Nationwide Class Action Filed Against DoubleClick 525
Stanley Ference continues: "The class action complaint alleges that DoubleClick deceptively and fraudulently commandeered millions of Internet users to the commercial websites of DoubleClick's customers through dissemination of tens-of-millions of fraudulent Internet advertising banners that impersonated computer system messages. The Complaint states that through use of such Fake User Interface ("FUI") dialogs that fraudulently represented themselves as computer system error messages, DoubleClick tricked millions of Internet users into interrupting the work they were performing to respond to the fraudulent system message, only to unexpectedly find both computer and computer user thus hijacked to commercial websites of DoubleClick's customers.
Additional information about this lawsuit, including an illustration of the advertising banners that are the subject of this lawsuit, may be found at ferencelaw.com/doubleclick."
Here's a link to the press release (PDF) announcing the filing of this lawsuit.
Damn - fooled again (Score:2, Interesting)
--
draziw - +3 karma for low user id
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, maybe more realistically, a sign that says "Warning: next stop for blinker fluid in 200 miles"
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Funny)
This really gets people the older they get. Not only do they need blinker fluid more often because they often forget to turn off their blinkers but they're also more likely to be taken in by the hoax. This is why I never use my blinkers.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Funny)
Wait, what?
Crap.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Informative)
"Warning: Your wheels are not properly secured. Stop here immediately to get them fixed."
or "We noticed that you engine is not running very well today, stop here for a tune-up."
And while you wait, they enter into their database as much info about you as they can glean. eg: license plate number, age range, sex, martial status (wedding ring on his finger?), how many children you have (size and type of car, and whether there is a baby seat in the car), income range (based on y
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Informative)
A casino in Las Vegas got in trouble [reviewjournal.com] over its billboards that resembled traffic signs...it turns out that there are laws (in Nevada and California, at least) that "prohibit the placement of signs that imitate official highway signs."
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Interesting)
Then, it's NOT on the internet, it's YOUR computer telling you that it's unoptimised. Some people may see the add, but when they're own computer says it
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:2)
I heard on the radio that when I am hungry I have a craving for the great taste only found at Taco Bell. Also I heard that I can levitate if I eat their enchilada bowls. Really I saw it on TV.
Well since only Taco Bell can satisfy my hunger cravings I only ate their and end up losing tens of thousands of dollars. Also I have yet to levetitate from eating their enchilada bowls.
Man I am pissed and deserve, oh I say 1 million dollars!
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Funny)
> eating their enchilada bowls.
Really? It happens to me all the time. Starts a couple hours after the enchilada bowl. Or, bean burritos for that matter. I just have to stay away from open flames or the levitation thing gets WAY out of hand. Damn near got a concussion hitting my head on the ceiling first time somebody lit up a cig during a particularly bad episode of levitation.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Insightful)
Despite freeway billboards being annoying they do not attempt to immitate actual road signs, which is illegal.
Even on private streaches of road it is illigal for you to post signes that closely mimic the ugly white on green government signage. Why should critical looking computer message that trick users be all that different... Mike
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Interesting)
I think that the parallel stands legitimately; this is a function of perception, not fact.
We are talking about users, after all.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Interesting)
In what way would it harm our nation and economy if products had to advertise based soley on legitimate, provable objective benefits of thier products? No paid actors giving "testimonials", no hints that using it will get you laid - just bare, provable facts. We'd all be better off.
Full disclosure time - do you work for an advertising company?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a bit different. If you saw a sign that said 'Traffic advisery, use this route instead.' you may very well follow it, and would be quite pissed that it was a ploy to get you to look at new cars. I'm sure most computer users aren't savvy enough to tell that it was a fake ad, since it was designed to look just like a message box in windows.
I don't see why you think the FTC should handle it; they'd likely do nothing at all. A class action suit is more likely to get something done, and i for one wouldn't mind if it shut down double click forever.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:4, Interesting)
That's so true. I teach Windows & general computer related stuff to two persons, and the two of them fell for the "windows-alike-ad" trick. And not that they are dumb or anything; it's just that they know very little about computers and the Internet.
The funny thing is that these ads are always in english, but the Windows version used in the classes is all in spanish (I'm in Spain). And anyway, they click the ad. I'm sure it's some kind of animal response to flashing things :-)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Funny)
Glad I'm not the only one that's happened to. I swear on the beltway that between the unmarked police cars and the policecar salesmen it's a miracle anyone can tell who is who. Though I will say, the Chanel knock offs are great at removing engine deposits and removing gum from the bottom of shoes.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Interesting)
Hold on! The FTC is a federal agency, and the actions of this agency can be controlled by the executive, and even members of Congress who weigh in on particular matters. Consider, for example, how the DOJ let Microsoft off the hook, even though it had won critical fact-findings at the district court.
