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Their current slogan is: "Whatever it is, you can get it on Ebay".

Very ubiquitous, these days.

Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. The laundry list of items that can - as a matter of fact - not been bought on Ebay is almost endless, as it violates their policies.

Does that spell class action lawsuit?

2006-12-11 16:06:23 · 10 answers · asked by Ejsenstejn 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

What pisses me off is the hypocrisy. They have over 80 CATEGORIES of banned items. With many subcategories and examples, each.

Liberally interpreted.

2006-12-11 17:43:11 · update #1

10 answers

Nope, but if you're in California perhaps if you find the right lawyer. There is a lawsuit pending in regards to Kraft avocado dip not being and I quote "avocadoey enough" and this nutjob is seeking class action level for that lawsuit, so if you find the right lawyer they might represent you, but my bet is that it will be tossed out th second it comes before any judge with a grain of sense. I do agree with your thoughts, however it is a slogan, and extremely broad. If they said "We sell cars every day for $1" then you might have a case.

2006-12-11 16:25:07 · answer #1 · answered by Chris L 4 · 0 0

there isn't something you're able to do approximately it. In photos the food consistently seems the superb it may look (thinking this is nasty food) yet i know once you get it, it seems disgusting and is basically thrown mutually. before I labored there and that i know how the backline people basically throw mutually the stuff as rapid as they are able to and it fairly is often sloppy and under no circumstances looks like it does interior the advertisements. this is all approximately being rapid, not making it the final way. i might advise staying far flung from McDonalds do not you recognize how undesirable and nasty is it? a lot of fat, energy, and next no 0 food.

2016-12-11 07:25:46 · answer #2 · answered by kleckner 4 · 0 0

I must echo that slogans are not typically legally binding...after all, to what was The Coca-Cola Company referring when they asserted that their product(s) were "even better than the real thing" and can I sue them for false advertising?

2006-12-11 16:16:11 · answer #3 · answered by happygogilmore2004 3 · 0 1

It's a slogan, not a guarantee. You have no grounds for a legal action.

2006-12-14 00:14:47 · answer #4 · answered by Carl 7 · 0 0

No. slogans are not legally binding in most places. If they were, Faux news would be facing several thousand suits right now for "fair and Balanced"

2006-12-11 16:11:48 · answer #5 · answered by The Big Box 6 · 2 1

That is not the only thing they screw up in, and I am about to report them for false advertising (their guarantees are worthless).

2006-12-11 16:19:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Relax it's only a stupid slogan.

2006-12-11 17:27:08 · answer #7 · answered by caciansf 4 · 0 0

nope it doesn;t

read the fine print.

2006-12-11 16:09:47 · answer #8 · answered by arus.geo 7 · 0 1

No.

2006-12-11 16:20:29 · answer #9 · answered by Trent D 2 · 0 0

no...

2006-12-11 16:17:24 · answer #10 · answered by Kyle 3 · 0 1

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