overviewfrequently asked questionscases & resources
By David L. Hudson Jr.
First Amendment Center research attorney
A common First Amendment commercial-speech dispute occurs when the government prohibits an advertiser from publishing or disseminating certain information. FULL STORY>  
 
Feds consider suing studio, newspaper over movie promotion
Last April, Paramount placed devices in Los Angeles Times news racks that played movie theme when door opened; some people mistook them for bombs. 02.03.07
 
Conn. probes ad claims for new Coke drink
State attorney general demands scientific proof Enviga promotes calorie-burning, saying its marketing claims 'may be nothing more than voodoo nutrition.' 02.06.07


Last system update: Sunday, February 11, 2007 | 09:01:52
 SEARCH  MORE
advertising & First Amendment issues >
Tobacco ads
News racks
Gambling ads
Billboards
Compelled advertising
Attorney ads
FDA labeling
Telemarketing