Bloggers beware — here comes the FTC. The long arm of the US Federal Trade Commission is reaching out to bloggers and social network users to stamp out a modern day form of payola. New rules approved by the FTC this week bring the new media into the same fold as radio and television when it comes to people endorsing products.
Simply put (and the Commission takes many pages to explain this) if bloggers get an economic benefit from endorsing a product, they had better believe what they say, and let the audience know they are being paid to say it. In future they will be held responsible for their words just like proper celebrities spruiking about products on the mainstream media.
A second toughening of the FTC’s rules modifies guidelines to state that endorsements “must reflect the honest opinions, findings, beliefs, or experience of the endorser.” According to Richard Cleland, assistant director of the FTC’s division of advertising practices, “If you say, ‘I love this product and I use it’ … it better be truthful.”
Celebrities (including a humble blogger getting a free product for giving a plug) can’t lie about loving a product, and if they say it has certain effects, they should at least attempt to ensure that’s true, Mr. Cleland said. Otherwise, in addition to slapping the company with fines or legal action, the FTC could now hold celebrities legally accountable for their endorsements.
The silver lining. The International Energy Agency has found the silver lining to the world economic recession. In a report out today it says that carbon emissions from energy will decline by as much as three per cent this year – the steepest drop in the 45 years they have been collecting data. The agency also calculates that it will mean emissions in 2020 will be 5% lower than its calculation of last year without any further policy changes by the international community.
The IEA report sets out a strategy which would stabilised CO2 at 450 parts per million by 2050 with targets for various sectors summarised for the world as a whole below:
That’s a scarily steep ramp-up projected for ‘wind’ and ‘other renewables’ – and that’s only for a 450 ppm target. I hope they’re up to it, but I don’t think they are. We’re going to badly overshoot 450 ppm without getting equally ambitious with nuclear.
GFC again same time next year?