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Cognosphere, LLC, U.S. v.
Cognosphere has agreed to pay $20 million and to block children under 16 from making in-game purchases without parental consent to settle FTC allegations the company violated a children’s privacy law and deceived children and other users about the real costs of in-game transactions and odds of obtaining rare prizes.
Concurring and Dissenting Statement of Commissioner Andrew N. Ferguson Joined by Commissioner Melissa Holyoak Regarding the FTC Staff Report on AI Partnerships & Investments 6(b) Study
Dissenting Statement of Commissioner Andrew N. Ferguson Joined by Commissioner Melissa Holyoak Regarding the Surveillance Pricing 6(b) Staff Research Summaries
FTC Issues Staff Report on AI Partnerships & Investments Study
FTC Surveillance Pricing Study Indicates Wide Range of Personal Data Used to Set Individualized Consumer Prices
FBA Machine/Passive Scaling, FTC v.
Statement of Commission Regarding Snap Complaint Referral to DOJ
Statement of Chair Lina M. Khan Regarding the Final Rule Amending the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule
FTC Finalizes Changes to Children’s Privacy Rule Limiting Companies’ Ability to Monetize Kids’ Data
Concurring Statement of Commissioner Andrew N. Ferguson COPPA Rule Amendments
FTC Takes Action Against GoDaddy for Alleged Lax Data Security for Its Website Hosting Services
FTC Finalizes Order Banning Mobilewalla from Selling Sensitive Location Data
FTC Finalizes Order Prohibiting Gravy Analytics, Venntel from Selling Sensitive Location Data
Traffic and Funnels, LLC., FTC v.
The Â鶹´«Ã½ Trade Commission has obtained proposed orders against the operators of a wide-ranging scheme known as “The Sales Mentor†that made millions by falsely promising consumers that they could make big money from telemarketing sales.
The defendants have agreed to proposed court orders that would require them to pay a total of $1 million for consumer refunds.
In a federal court complaint, the FTC charged the Tennessee-based group of companies, their owners, their officers, and a former sales director with deceiving consumers to pay hundreds or even thousands of dollars for supposed telemarketing training programs that rarely, if ever, delivered on what was promised. In addition, the FTC said the companies continued to make deceptive earnings claims even after they received the FTC’s Notices of Penalty Offenses on money-making opportunities and on endorsements and testimonials warning them that such conduct is illegal.
In January 2025, the FTC sent more than $960,000 in refunds to consumers who paid a job scheme known as “The Sales Mentor†that, according to the FTC, falsely promised consumers that they would make big money from telemarketing sales.