iPhone Ad Banned by UK's Advertising Watchdog Due to Misleading "Internet Capabilities" Claims
Apple's iPhone television ad that says "all the parts of the internet are on the phone" has been banned by UK's Advertising watchdog as it gives a misleading impression of the internet capabilities of the iPhone.
It was only last week that Apple's iPhone 3G "Unslow" ad had created some controversy in the blogosphere with some folks complaining that the ad is misleading, and that it sets wrong expectations. This time its an iPhone television ad aired in UK that has come under the scanner.
Apple's iPhone Ad featured an individual flicking through web pages on the iPhone to a voiceover saying:
"You never know which part of the internet you'll need. The 'do you need sun cream' part? The 'what's the quickest way to the airport' part? The 'what about an ocean view room' part? Or the 'can you really afford this' part? Which is why all the parts of the internet are on the iPhone."
This ad prompted complains from two customers claiming that the commercial was misleading to U.K.'s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA).
Apple in their defense had said:
"The ad was to highlight how the iPhone can offer access to all websites, while many other handsets only offer lower-level access to WAP versions of sites or those selected by service providers.
The web browser the iPhone uses, was built to open internet standards and since Flash and Java technology were not open source, adding that it could not ensure compatibility with every third-party technology in the marketplace."
They also pointed out that:
"None of the content in the ad was Java or Flash-based and that the line "all parts of the internet" meant website availability, "not every aspect of functionality."
However, Guardian has reported that ASA has upheld the complaints and has banned the ad from being broadcasted in UK. Their reasoning was quite interesting, they believe that since Apple's iPhone does not support Flash and Java, it is misleading to say that it brings users the entire internet.
Apple has declined to comment on the ruling.
You can check out the YouTube video of the banned iPhone ad below:
Do you really think the ad is misleading?
[via TUAW]
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