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<blockquote data-quote="ForgottenSeer 98186" data-source="post: 1029445"><p>Actually, there is one in particular that does think that opinion polls prove his product is "superior in every way" as he has said publicly numerous times.</p><p></p><p>Since it is done here on this forum with the intent of promoting their product, it is legally considered advertising and subject to consumer protection and advertising regulations.</p><p></p><p></p><p>In the USA it is a Lanham Act violation. A user or a competitor can sue the violator for false or fraudulent advertising. The awards are, more often than not, huge - enough to plow a small operation right into the ground.</p><p></p><p></p><p>The only such evidence that exists is their internal data, which none of them will ever willingly share publicly.</p><p></p><p>Someobody out there working for one of the AVs should pull an Assange-Snowden-Bradley AV Wikileaks and dump all the internal data that shows how bad the protection actually is onto the www.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ForgottenSeer 98186, post: 1029445"] Actually, there is one in particular that does think that opinion polls prove his product is "superior in every way" as he has said publicly numerous times. Since it is done here on this forum with the intent of promoting their product, it is legally considered advertising and subject to consumer protection and advertising regulations. In the USA it is a Lanham Act violation. A user or a competitor can sue the violator for false or fraudulent advertising. The awards are, more often than not, huge - enough to plow a small operation right into the ground. The only such evidence that exists is their internal data, which none of them will ever willingly share publicly. Someobody out there working for one of the AVs should pull an Assange-Snowden-Bradley AV Wikileaks and dump all the internal data that shows how bad the protection actually is onto the www. [/QUOTE]
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