
Confession: I Fell for HelloFresh’s ‘Free Breakfast’
A reminder to be careful about ad claims that may seem too good to be true.
In September 2020, a class-action lawsuit was filed against Rockville Audio for allegedly falsely advertising the Root Mean Square (RMS) power ratings of its amplifiers, speakers, and subwoofers to make consumers believe the audio products can handle more power and produce higher volumes than they actually can. The complaint claims that the actual RMS ratings of Rockville Audio products is approximately half of what the company advertises and the audio products fail when consumers try to use them at the advertised RMS power capacity. (Serafini et al v. E-Distributors, Inc. d/b/a Rockville Audio a/k/a Rockville Pro Sound & Lighting d/b/a AudioSavings, Inc., Case No. 20-cv-4348, E.D.N.Y.)
A reminder to be careful about ad claims that may seem too good to be true.
The bottom line? Toothpaste tubes aren’t generally getting recycled.
Lawsuits allege products contain ingredients harmful to coral reefs and marine life.
TINA.org explores the divide between the marketing and the science.
Company walks back composting claim following TINA.org inquiry sparked by self-regulatory ad challenge.