Regardless of your personal political view, do you really want politicized agencies having exclusive enforcements?
There's a class of lawsuits known as "private attorney general" actions, where ordinary citizens can sue to enforce laws and rules (if these laws allow such actions). This is explicit recognition by the legislature that their agencies charged with enforcing the laws often don't get their priorities right, and that sometimes, justice can come from common citizens.
A similar legislative goal is behind class action suits, but there are other goals, such as efficiency and conservation of scarce judicial resources.
Could you follow up with more specific reasons why you think only a federal agency should have the power to police advertising? Please provide information about how "zealous" the FTC has been under various administrations about pursuing all law-breakers, and not just those without the common sense to make hefty political donations and retain Washington lobbyists (like Microsoft).
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:3, Informative)
See, at least those can be somewhat true from the right POV (the dealer will only have a sale exactly like that just once, etc. etc.). What the suit is complaining about is something akin to setting up orange "Road Closed Ahead - Use Detour" signs along the road that trick drivers into driving right into the car lot.
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:2)
Re:Damn - fooled again (Score:5, Insightful)
what the hell is wrong with 90% of the posters here? Are you really so f***ing arrogant or are you just 14-year-olds who have no other ability besides beeing able to use a computer? Wait.. this is slashdot... forget I asked.
Do you honestly think that a person who clicks on these adds is stupid? How the hell do you excpect someone with no computer skills to spot the difference between the add and a genuine warning?
Do you honestly think it requires intelligence to use a computer? The only thing you need is memory silly people! Experience is what lets you be aware of these things, nothing else.
I assume all the geniuses here are instantly able to spot the difference between an true arabic fullblood (a great horse) and the nordic coldblood (another, very different, horse) the horsedealer over there is trying to sell you...?
Oh wait, you need to have seen them before you say? Good golly, I thought you could spot the difference through your amazing intelligence?
and no, I have never clicked on these adds, not because I'm intelligent, but because I have experience with computers.
Whoa whoa whoa (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Whoa whoa whoa (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Whoa whoa whoa (Score:2)
Well hell then, if all it takes is "You have a new message" we could sue Slashdot! I never asked for those $%#$% metamoderation results...
Yes, I am being sarcastic...
Re:Whoa whoa whoa (Score:2)
Re:Whoa whoa whoa (Score:5, Funny)
oh shit! gotta go. my computer is broadcasting an ip address
in other words (Score:4, Funny)
You can be part of the the Class action if you are willing to admit that you are stupid.
Re:in other words (Score:3, Insightful)
from the site: [ferencelaw.com]
Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, you too can be part of the twenty-first century "I'M SO STUPID I DESERVE MONEY" movement.
Click now and receive $$$'s!!! (*)
* Subject to reality.
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:5, Insightful)
But hey, who cares about making sense, you made your funny little post and you'll get your +1 Funny mods, that's all that matters!
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:5, Funny)
Anyway, I agree that the smartest people I know don't spend that much time with computers, or watching television for that matter.
I don't own a TV, but when I see a TV, I notice that I am more impacted by the commercials than people who've been anesthesized by the machine.
With computers, the marketing data seems to show that when advertisers introduce a new type or shape of ad, the click rates will go up, until people get used to them. I suspect that if you measured the activity of new Internet users, you would see them clicking on the 468x60 ads at the same pace as the new Google/adsense ads. Conversely, as the market is anesthized to the adsense format, its rates will drop.
But back to calling people names. I haven't heard any disparaging remarks about Iceland for awhile; so, I would like to say that anyone who lives in Iceland is stupid...and get some mod points.
PS: if you live in Iceland, I apologize for the crude, and blatantly false remark, but, hey, we do what we can for mod points.
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:5, Insightful)
On /. we take the piss out of normal people that get duped by fake UI's, but when the guy at McDonalds wipes the Big Mac beef patty on his ass and serves it to us, we get pissed off. Why? We see a Big Mac and we assume it's edible, the marketing and packaging dictate that it is, and we BUY it for the marketing and packaging. That makes marketing and packaging directly liable. A professional conoisseur can easily spot/smell whether a beef patty has been wiped on someone's ass, but does that mean he can take the piss out of us C++ hAxOrS because we can't smell/taste it?
