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| Telstra guilty in keywords advertising | | Print | |
| Written by Noric Dilanchian | ||||||
| Wednesday, 09 April 2008 | ||||||
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A court case report in today's Australian, indicates that "Telstra announced yesterday that its classifieds division, the Trading Post contravened sections 52 and 53(d) of the Trade Practices Act through its search engine marketing on google.com.au in August 2005."
The case was begun in mid-2007 by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC). The ACCC's press release of July 2007 framed its legal claim as follows (emphasis added):
Yesterday's announced settlement requires Telstra to engage an independent auditor to conduct an annual review of Telstra business' processes relating to the Trading Post search engine advertising.
Meanwhile the case continues as regards Google. I was interviewed today regarding the legal implications for Google of this case by smartcompany.com.au.
Practical legal implications
What lessons are there from Telstra's settlement for other businesses? It indicates the following:
Call if you wish to discuss any of these practical suggestions.
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To find out more about the practical and commercial aspects of online advertising we off our Online advertising guide for deal makers priced at $330 inclusive of GST. To order a copy Tel (+61 2) 9269 0229 or send an email.
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The rise in keyword advertising has brought with it opportunity for some and piracy, theft or misleading conduct for others. Telstra yesterday admitted it fell into the later camp in 2005 in its use of keyword advertising.
