Clickbooth marketing firm settles $2M case with FTC
Date: November 15, 2012
by: Mark Gordon | Gulf Coast Business Review
Clickbooth, a web-marketing company based in Sarasota, agreed to a $2 million settlement with federal regulators over allegations the company knowingly supported false and unsubstantiated products and claims.
Clickbooth co-founder and CEO John Lemp was personally named in court filings, in which the Federal Trade Commission contends Clickbooth and a subsidiary, IntegraClick, engaged in “unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.” The FTC filings, documented on a Clickbooth blog, http://blog.clickbooth.com/, detail the company’s involvement with deceitfully promoting dozens of weight loss and “colon cleanse” products. Those practices, documents show, allegedly go back to 2008.
Officials at the FTC couldn’t be reached for immediate comment Wednesday.
But the court filings include contentions that Clickbooth consciously supported fake news websites with false reports, including one titled “1 Trick of a Tiny Belly: Reporter Loses Her ‘Belly’ Using 1 Easy Tip.”
“The sites often include the names and logos of major broadcast and cable television networks, falsely representing that the reports on the sites have been seen on these networks,” the FTC states. “(Clickbooth) designs some of these websites for its affiliates to use.”
Clickbooth, moreover, supported the sites, the FTC alleges, though its network of affiliate publishers who earn fees when consumers buy the products. Clickbooth makes money off those purchases, through its pay-per-action model.
But the FTC, in court filings in the Northern District of Illinois, says Clickbooth should be doing more to protect consumers.
“Defendants, through their affiliate marketers, have failed to disclose in a clear and conspicuous manner that they are not objectively evaluating the advertised products and, in fact, are being paid to promote the products,” the filings state. “The websites of Defendants’ affiliate marketers either fail entirely to disclose these facts, or fail to do so adequately. The relevant information, if disclosed at all, typically appears in small type at the bottom of the web page, following the fake consumer comments, well below the links to the products being sold.”
Lemp, through a Clickbooth spokeswoman, declined to comment Wednesday. But on a Nov. 13 blog post, Lemp wrote that the FTC allegations revolve around “just a handful of weight loss advertisers” and affiliates from three years ago.
Added Lemp: “These were advertisers and publishers in many cases that our compliance team had proactively shutdown from our network. This handful of advertisers and affiliates accounted for a very small percentage of our traffic over the years, and even though we had never been an advertiser or publisher ourselves like other ‘networks,’ (the FTC) wanted to hold us responsible.”
Lemp, nonetheless, wrote that a settlement was the best decision for Clickbooth, partially because it avoids protracted litigation to fight “how an ad network should be regulated.”
Currently 2 Responses
- 1.
- Going up against the government no matter the outcome is costly. Hard decision to make. From the sounds of it, they did what was best for them and their clients. $2 million sounds like a lot, but in the grand scheme of things, that's a drop in the hat for a big business.
- 2.
- Look at how many other big companies have gone through this and come out on the other side without any lasting effects. I expect no different here. They aren't the first, nor will they be the last...
- May
22 Rhonda Riley: The Enchanted Life of Adam Hope
7:00 pm - May
23 [New Scholars] New College
8:00 am - 4:00 pm - May
23 Ageless Grace with Mary Masi
10:00 am - 11:00 am - May
23 Fun Fitness for Parkinsons
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
-
Culinary roots
05/16/13
Trevor Kunk is the chef de cuisine at Blue Hill in New York City’s Greenwich Village, which the James Beard Foundation just named "most outstanding restaurant." -
Bright lights
05/16/13
Sarasota native and resident Bri Oliva made her TV debut May 7, on the "Rachael Ray Show." Oliva was selected to participate in a segment called "Hidden Dangers on the Playground." -
Key to the city
05/02/13
More than 100 community members and leaders, friends and family surprised Paul Thorpe, one of the founding members of the Downtown Association of Sarasota, April 25, at The Gator Club, to show their appreciation and celebrate the strides he’s made for Sarasota over the past four decades.