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:2)
Microsoft is under threat of lawsuit from numerous people who can't understand that a "Standard" is different than a "Convention." Microsoft's sales pitches stressed that its software was an industry standard, when in fact it was simply a convention, and not based on any kind of specifications from an industry board at all.
Oh, and every product now will have to be geared toward those of limited intellect and/or small children.
Re:Warning Your Computer Has Been Hijacked!! (Score:3, Informative)
McDonald's had received 700 such complaints, and documented full knowledge and extent of the hazard. Many of the claims were settled for up to $500K.
McDonald's kept their coffee heated to 180-190 degrees (boiling is not far off) to maintain taste. Most other places (and probably your own coffee maker) serve coffee at about 135-140 degrees. Big diff
I see the flaw... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I see the flaw... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I see the flaw... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, this is the type of absolutist argument that gets taken up by the academia. A social theorist might see one or two deceptive ads, then conclude that all ads are fraudulent.
The truth of the matter is that most ads are not fraudulent. For example, an ad might say, "We are selling the new Harry Potter book for $xx.xx."
The ad is telling a verifiable fact.
A list of products with the price next to the product is
Not a problem (Score:5, Informative)
WHO IS A MEMBER OF THE PROPOSED CLASS?
The class action Complaint was brought on behalf of all persons residing in the United States who have, while operating a computer, encountered an advertising banner like the one illustrated on this website.
If you saw the ads, you're a member of the class. You don't have to have clicked on any of them.
Re:I see the flaw... (Score:2)
what matters is that the website(ad) is deliberately trying to fool the consumer, i wouldn't think that successing in it or not has much matter.
it's still a very serious crime to try to push very badly printed counterfeit money and use it, it doesn't really matter that you try to say in the court that 'but sir, anybody with brains would have noticed them not to be real'.
Re:I see the flaw... (Score:2)
Especially since their webpage doesn't tell you how you can sign up, it just tells you how you can get email updates about it.
wait a sec ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:wait a sec ... (Score:2)
Re:wait a sec ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:wait a sec ... (Score:2)
how do you prove you were duped? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:how do you prove you were duped? (Score:2)
If you click on it they invite you to join the class...
oh wait
Re:how do you prove you were duped? (Score:2)
ISP Logs
Cookies
They look like and idiot
Right. (Score:2)
How many of us here on slashdot are going to get tricked in this manner? For those of us on Mac or *n*x systems the difference is obvious.
Re:Right. (Score:2)
Re:Right. (Score:2)
Re:Right. (Score:2, Funny)
"FUI"??? (Score:2, Funny)
Banana-fanna-fo-FUI
Me My Mo-MUI
GUI!
*sigh*
True Story (Score:5, Informative)
Re:True Story (Score:2)
I agree. Like most readers of slashdot, I have never personally been fooled by one of those ads. However, there are many (most?) internet users that are not expierenced enough to realize the difference between a real window and an ad.
Take my mother for instance. She is new to computers. When the windows GUI gives her an option ("Ok" and "Cancel" buttons for instance) she expects it to do what it says. When presented with an ad that looks like an official dialog box to her, she gets confused and asks m
Will anyone ever know? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm just waiting..... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh well, at least if I get part of the settlement I can start buying some of those penis pills and russian brides everyone keeps telling me about. I mean honestly, I don't even know half of these people. I guess I just met em at a party or something, but they seem to have gotten my name confused with someone elses. Jesus, you'd think I was on some kind of mailing list or something.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
I hope this succeeds.. (Score:3, Informative)
That kind of advertising is a classic ploy praying on people who are ignorant of the real working of the technology being pushed and used.
Are your brakes less than optimal? Well sure, if you've taken the car out of the driveway in the last six months, hell even if its been driven off the truck that brought them to the dealership.. That does NOT mean that my brakes are going to fail that very moment and that by not following the ad to the product I'm in some sort of imminent doom..
Anyone fooled? (Score:2)
Especially when it resembles a Windows UI.
I mean it's buying "Penis Enlargment" from spammers or something.
Oh! Great! It say "1 message waiting" I have a new message! Hooray!!!
Punch the Monkey! (Score:4, Insightful)
Barely clothed Hot chicks. They could have them hold Linux distros with headlines like "Real men use this distro" or "How hard is your Hardware".
Hey, how many of you checkout a vendor just because of a cute Booth Babe [google.com]? Exactly...
advertisements & falsity (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:advertisements & falsity (Score:2)
Re:advertisements & falsity (Score:2)
There's a difference. These advertisements carry the highest possible degree of falsity possible. Because of that, non computer-savvy people find them confusing and computer-savvy people find them in
Mozilla, you let me down (Score:3, Funny)
I don't have the background to comment on the legitimacy of this suit -- but I sure am curious to see how it plays out, since I have always hated the deceptiveness of those ads. My wife gets fooled occasionally, and I have to clean all that Gator crap off the computer *again*. If only she'd swear off IE for good....
