Online marketing law presentation for small businesses given by Denver Business Attorney Elizabeth Lewis from the Law Office of E.C. Lewis, P.C. for Colorado based businesses.
2. Online Marketing Privately owned websites Public websites Email marketing Social media sites Text messaging Mobile communications
3. Govt. Agencies Affecting Online Marketing Federal Trade Commission Federal Communications Commission Securities Exchange Commission Also - State Governments
4. Laws Affecting Online Marketing Telecommunications Act Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act Franchise and Business Opportunity Rule Lending Rules Truth in Advertising CANSPAM Act Industry Specific Rules Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act Colorado Rules of Professional Ethics
8. Terms of Use Covers the use of the website by users Covers issues like jurisdiction, venue, uptime, etc May include language regarding sales on the site May include language regarding user conduct on site
9. Privacy Policies Covers what the website owner does with the information gained from users Should state if any third party applications are used through website (i.e. PayPal) Should cover information gained through weblogs
10. Copyright Policies DMCA requires that you have information about who to contact to remove infringing materials Should have designated agent In some cases need to have website registration form with copyright office
11. Industry Specific Texts Red Flag Rules if you extend credit Software license agreements SEC information Attorneys, financial institutions, etc
12. FTC Endorsement Rules Rules were released in October of 2009 regarding paid endorsements 15 US §45 Affects bloggers, employees, employers, family members
13. What is an Endorsement? Endorsement – any act in which a person is likely to believe the information is coming from someone other than the sponsoring advertiser Covers Paid advertisements Free products Employees/material connections
14. What Can I Say? Endorsements Must be honest Must not say anything advertiser can’t Must disclose relationship
15. Endorsements Both endorser and endorsee can be held responsible if relationship not disclosed Action is brought by the FTC No right of private action
16. Adwords Lanham Act – regulates trademarks Current status European Court of Justice said okay for competitors to bid on competitors’ names in March US court say adwords can contain competitors’ names Rosetta Stone case is still pending
17. CAN SPAM Act Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Passed in 2003 Applies to commercial and transactional email
18. Applicable Emails Commercial mail – primarily promoting service or product Transactional mail - primarily to inform existing client of something dealing with past or current transactions
19. What You Can’t Do! Deceptive email headers Deceptive subject lines Not give opt-out Make multiple accounts to send email Send fraudulent, obscene, or child porn
20. What You Can Do! Email people without permission (as long as not dictionary style list) Send multiple emails until someone opts out Send commercial email
21. Enforcement of CAN SPAM Civil penalty of up to 16k per email Criminal convictions for Email harvesting Randomly generating receipents False info Fraudulent, pornographic emails
22. Best Practices Although it may be legal, ask: When do you add people? Do you want to be added without permission? Do you give way to opt-out before adding them?
23. Facebook Terms of Use By posting information, you grant Facebook a non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use any IP content that you post on or in connection with Facebook until you delete your account. Profile page must be a real person Cannot collect information about others without permission and policy in place
24. LinkedIn “You grant LinkedIn a nonexclusive, irrevocable, worldwide, perpetual, unlimited, assignable, sublicenseable, fully paid up and royalty-free right to us to copy, prepare derivative works of, improve, distribute, publish, remove, retain, add, process, analyze, use and commercialize, in any way now known or in the future discovered, any information you provide, directly or indirectly to LinkedIn, including but not limited to any user generated content, ideas, concepts, techniques or data to the services, you submit to LinkedIn, without any further consent, notice and/or compensation to you or to any third parties.”
27. Elizabeth C. Lewis, Esq. Law Office of E.C. Lewis, P.C. 720-530-3405 Elizabeth.Lewis@eclewis.com www.facebook.com/legalsolutions www.twitter.com/eclewis