Summary

Anna Tollison has filed a class action lawsuit against Subway, claiming its Steak & Cheese sandwich is falsely advertised to appear as if it contains 200% more meat than it actually does.

Tollison alleges that Subway’s misleading advertising causes consumers to overpay, which is concerning due to inflation.

Her lawyer said that while such cases often face dismissal, if this one proceeds, it could lead to compensation and class certification, allowing affected customers to seek refunds for the alleged misrepresentation.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Here in EU it’s illegal to advertise to consumers without taxes. Regulation is cool when t protects consumers and the environment and it stimulate real competition, instead of the more sophisticated liar.
    I grief every time I hear some stupid Republican American call for more deregulation. Deregulation was also what made the banks fail.
    But somehow there is little response in USA against the minimal state you can drown in a bathtub?!
    Although it’s obviously worse to empower the mega corps and the mega rich, over a lawful state regulation against abusing power.

    Edit: de-hyperlinking the lens site, they don’t deserve any clicks, only hate.

    Good call. 😀

    • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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      18 days ago

      Oh man, seriously, regulations are the only thing keeping people safe or it would be junk fees all the way down. Take wireless phone service in the US right now, the main carriers say you have a rate plan of x, but then they tack on all the taxes and fees they have to pay and pass them onto you, saying they’re taxes you have to pay. The price also then varies depending on where you live, in some places the “taxes and fees” can add $15-20/month to a single phone line. Nowhere near the advertised price.

      Now, once or twice a year, they also add on new made up “fees” whenever their quarters aren’t looking as profitable as they expect, so you’ll see another $5/month or $7/month charge tacked on.

      Then they don’t let you pay your bill with a credit card if you want an “autopay discount” - a discount that used to exist for carriers to encourage people to stop using paper billing.

      More and more people are switching to paper billing and mailing in checks just to make those companies have to waste more money/resources for being so dickish.

      If they were regulated, they’d be forced to just have a flat price, you could pay with any money, and they’d still be profitable, and the bill would be less confusing.