The Death of Social Media, Brought To You By The FTC & FDA

Mar 06
2010

Before I start let me say that I agree with both the FDA and FTC (the big Fs), that companies need to improve their disclosure and honesty in packaging/labeling. I also completely agree with their initiative for bloggers and websites to disclose when they are getting free or paid samples from companies (as an endorsement or not) so readers know that there was a gift or transaction involved in the post.

Let me also disclaim that I am currently employed by one of the companies effected by these broad-reaching initiatives, although our upper management and lawyers have kept me out of it, thankfully.  This is not a company-sponsored, encouraged or sanctioned post.  This is my opinion and my opinion only.

Here is where the existence of social media is in serious jepeordy:

FTC.gov Online Endorsement Guidelines

“The Commission intends to treat endorsements and testimonials identically in the context of its enforcement of the Federal Trade Commission Act and for purposes of this part. The term endorsements is therefore generally used hereinafter to cover both terms and situations.”

FTC Warning Letter to 17 Companies

One of the 17 companies was specifically targeted for pure customer testimonials on their site (I wonder who’s lobbying was able to do that, only one of the 17?  Hmmmmm).

Let me restate.  I completely agree with fixing all of the mislabeling and dishonest labeling and hope that all companies will be honest about what they are putting in products we buy.

Here is where social media will die…the first time

If a consumer can be held liable, as the FTC says, for anything they say if they are given a product either for free or paid.  Then any comment you make after going to any big-box store, your local grocer or an event where you try a sip, taste or freebie will make you completely liable for anything you say about it.  What happens if you go to dinner at a friends house who forges steal for a company that makes pots/pans that made the perfect meal you just ate, do you need to disclose everything you ate, the brand of ingredients and everything associated with it or you might get sued?  The short answer is no.  But the issue is a very slippery slope and both the FTC and FDA are starting to hop on the slide.  Yes, I’m being ridiculous but my point is, there is a very fine line between keeping companies and the online community honest and making it impossible for everyone to do anything online for fear of the big F’s coming after them with unlimited consumer funding (because we all know they don’t care about how much it costs…us).

The second death of social media

The minute the big Fs (or big pharmaceutical lobbyists) are able to stop consumers from being able to voice their OPINIONS or FEELINGS is the minute we can all stop believing or hoping.  You see a testimonial is not scientific, it is not studied, researched, scrutinized or proof that anything will work, cure, save or solve any problem.  Testimonials are OPINIONS and FEELINGS by someone who had an experience with or about something.  Often times, testimonials are simply the only hope we have because research and corporations (pharma, usually) have failed or priced things out of reach and we have no other hope. For the big Fs to say that all humans treat testimonials with the same weight as medical research is presumptuous and an insult to everyone’s intelligence. I’d like to see how the study was done, who funded it, who lobbied to have the study done (who funded that) and exactly what the study questions and options to answer were. It’s quite easy for companies and/or the government to create survey’s, studies or research that produces the results they (or lobbyist) want.  It’s MUCH harder to produce a product that someone purchases themselves or tries at a friends house or in a big-box store, grocery store or at an event and believes in it enough to tell others…without compensation!

Compensated or implied-compensation testimonials are something totally different. I agree those should be disclosed. I’m talking about a pure testimonial, comment, post or article. If free sampling in stores or anywhere else can produce testimonials that hold both the consumer and company liable…how long will they last?  Who wants to get sued by the big Fs every time they do sampling because someone may find they liked the product or had a great experience with it?

I find the general premise of the FTC & FDA actions spot-on. The scope, reach and potential power of these actions is what I find disturbing.  So far I’m going to have faith that they’ll do the right thing and that they won’t over-reach either of their bounds and destroy social media for everyone.

I wouldn’t wait for my testimonial though. I’m going to hold out and see what the data and their track record show because  this is the health of the internet we’re talking about and nobody is lobbying me.

DISCLAIMER: The internet, myself, or any of you will not, would not, might not and/or can not become healthy by reading this. None of the claims made here are made by me, supported by me or  encouraged by me. This is for research and educational purposes ONLY, eating this article will not prevent anything, will make you gain weight and may force you to seek medical attention.

DISTURBING CONTRADICTIONS

Major Contradiction by the Big Fs Shows A Concern For Lobbyists NOT Consumers

Why aren’t the Big Fs submitting the same complaints to their own sister agencies making similar claims encouraging consumers to buy/consume these products (and these aren’t testimonials, some aren’t even  study-based) ?  Here are just a few examples:

1)  Department of Health & Human Services (referencing a CDC study): “Eating lots of fruits and vegetables is important for healthy weight and prevention of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease and some cancers. And kids get better growth with enough fruits and vegetables.”  http://www.hhs.gov/news/healthbeat/2009/12/20091202a.html

2)  Center for Disease Control (there are pages of supporting studies and statements on this site): “Epidemiologic evidence supports an association between diet and several chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and several types of cancer (1-6).”  http://www.cdc.gov/PCD/issues/2006/apr/05_0146.htm

3) U.S. Department of Agriculture: “Fiber, fruit and vegetable consumption may help prevent cancer…The consumption of vegetables and fruit has always been seen as health-promoting. Historically, particular fruits and vegetables were thought to prevent or cure ailments ranging from headaches to heart disease. Studies spanning several decades have shown that people who eat a wide variety of vegetables and fruits have a lower incidence of many types of cancer than people who do not.”  http://www.ars.usda.gov/News/docs.htm?docid=10899

4)  The U.S. Surgeon General: “In contrast, consumption of fruits and vegetables in place of high calorie foods may reduce the risk for obesity and help sustain weight loss because the body’s sense of fullness at meals is partly regulated by volume. Fruits and vegetables contain few calories and are bulky foods, so they have a low caloric density and are more filling than fast foods.”  http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/obesityvision/obesityvision2010.pdf

5) U.S. Public Health Service (part of Department of Health & Human Services): “It is estimated that as much as 50 percent or more of cancer can be prevented through smoking cessation and improved dietary habits, such as reducing fat consumption and increasing fruit and vegetable consumption.[7][8] Physical activity and weight control also can contribute to cancer prevention.[9][10]”  http://www.usphs.gov/corpslinks/pharmacy/phpharm/hpcancer.html


To Free-Fi or not to Free-FI (that’s free wi-fi)

Mar 02
2010

Who hasn’t hopped on someone else’s network either by mistake or on purpose for a quick connection. I know every time my Cox connection goes out (daily) I end up on the neighbors crappy network.

