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Is your sex toy review breaking the law?

Does this sound familiar?  You log on to your favourite sex toy site, have a nose around the forums and community pages and before long you find a thread offering you free sex toys in exchange for a review.

It sounds great doesn’t it?  After all who wouldn’t want a free sex toy?  You’re going to use it anyway so writing a review about it is no trouble at all and as the site points out the more reviews you write the more fee sex toys you’ll get.

But did you know that if you post your sex toy review to your blog you could be breaking the law?

Disclosure

As a blogger you must disclose any payment that you receive in exchange for hosting content.  This includes payment in kind via free products for a sex toy review or gift vouchers, it also includes being paid for hosting content written by someone else (sponsored posts)

Why?

Paid for content, including reviews are advertising and comes under the remit of the Advertising Standards Agency (ASA) and your readers need to know when they are reading your editorial content and your advertorial content.

It comes down to trust.  Companies want bloggers to be writing about them because it creates brand awareness into their target audiences.  Bloggers spend a long time building their audiences and are rewarded with loyal readers who trust what they have to say about products and companies.  How would you feel if you bought a product that someone recommended to you only to find out later they had been paid to do so?

Your readers trust you and a part of that trust, both legal and moral is to disclose a commercial relationship with a company.

This from the Office of Fair Trading;

“’The integrity of information published online is crucial so that people can make informed decisions on how to spend their money. We expect online advertising and marketing campaigns to be transparent so consumers can clearly tell when blogs, posts and microblogs have been published in return for payment or payment in kind. We expect this to include promotions for products and services as well as editorial content.”

Will a site wide disclosure do?

No.  Having a site wide disclosure on for example your “About me” page will not be sufficient.  Every post for which you have received a free product or direct payment needs to be disclosed.

Will an image do?

No.  The disclosure has to be in text so that readers via RSS will also be informed of the paid for content.

Will “brought to you in conjunction with”, “Guest post by” or similar do?

No, these phrases are too vague and do not disclose that here was remuneration for the content created.

I’m a sex blogger in the USA, will this affect me?

Yes.  Have a look here at this article by The Bureau of Consumer Protection about the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) endorsement guidelines.

What about social media?

Yes, that too.  If you receive payment to talk on social media about a product or service, this has to be disclosed too.

Okay, I got it, so how do I do this?

It is really very easy, all it takes is a few words at the beginning or end of your post, here are some suggestions.  What needs to be clear and without doubt is that you received a product or payment in exchange for writing about the product or company.

So there we have it, a quick run down on the do’s and don’ts of sponsored and sex toy review posts, what’s your experience? Have you ever been asked not to disclose a product was sent for free or that you were paid to write a post?

Sources and useful links

UK

CAP code of practice:  http://www.cap.org.uk/Advertising-Codes/Non-broadcast-HTML.aspx

OFT press release on a ruling about non-disclosed relationships: http://www.oft.gov.uk/news-and-updates/press/2010/134-10#.URK5DqVKMXV

US

FTC endorsement guidelines: http://business.ftc.gov/documents/bus71-ftcs-revised-endorsement-guideswhat-people-are-asking

 

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