postal Service.
Lawsuit alleges products’ ginger ale taste comes from a secret artificial ingredient.
Hidden fee is a bummer.
Some class-action settlements that left consumers behind.