It’s not safe, insecure and generally not very smart to hop on someone’s network. Long long ago in a galaxy far away, in a parallel universe of course, someone like me use to drive around ‘war-driving’ just to see how many people had open networks and then see how many files/folders they left open to the world.  It was amazing how little you had to drive to find completely open networks and thanks to our friends at Microsoft, completely open computers. My friend was a ‘good’ hack and left a message behind in the form of a word document with the words “SECURE YOUR NETWORK” in type 72 font. But could have done a lot more, including deleting every file in My Documents and in some cases even formatted the hard drives.

I know the bad of playing the Free-Fi game, yet I still find myself doing it by mistake or out of necessity on occassion.  How many of you Free-Fi?

Do you Free-Fi your Wi-Fi

Have you ever used someone else's wireless internet? Tell the truth and we won't tell your mom!

How Not to Add your Boss / Co-workers to your Social Media Network

Feb 25
2010

Came across an article today that was stating in a survey that 56% of Americans say it is irresponsible to be friends with a boss and 62% say it’s wrong to be friends with an employee. Well crap, it’s a lose, lose situation. Let’s say you add your boss or co-worker you do a status update, they know everything that is going on. From drinking too late one night and not showing up to work or drinking without them even. You can’t do that status update about driving up to Mammoth and snowboarding for the day because you already called in sick. But what if you don’t add them and they get mad at you for it. Maybe they think that you are so socially superior then them or in lamens term “cooler” than they are that’s why you didn’t add them.

Well today is your lucky day as I will give you a few tips to avoid this awkward situation.

1.) If you haven’t already told them that you have a Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, and/or LiveJournal. DON’T!

2.) What if they already know? Then you create two accounts with your name.

3.) One, that you use all day to chat and leave message on everyone’s wall spamming your Farmville, Mafia Wars, Bejeweled Jabber and everything else you can think of. The second one with a perfect portrait shot of you (think high school senior portrait, but aged by 10 years). Add every fan page that is associated with your business field. Also don’t forget to make a secondary email address as well. Follow the proper email etiquette  by using first name, last name @gmail.com

4.) Do NOT* link your twitter page to your Facebook page, sometimes you forget which one you linked it to you and start having a few drinks. Then you twittered about how you hookup with your boss’ assistant. Not the time for him to find out or the place.

5.) If you have already added your colleague and/or boss to become a friend already, then you can accidently* delete them. Maybe they won’t noticed, but if they do run the line, “Dude, my account was hacked.” This always will work, it’s like a PC getting a virus. It’s bound to happen.

Well, I hope those tips will help you out in your social media war at work. It’s a dangerous place out there and it’s only going to be more dangerous if your boss is your friend.

tram@wtfissocialmedia.com

D.C. Lobbying – Toyota = $15M, GM = $50M, who’s hiding what?

Feb 24
2010

I heard on NPR this morning that Toyota has been Lobbying Washington (along with every other major company in the country) to the tune of $15M.  They brought up the fact that several of the people that are on the current questioning panel have received campaign money from Toyota totaling under $200K.

Hearing this didn’t make me mad, it made me wonder…Even if Toyota spent every cent of that money trying to “cover” up some issues, what kind of issues does GM have if they need to spend $51.1M in Lobbying (according to the NPR report)?  Or another question, how much of that $50M was Lobbying Washington to investigate Toyota?

I drive a Toyota with zero fear, probably because I’m a safe driver and stay well behind people but also because the shear number of “bad” cars vs. good cars is FAR LESS than I would have expected.  Honestly, this whole thing is not good for Toyota and is an absolute nightmare for the families that have had car problems and lost someone or been hurt.  But how is it that nobody is asking for the same data from Ford, GM or other car companies so that we have something to compare to.

In business you learn that the worst thing you can do is make decisions in a vacuum (without seeing everything around you). Yet, I really feel in-a-vacuum about this whole Toyota thing.  Maybe they are bad, maybe their percentage of bad vs. good is high but I don’t believe any of it until someone shows me a real picture with real data comparing the companies that are all over the news capitalizing on it.

Hey Toyota, throw me some data about your competition and let’s start a PR campaign called Tell the Truth.  If you suck…let’s expose it, if all of this bad news pales in comparison to those other big car companies then let’s tell people about it and tell the truth, outside of a vacuum.

Washington Lobbying is great at creating Vacuums. It is great if they truly are backed by data.  I’ve seen zero comparative data which makes me feel duped by the dopes again.

Another report shows the Auto Industry spending over $50M in just the first 9 mo. of 2009

WTF*s Trip to Macworld 2010

Feb 22
2010

Thank you to the following people who made this video happen:

Telefingers
iXpand 3G
Scosche
CarMD
Eye-Fi
Fasttrac from Juicy Development
Microsoft and Microsoft Office 2008/2010
And of course Macworld
Also to my co-host Aaron Williams, guest including James, Robin, and Randy.

Also wanted to thank Alex @ Unitek for tickets to Macworld, this would never have happened without you. The best Apple vendors this side of the country.

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