Expected Knowledge (Score:2, Insightful)
Anything that makes the Internet easier to use and less scary for the common user without limiting anybody else is a good thing.
Re:Expected Knowledge (Score:2)
Who should really be upset (Score:3, Interesting)
good and bad... (Score:4, Insightful)
On the other hand, if it takes an ambulance chasing laywer to stop these practices, that's not entirely bad. Except that they don't have the consumer's best interest in mind, they have their own best interest in mind.
Legislation through Litigation is the wrong answer. If they really did soemthing illegal or wrong, there are appropriate gov't agencies to deal with it.
Re:good and bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus it's done without government involvement, which is always nice.
Re:good and bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
If it puts doubleclick out of business, I win, even if I get no money.
If it hurts doubleclick, I win, even if I get no money.
If it sends a message to doubleclick and others that some of the things they are doing on the internet are illegal and helps curb partices like installing crap on your system that you don't want and never accepted, then I really win, even if I get no money.
And if it keep these lawyers busy in a suit against doubleclick rather than asuit against someone who does not deserve it, I'll consider that a win too.
The Ultimate Answer to Banners Pop Ups and E'thing (Score:2, Redundant)
Rather crude, but highly effective.
not informative, mod parent down (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Ultimate Answer to Banners Pop Ups and E'th (Score:2)
Misleading can be clever (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand... Does anyone remember those Orkin commercials where it looks like a cockroach is crawling across your screen? Clever advertising, even if it is misleading. There was a lawsuit a while back by some idiot woman who threw her shoe at the TV when she saw the ad. If I remember correctly, she lost the lawsuit, as she should have.
True, it's a slightly different scenario for this DoubleClick lawsuit. The key difference is that in the cockroach commercial, it's /obviously/ a commercial. Not so for those damn DoubleClick ads, to the moderately-literate computer user.
IMHO, the best eventual outcome of this DoubleClick lawsuit would be some laws requiring Internet advertisers (operating in the U.S. of course, sigh) mark their ads as such, with a big red "ADVERTISEMENT" in the upper left corner. Sort of like newspaper ads.
Stupid is as stupid does... (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, advertisers have never been allowed to make patently false claims. Just because these adds were on the internet, and not on TV, or radio, or in a magazine has no bearing on anything. Given the amount of latitude they have to stretch, bend, and massage the truth, it should be enough. Suing for outright lies seems pretty reasonable, and the couple cents per person they get in damages will make a nice symbolic warning.
What about corporations? (Score:3, Insightful)
IAMALBIPOSD.... (Score:2, Interesting)
From the Statement of Facts:
(emphasis mine)
Ya gotta love a lawyer with the balls to characerize something as "diabolical;" not merely "greedy," "unethical," or even simply "fraudulent." They called this behavior worthy of the devil himself.
From Claims:
about time (Score:5, Insightful)
What I find to be a cleverer advertising method is to have your ads built into little games that pop up. I've been distracted by one in particular from IBM where you have to put different shapes into their respective slots before the timer runs out. Exactly like this kid's game that a childhood friend of mine (don't remember the name of it though). If some ad threw out a tetris game, it'd be all over for me.
They deserve it! (Score:5, Informative)
Some examples: In 1998, the spammed Princeton U, [rice.edu] trolling for job candidates. In June of 2003, DoubleClick announced their own so-called anti-spam initiatives [internetnews.com] that, according to the article, will "focus on finding out how consumers identify spam, to give marketers a better idea of how they can avoid being unfairly singled out as spammers." (For the record, spam is any E-mail received that tries to sell you something or, in the case of political spam, get your vote, and that you did not ask for).
Want more? No problem. In 2001, DoubleClick two unnamed E-mail marketing companies [thestandard.com] to, according to a quote in the article from CBS's Market Watch, "increase its junk e-mail capabilities."
Still not convinced? How about this thread [insecure.org] over at the Firewall-Wizards site from 1999?
In summary, it looks like DoubleClick has long attempted to redefine spam as "That Which We Do Not Do." It also appears that their ethics are questionable at best, especially in light of those FUI banners on web pages.
DoubleClick, if you're reading this... You brought it on yourselves, and you have nothing but your own shady practices to blame. May you go down in a nice, pretty set of multicolored flames, and may the ashes be used as space filler for the next five Great Deconstructed Architectural Makeovers in FunFun Town. Nick Danger [thrillingdetective.com] could probably use a new office...
