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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday May 21 2020, @05:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the spoof-in-advertising dept.

AT&T slapped down for its '5G E' ads: You don't have a 5G network, so stop saying so, says watchdog:

AT&T has been officially slapped down by America's National Advertising Review Board (NARB) for its 5G Evolution campaign in which it branded its phone and network 5G E, despite not actually deploying 5G technology.

"A panel of the National Advertising Review Board has recommended that AT&T Services discontinue its '5G Evolution' and '5G Evolution, The First Step to 5G' claims," the self-regulatory body ruled on Wednesday.

It went on: "The NARB panel determined that both claims will mislead reasonable consumers into believing that AT&T is offering a 5G network and recommended that the claims be discontinued."

Amazingly, despite AT&T being roundly mocked for its campaign – which, among other things, placed a "5GE" logo in the icon-bar along the top of its phones to dress up its 4G network as 5G – AT&T fought against the censure, even appealing a previous recommendation that it stop.

The NARB noted straight though you suspect with a smirk: "It was not disputed that the AT&T network is not a 5G network."

It also disagreed with AT&T that people would realize the "E" meant "Evolution," as in the network will eventually evolve into a 5G network, rather than thinking, er, it's 5G. And the watchdog pointed out, quite reasonably, that "the current prevalent technology in wireless is 4G LTE, and LTE stands for 'evolution'." Bam!

Also at iPhone Hacks, the Mac Observer, and Android Police.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by DannyB on Thursday May 21 2020, @09:51PM (1 child)

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Thursday May 21 2020, @09:51PM (#997605) Journal

    I would want enforcement of truth in advertising laws. And any other regulations necessary to stop corporate bad behavior. It's just that any kind of regulation seems to get push back from a certain party.

    Regulations wouldn't be needed of corporations could behave themselves.

    Is that more clear?

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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by bzipitidoo on Thursday May 21 2020, @11:47PM

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Thursday May 21 2020, @11:47PM (#997650) Journal

    In fact, many businesses want good rules, and want those good rules enforced, for the same reason that sports teams want rules and enforcement. If the rules can be ignored, then the game, whatever it is, degenerates into anarchy. Some would have us believe the fans could force them to stay honest, through the power of the market, by, for instance, boycotting all the games with the cheaters.

    Without structure and laws, it's a race to the bottom. If a rival gets away with cheating, that puts more pressure on an honest business. If nothing is done about the cheating, the honestly run business may eventually face the stark choice of cheat, or die.

    Rules aren't perfect, of course, and efforts to corrupt them are an ongoing problem. Any business can try to bribe lawmakers into passing legislation that is highly favorable to them. Happens all too often.