FTC officials settling a lawsuit with marketing firms over a deceptive smartphone listening ad tool
FTC officials settling a lawsuit with marketing firms over a deceptive smartphone listening ad tool
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FTC settles claims over ineffective phone listening ad tool

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The Federal Trade Commission announced Thursday that three marketing firms agreed to pay nearly $1 million to settle allegations of deception. Cox Media Group, MindSift LLC and 1010 Digital Works claimed their Active Listening service could target ads using audio from consumers’ smart devices. The FTC said the technology amounted to nothing more than costly email lists.

The settlement resolves charges that the companies misled other businesses about the capabilities of their marketing service. Officials alleged the firms sold access to what they described as phone recordings for ad targeting but provided only standard consumer data instead.

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Initial reactions on X focus on the FTC's announcement of the settlement with Cox Media Group and two other firms over false claims about their 'Active Listening' AI ad tool, which the agency said was merely resold email lists. Official accounts and journalists shared factual details of the nearly $1 million penalty and deceptive marketing to small businesses. Some users highlighted the irony of the ineffective 'creepy' technology, with mostly neutral or reporting tones and minimal additional commentary beyond links and quotes from the FTC.

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News illustration depicting FTC officials in settlement talks with major ad agency executives amid antitrust probe on ad placements steered from X platform.
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Report: FTC in talks with major ad agencies amid probe into alleged coordination over ad placement decisions

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The Federal Trade Commission is in discussions with several of the world’s largest advertising agencies—including WPP, Publicis Groupe, Dentsu, Havas and Horizon Media—about a possible settlement tied to an antitrust inquiry into whether ad dollars were steered away from certain online platforms, including Elon Musk’s X, for political or ideological reasons, according to The Wall Street Journal as summarized by The Daily Wire.

General Motors has reached a settlement with California to pay $12.75 million in civil penalties over the sale of customers' driving data. The agreement also imposes a five-year ban on selling such information to consumer reporting agencies, adding to prior regulatory actions including a finalized FTC settlement earlier this year.

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Google has reached a preliminary $135 million settlement in the class-action lawsuit Taylor v. Google LLC, which accused the company of transferring data from Android phones without users' permission, using cellular data. The agreement covers U.S. Android users with cellular plans from November 12, 2017, onward. A final approval hearing is set for June 23.

The Federal Communications Commission plans to vote next month on scrapping a requirement that internet service providers itemize all passthrough fees on broadband price labels. The draft order would instead permit a single "up to" amount covering such charges. The changes are scheduled for a July 22 commission meeting.

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Starting July 1, streaming services in California must ensure commercials are not louder than the programs they accompany. Governor Gavin Newsom signed the measure last year to align online platforms with rules already applied to traditional television.

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