Apple Smacked Down For Calling iPhone 3G "Really Fast"

from the define-really-and-define-fast dept

An ad for the iPhone 3G has been banned in the UK, after the country’s advertising regulator decided that calling the device “really fast” four times in an ad was making deceptive claims about the speed with which it could access the internet. Earlier in the year, Apple had another iPhone ad banned after it said it could access “all parts of the internet.” The regulator’s action was prompted by 17 complaints from consumers about the ad, though at least one of those who complained after he’d received some poor customer service from Apple says revenge was a factor, and wonders if others had similar motivation. While plenty of complaints about Apple in online forums get ignored or shouted down by the legions of Mac fanboys, at least one guy found a way to make his stick.

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Comments on “Apple Smacked Down For Calling iPhone 3G "Really Fast"”

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27 Comments
dmat says:

I am of two minds on this. On the one hand I like the fact that Apple isn’t able to just get away with everything. I don’t want it to become another Microsoft and see the OS go down the drain.
On the other hand I see an incredible fuss being made every time anything seems to not work perfectly. This may be a little biased, but I think Apple gets blamed for mistakes a lot more and a lot faster than any company. Probably partly their fault, they are one of the best known companies around now, with their ad campaigns.
But I think we just don’t make nearly as big a deal of lawsuits like this hitting Dell or IBM. And although the fanboys can be very… energetic in their opinions, a fanbase does not appear for nothing.

SteveD says:

An angry customer is an angry customer, no matter the motivation.

But this seems a fairly cut&dry situation, with an advertiser misrepresenting the abilities of their product and getting smacked on the nose for it.

Speed is an important product feature in mobile net devices. If you bought a car after watching it zoom about in an advert only to find it only did 30mph, you might feel a bit cheated too.

Thom says:

How is a relativistic claim a problem?

As I’m currently traveling in London, I’m seeing the iPhone ads on TV with a disclaimer something to the effect of “sequence and speed has been accelerated”, or some such legalese.

If they want to go after Apple because the *NETWORK* cannot possibly function as fast as the events necessary to be squeezed into a :30 spot, that’s one thing. It’s entirely another to go after them for a relativistic statement like “really fast” As compared to what? My old 1st gen HTC WinMo phone? Abso-friggin-lutely! As compared to my desktop on a hard-wired gigabit Ethernet connection? Well, sure… but that’s not the point here, is it?

Matt (profile) says:

Re: How is a relativistic claim a problem?

It’s not about speed, you dolt.
It’s about realistic performance. This is why the smart folks don’t use intel, the smart folks don’t use vista, etc. However, some do get frauded by a fraud ad like apple’s.

Lets use your example. If they said its way faster than an HTC, nobody would have said squat. In fact, it’d probably have been a more effective advertisement.

If you claim your car can go up to 200 miles per hour when the real max speed is around 120 and don’t mention that the “max” is on a downhill, well gee, maybe it can only go as fast as it will go (which might be, say considerably less).

Essentially even if your Iphone was on a LAN your performance would not match what they did in a commercial. For this occurrence, someone managed to make the complaints about fraudulent advertising known. It’s not unlike those McDonalds commercials that use plastic glazed sandwiches to look “amazing” are the same as the real ones, just nobody has been as successful at putting them to the same standard of honesty.

SteveD says:

Re: How is a relativistic claim a problem?

It wasn’t about a statement, it was about showing the phone doing things like downloading google street maps instantaneously.

A tech-savy person would probably see it as an exaggeration (and ignore it as such), but there are plenty of people out there who don’t know any better and would buy it believing that possible.

Seatec says:

IPhone commercials

Has any of you seen the disclaimer that flashes by in the ad foprs the IPHone at least here in the states. It says something like some parts of the operations have been cut out for the purpous of this commcercial meaning that they left several things like waiting for he internet to load and other things you have to do to get the same result they show in the commercial to make it look quick! everyone of you IPHOne users deserve what they get. All this oooohh aaaahh stuff theys how you has been available for years but most of you are to dumb to fgind this kind of functionality so you have to have Jobs show you to the water. Cattle!!!

Dave says:

It wasn't the claim, it was the demo

The ad itself and the words they use weren’t the problem. The problem was the fact it showed the phone doing a number of different tasks in :28 when it wasn’t actually possible.

The showing of an impossible scenario is what the Advertising Standards Council said was misrepresentative.

PCPro duplicated the tasks using an iPhone connected to Wifi and it took almost three minutes to actually do the tasks shown. Here’s the video of the recreation.
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/239556/what-the-banned-iphone-advert-should-really-look-like.html

Anonymous Coward says:

Apple torches

This ad smack down seems a bit odd. We let a lot of misleading ads get through in the US… maybe overseas they are a bit more strict on these things?

But Apple always tout how they are super mega ultra best and how their products are top notch and flawlesss… really just their brand name not living up to the brand and hype. They are unfairly scrutinized and I take stones thrown at apple with a grain of salt but they sort of brought it on themselves. Everyone expects Microsoft to screw up… but Apple claims they never do.

tubes says:

Re: Apple torches

That’s exactly what I was thinking. Almost every commercial on US TV is misleading & wrong. At least overseas there is a little bit of oversight on the “tele”. We are supposed to have truth in advertising but that is not the case. If there is truth they put it on the bottom of the screen where it is shown for a second & in a very small font that no one can read or it is read very quickly similar to the pharmaceutical ads.

You, Me and the Bourgeois says:

UK Safety Police: Keep away from the iphone! They're lying to you!

Only 17 complaints? I wonder if this complaint may have come from a competing network who doesn’t have the phone on their network.

Is it a case of “If you can’t compete, silence them”?

iPhone has 80% of the high-end smartphone market, and has around 95% satisfaction and 80% of owners will recommend it to others. Those numbers are nothing short of incredible. From a organic, word-of-mouth advertising perspective, it’s virtually impossible to compete with those numbers.

Ally Shannon says:

Why so heated?

Why is everyone getting so wound up about the iphone and how it is advertised? So what if they demonstrate the functionality and ‘omit’ the downtime to illustrate the end product? Everyday in life we, the general public, are subjected to unrealistic advertising on TV…singing cows, cars travelling 200 miles in the time it takes to run an average ad etc. Do we get over-heated about them? In our home, myself, partner and our 2 sons all have the iphone 3G and cannot believe how good it actually is. The harshest critics of new technology are teenagers and early 20 somethings – our sons fall into these categories, one of whom is an IT wiz, and everyday they find something new to do with the iphone. Lighten up people…its a new generation of mobile comms; embrace it as such.

Sean says:

I find my phone to be about as fast as it is in the commercial when I’m on Wi-Fi, meaning that they aren’t really misrepresenting the phone’s speeds, but they are misrepresenting the network’s speeds. I don’t believe they say anywhere in the ad they are on the 3G network, they just imply the phone transmits and receives data over the 3G network.

But advertising has always been this way, the product is rarely as good as the ad says it is. Will the UK begin to attack McDonalds because their burgers never look as good at the restaurant as they do in the ads?

Sean says:

I find my phone to be about as fast as it is in the commercial when I’m on Wi-Fi, meaning that they aren’t really misrepresenting the phone’s speeds, but they are misrepresenting the network’s speeds. I don’t believe they say anywhere in the ad they are on the 3G network, they just imply the phone transmits and receives data over the 3G network.

But advertising has always been this way, the product is rarely as good as the ad says it is. Will the UK begin to attack McDonalds because their burgers never look as good at the restaurant as they do in the ads?

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