Unfortunately won't get anywhere. (Score:5, Insightful)
*ahem* (Score:5, Funny)
If you've ever been tricked by one of _those_ ads then what are you doing reading
Precedent says . . . (Score:4, Informative)
http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/03/05/28/173228.shtml
Will they, as opposed to the purple monkey people, have to pay damages though? One could argue that knowing the outcome of the above case meant they KNEW that what they were doing was illegal.
Either way I dont care, doubleclick is dev/nulled out in my hosts file
Windows FUI on my Mac (Score:4, Funny)
barking up the wrong tree? (Score:3, Insightful)
If this had happened in China... (Score:4, Funny)
...would that have possibly been a Hong Kong FUI?
*rimshot*
Here's another one...or two (Score:3, Informative)
Not only that, but I also noticed that while using CIS software to access the Internet, Real Player added a framed advertisement to my IE windows requesting that I visit their website and pay them for an upgrade (before you knock IE, remember that most Windows users use IE and Real may just as easily be able to effect other browers - I wouldn't know, I'm not a programmer). I'm not sure this is actionable, as Real One gets installed when the Compuserve software is installed, but it is annoying as all hell, and I don't like it, and I'll be damned if I ever give them any money. Anyone out there running AOL or CIS should check out their IE brower as well. The software adds a real player icon to the IE toolbar.
StupidPeople? Or stupid advertising? (Score:3, Funny)
People who actually believe those are error messages are StupidPeople (tm). Like, you can't tell that it's part of a web page, stupid.
Just a little side note: It reminds me of all these stupid people on my cousin's street. I came to L.A. for a week (I live in Mexico City, if you must know) to visit my cousin and his buddies, and to go booze it up on the Sunset strip. So there's this stupid restaurant on the corner of his street, another one of those "trendy" restaurants with one-syllable names (because StupidPeople cannot remember names with more than one syllable--it overflows their stack), and it's always crowded. The StupidPeople who eat there always park their cars on my cousin's street, and as a result, my cousin and all his neighbors are at a loss to find parking spaces. During the weekend, it's especially bad. To make matters ironic, his street is permit-parking only. So he called the parking enforcement agency and they came by and ticketed at least 10 different cars. All these StupidPeople came back to their cars, saw the tickets, and started reading the parking signs, as if they didn't know that it's illegal to park there without a permit. What's even funnier? My cousin's roommate was outside when one such group of StupidPeople pulled up in their Stupid Ugly Vehicle (SUV) and he told them that they can't park there. They did anyway, got a ticket, and then acted all surprised when they did (I watched them gleefully from the window when they returned to their car).
I call them StupidPeople because they all look the same. They all have this Los Angeles accent and vocabulary that is different than in, say, Louisville. All the women have stupid, meaningless tattoos on their lower backs. All the men have a lame haircut. And you can tell by their speech that unlike the typical computer geek, they do not have a brain inside their head. They are simply StupidPeople. Their stupidity drives me up the wall.
Back to banner ads: People who fell for this trick should not be allowed to use a computer in the first place. And the people who made these stupid ads should be shot for lack of imagination.
Re:Hold on (Score:2)
Re:Doubleclick is gonna loose (Score:2)
jesus
Re:Doubleclick is gonna loose (Score:2, Informative)
These goons (the DoubleClick advertisors) deliberately designed their items to trick people. They left "presents" behind for admins like myself to clean up after. The only reason they were able to do that was by ha
Re:i simply block them (Score:3, Informative)
Double-click wasted a lot of my time back when I was using IE. We all thought they would go bankrupt back in 2001, but they just kept surviving. Maybe this will break the bank and smother the dark side forever.
Re:i simply block them (Score:2)
Re:don't know who gets tricked (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:don't know who gets tricked (Score:3, Insightful)
I've had family members and I've had consulting clients who I've had to explain the situation to. With the family members it's fairly easy because they aren't (usually) going to question whether you know what you're talking about, but it's a d*mn pain in the ass when it's a non-knowledgable consulting client. You've told them one thing, but a message t
Re:Don't be stupid ... or we'll end up like Califo (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Don't be stupid ... or we'll end up like Califo (Score:3, Insightful)
You may as well say that we can't protect people from being duped by Ponzi schemes, so why not make them legal? The fact is, these are false advertisements, designed to convince the recipient that there is something wrong with his or her computer. This should be outlawed,
Re:Query... (Score:5, Informative)