Online advertiser ValueClick has agreed to pay a record S$2.9 million to settle a U.S. Federal Trade Commission complaint
that it sent deceptive advertising claims in spam e-mail and failed to secure consumers' sensitive financial information.
ValueClick subsidiary Hi-Speed Media used deceptive e-mails, banner ads and pop-ups to drive Internet users to its Web sites,
the FTC said Monday. The e-mails and ads promised that consumers were eligible for free gifts, including laptops, iPods and
gift cards. The ads included promises such as "Free PS3 for survey," and "CONGRATULATIONS! Select your FREE Plasma TV," the
FTC said.
Consumers who went to ValueClick's Web sites because of these promises were led through a "maze of expensive and burdensome"
third-party offers, including car loans and satellite television subscriptions, which they were required to "participate in"
at their own expense in order to receive the promised merchandise, the FTC alleged.
ValueClick's use of deceptively labeled e-mail messages offering free gifts and its failure to disclose that consumers must
spend substantial sums of money to obtain the promised merchandise violated the Can-Spam Act and the FTC Act, the FTC said.
The settlement with ValueClick and subsidiaries Hi-Speed Media and E-Babylon was filed with the U.S. District Court for the
Central District of California last Thursday. In addition to the $2.9 million fine, the largest ever for violations of the
2003 antispam law the Can-Spam Act, the settlement requires ValueClick to clearly disclose the costs and obligations consumers
must incur to receive the products it touts as free. It also bars deceptive claims about the security of the consumer information
collected at the company's Web sites.
ValueClick announced last month it had agreed to a settlement with the FTC. It recorded a $2.9 million charge on its financial
results in the fourth quarter of 2007 in anticipation of the settlement, the company said in a February news release.
"We have worked with the FTC and have reached an agreement on the standards and practices that will govern our lead generation
business going forward," David Yovanno, chief operating officer of ValueClick's U.S. media, said in a statement. "We believe
this settlement will also help set the guidelines for the lead generation industry as a whole, and we will continue to participate
in the Interactive Advertising Bureau to help establish best practices to that end."
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.