NAA Asks FTC to Investigate Ad Blocking Practices
The Newspaper Association of America has filed a complaint and request for investigation with the Federal Trade Commission alleging that certain ad blocking technologies and related services violate Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act 1914 as unfair and deceptive trade practices.
NAA requests that the FTC investigate ad blockers that offer “paid whitelisting,”substitute ad blockers’ own advertising for blocked ads, claim that subscription services prevent publisher harm, and facilitate the evasion of metered subscription systems.
“Newspapers recognize that ad blocking technology is responding to a consumer demand, and publishers are working diligently to improve the ad experience for consumers. However, some ad blocking firms have implemented ad blocking business models that deceive consumers. These practices undercut our members’ ability to provide a satisfying customer experience because the consumer is not receiving the whole truth,” claimed NAA president and chief executive David Chavern.
The complaint calls on the FTC to investigate Eyeo’s practice of using paid whitelisting that leads the consumer to believe that the “acceptable” advertisement is based on quality, when in fact advertisements are passed along to consumers if advertisers pay a fee.
The complaint brings attention to other ad blocking technologies that replace existing advertising with the ad-blockers own advertising, which leads consumers to believe that publishers have consented to the substitution.
It also requests investigation of subscription services that claim to offset publisher harm, which it describes as “a deceptive assertion given the complete lack of evidence that nominal subscription prices will recover millions of dollars in lost advertising revenue.” Finally, the complaint calls attention to ad blockers that permit users to evade metered subscription services and paywalls, which the NAA alleges are engaging in an unfair method of competition.
“The deceptive activities of these ad blockers undercut publishers’ ability to innovate and respond to customer demands, and preempt publishers’ efforts to communicate with consumers about the importance of advertising or alternative mechanisms for supporting high-quality journalism content,” claimed Mr Chavern.