Saturday, November 4, 2017

China Daily — High fines set for false online ads

As China's online shopping festival, which falls on Nov 11 each year, is coming, a newly revised law approved on Saturday makes provisions for serious punishment to those who help online vendors make false advertisements.
The new amendment to the Anti-unfair Competition Law, passed at the bimonthly session of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, stipulates that online shoppers or people who help online shoppers delete unsound comments about products written by buyers or make fictitious transactions will face a fine ranging between 200,000 yuan ($30,138) and 1 million yuan.
Fines in serious situations could be up to 2 million yuan and violators' business licenses will be revoked, the law said.
"As several kinds of online shopping festivals make the market prosperous, some taking advantage of fake advertisements or false transactions to lure customers also arouse our attention," said Yang Hongcan, director of the China Anti-monopoly and Anti-unfair Competition Enforcement Bureau with the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, during a the NPC Standing Committee press conference.
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High fines set for false online ads
chinadaily.com.cn

2 comments:

Noah Way said...

In the end, the ads are the most truthful part of the media. At least you know they're trying to sell you something.

Kaivey said...

Amazon can sometimes have lots of fake reviews. You can run a software checker on it.