Will Walmart Ever Take Responsibility for Deception on Its Site?
TINA.org finds more of the same – and then some – from retail giant.
March 2013: A state court judge granted the plaintiff’s request to dismiss this case.
July 2012: Organic Liaison and Kirstie Alley, spokeswoman and owner of the company, were hit with a class-action lawsuit alleging, among other things, that Organic Liaison uses deceptive before-and-after pictures of Kirstie Alley to market products that it falsely claims will promote weight loss. The complaint states that “[i]n peddling the Organic Liaison Program, Ms. Alley attributes her weight loss to the program, but in reality, Ms. Alley’s weight loss is due to nothing more than the tried and true concept of diet and exercise.” (Abramyan v. Organic Liaison LLC, Organic Management, and Kirstie Alley, Case No. BC488737, California Superior Court – Los Angeles)
TINA.org finds more of the same – and then some – from retail giant.
FTC lawsuit alleged company duped consumers into signing up and then made it hard to cancel.
Your best defense against deceptive AI? A little research.
The surprising way you may be paying more for delivery.
Where’s the beef?