Apple Inc. Apple has been involved in two major rulings by the ASA; its claim to be selling "the world's fastest personal computer" in 2004, its
Power Mac G5 system, was judged to be unsubstantiated. The complaints against two other claims made in advertising for the product were not upheld. Later, in August 2008, an advertisement for the
iPhone was banned because of false claims that it could access "all of the Internet"due to its lack of support of major
plug-ins such as
Flash.
Atheist Bus Campaign On 21 January 2009, the ASA ruled that an advert campaign, stating "There is probably no God", did not breach the code. Religious groups including
Christian Voice had complained that the Atheist Bus Campaign broke the advertising code on the grounds of substantiation and truthfulness. The ASA said that the
British Humanist Association's campaign did not breach the advertising code or mislead consumers and that it therefore would not launch an investigation. The ASA subsequently closed the case. "The ASA council concluded that the ad was an expression of the advertiser's opinion and that the claims in it were not capable of objective substantiation," said the ASA. "Although the ASA acknowledges that the content of the ad would be at odds with the beliefs of many, it concluded that it was unlikely to mislead or to cause serious or widespread offence."
Israel tourism advertisement In July 2009, the ASA banned an
Israeli tourism poster following complaints.
Palestine Solidarity Campaign,
Jews for Justice for Palestinians and 442 members of the public complained about how the map on the poster displayed the
West Bank,
Gaza Strip, and the
Golan Heights as part of
Israel. The
Israeli tourism ministry responded to the criticism, saying the map was a "general, schematic tourism and travel information map" and was not meant to be a political statement.
L'Oréal L'Oréal's claims in a mascara advertisement featuring actress
Penélope Cruz "exaggerated the effect that could be achieved by using the mascara on natural
lashes". In 2011, two additional makeup ads for
L'Oréal's were banned after British Liberal Democrat politician
Jo Swinson lodged complaints about ads for
foundation products made by L'Oréal-owned brands,
Lancôme and
Maybelline, featuring actress
Julia Roberts and supermodel
Christy Turlington. The 2011 complaints stated that L'Oréal ads were not representative of the results that the products can actually achieve. ASA confirmed that both ads were misleading, without the aid of before and after shots. It ruled that the two ads breached advertising standards code for exaggeration and for being misleading, and banned them from future publication.
Brennan JB7 music player In March 2011, 3GA's advertisements for a digital
jukebox known as the
Brennan JB7, which can import content from CDs and
cassette tapes, were found to be in violation of ASA guidelines for glorifying illegal acts, because it implied that it was acceptable to
rip music, since "[it] repeatedly made reference to the benefits of the product being able to copy music but did not make clear that it was illegal to do so without the permission of the copyright owner". 3GA denied the claims, stating that the copies of music stored on the device were intended to improve accessibility, and are incidental copies without economical significance. Making private copies of audio CDs is illegal under United Kingdom copyright law. In January 2013, 3GA was also found to be in non-compliance in another set of ads for the JB7 which promoted an optional dock for attaching an MP3 player such as an
iPod. The ASA found that their advertisements did not make clear that the dock was not included with the JB7, and did not adequately mention that it is only compatible with older iPod models (such as the
iPod Classic) formatted for use on Windows and could not be used with newer Apple devices such as the
iPod Touch and
iPhone.
TripAdvisor In September 2011, the ASA launched a formal investigation into
TripAdvisor after receiving a complaint submitted by online investigations company
KwikChex and two hotels, that its claims to provide trustworthy and honest reviews from travellers are false. The ASA found that TripAdvisor "should not claim or imply that all its reviews were from real travellers, or were honest, real or trusted", and as a result of the investigation, TripAdvisor was ordered to remove the slogan "reviews you can trust" from its UK web site. It changed its hotel review section slogan to 'reviews from our community.'
Other rulings • In 2002, a campaign created by
HHCL for
Easynet's broadband services showed both male and female bosses punching their employees for wasting company money, and employees punching their bosses for slow internet speeds. It was ruled that these adverts could cause serious or widespread offence, and that they condoned violence and
anti-social behavior. • In February 2012, the ASA ruled that the local
Northampton furniture store Sofa King could not use a tagline stating that their prices were "Sofa King low" because it would be considered "likely to cause serious and widespread offense", due to its use of a
pun based on a
profanity. Sofa King's owner disputed these claims, saying that he had run print advertisements in a local newspaper containing the offending slogan for ten years without any complaints, and compared the situation to
FCUK being banned from using their name in such a fashion. •
Nestlé's claim that it markets
infant formula "ethically and responsibly" was found to be unsupported in the face of evidence provided by the campaigning group Baby Milk Action. • In July 2018, the ASA ruled that Karamba Casino must remove an advert for the slot game Starburst titled "Tips and tricks on how to win at Starburst." The complaint filed stated the advertisement was "socially irresponsible" because it implied that strategies for a slot game could lead to a player making money. Four other complaints against online casinos were upheld by the ASA in 2017 against
Ladbrokes,
888,
Skybet, and Casumo because of adverts placed by
affiliates. ==See also==