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Comments 14

skellington1 October 6 2009, 22:07:29 UTC
FAIL. Hurry everyone! We all have to freak out, because what's been going on forever is now going on ON THE INTERNET. I hope publishers throw a righteous tantrum about this; it's so clearly against their interests.

And...doesn't this really apply to all other review sites? Places like anandtech? Considering how many people do reviews for free, a lot of that wealth of information will dry up if people no longer have the incentive of some stuff at the end of the day...if anyone follows the rules, that is. Enforcement of this idiocy'll be a bitch.

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l33tminion October 7 2009, 02:28:05 UTC
Did you actually read the text of the new regulation? It's not that bad, and it doesn't prohibit anyone from receiving compensation (including the product in question) for doing reviews.

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skellington1 October 7 2009, 23:38:01 UTC
Point -- just read it, and the interviewee was definitley making stuff up when he talked about sending things back.

I'm still curious about how they think they'll police the whole internet, though.

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l33tminion October 8 2009, 00:59:58 UTC
interviewee was definitley making stuff up when he talked about sending things back

The interviewer asked him how you could get a review product to not count as compensation. He wasn't "making stuff up" so much as getting distracted by largely irrelevant questions.

I'm still curious about how they think they'll police the whole internet, though.

They don't. I don't think they go through print ads or TV ads currently, either. They investigate complaints about deceptive advertising practices.

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rosepurr October 7 2009, 02:01:53 UTC
Jim and I are very not happy about this. We receive and review preview copies of books ALL THE TIME. I seldom disclose that it's a proof copy because I don't really think about it. And the way the reg is written, I'm not even sure if my Good Reads account counts as a blog? Or if I link to my Good Reads account in FB and LJ is it a blog entry then? Dumb.

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l33tminion October 7 2009, 02:27:35 UTC
The text of the regulation makes no distinction between any form of media and any other. It only uses the word "blog" in the examples.

How exactly do you think this is going to affect you?

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rosepurr October 7 2009, 02:35:34 UTC
Because we get free books and review them online, either in our Blogs or in a venue like FB or Good Reads. The free books qualify as the receipt of goods and that possibly makes us advertisers under the new reg.

Also, from listening to the news this morning, the FTC is going to be targeting companies that send out products more than bloggers who endorse the products which means that the steady stream of new books I might not have otherwise heard about or read may stop coming free to my house, which sucks.

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l33tminion October 7 2009, 03:43:42 UTC
Seriously, read the regulation (p. 75 and examples 7-9 on p. 79-81). (When reading example 7, please note the significant ways it differs from your situation.) This is basic, common-sense stuff.

I expect the only change publishers will make in response to this regulation will be adding a note to review copies along the lines of "if you review this, please say you received a review copy".

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l33tminion October 7 2009, 02:08:32 UTC
As far as I can tell after reading the updated guidelines (the relevant bit (§255.5 Disclosure of material connections) starts on p. 75, examples 7-9 are especially relevant to online media), this isn't a problem. The meat of it:

When there exists a connection between the endorser and the seller of the advertised product that might materially affect the weight or credibility of the endorsement (i.e., the connection is not reasonably expected by the audience), such connection must be fully disclosed.

The actual text of the revised regulation doesn't seem to make any distinction between new and traditional media, except to the extent that affects audience expectations. The enforcement of the policy is directed at the companies, not the endorsers, as before. The effect of the policy will probably be that companies will include "say you got a free copy of this product" in the letter that comes with said product and reviewers will start posts with "we received a copy of [product] from [company]". In other words, it's an incredibly ( ... )

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::blinks:: mojave_wolf October 7 2009, 14:30:46 UTC
Yes, this is much stupidity, but I am suddenly wondering how many reviews I will have to start. writing and putting where to get free books, before this moronism causes publishers to stop sending them? I want free graphic novels, too, does the freebie concept in xchange for reviews work w/them, too?

::plans on paying as much personal attention to new rule as I did to speed limits on the interstate back when I was younger::

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l33tminion October 7 2009, 16:51:40 UTC
It's an apt comparison, I expect this one will be a case where selective enforcement rules the metaphorical road.

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