Marksman Security Corp. v. P.G. Security, Inc., 2021 WL
649821, No. 19-62467-CIV-CANNON/HUNT
(S.D. Fla. Oct. 12, 2021) (R&R)
The magistrate judge joins the split over fake reviews,
adopting the position—which I think is wrong—that concededly fake reviews that
only include puffery in their content are nonactionable, despite the
non-puffing fact of whether the reviews reflect an actual experience with the
reviewed product/service.
Marksman sued defendants, who compete with it to provide private
security and concierge services in South Florida, for creating an Instagram
account that bore Marksman’s name, as well as purchasing domain names similar
to Marksman’s that when accessed sent consumers to defendants’ website instead
(e.g., marksmensecurity.com and some other TLDs). The magistrate recommended
finding an ACPA violation and awarding attorneys’ fees (there was some
litigation misconduct).
The Instagram “Marksmansecurity” account, which used
Marksman’s logo, said: “We claim to be the best security company but we are
not! Our employees steal from clients, we lie to our clients and we sue them if
need be.”
Also, defendants paid acquaintances and other people $10 to
post five-star positive reviews online about Defendant PG’s services on Google.
Reviews paid for by the reviewed party were commercial
speech. And the reviews were false: “Defendants
paid for positive reviews from at least three individuals who never lived in a
building that Defendant PG serviced. … These reviews are false and misleading
representations of Defendants’ services.” But the reviews were not material
because they contained only puffery: the “best,” “great company,” “great
company to work for,” and keep “buildings safe and comfortable.” I don’t see
how this makes sense: puffery can influence consumers, which is why businesses
use it, and a consumer who knew the truth—that these reviews were not posted by
people who had actually used the services—would certainly discount them. But anyway—plaintiffs
also couldn’t show injury in lost sales or otherwise.
The judge didn’t explicitly rule on the Instagram account,
but denied injunctive relief because the account had been deleted and the
domain names transferred. However, it did find that this case was exceptional, with
reasoning that seems quite cursory: the domains were purchased in bad faith,
and “Defendants deliberately engaged in actions using Plaintiff’s marks for
their own profits. Regardless of whether Defendants were successful, such
actions qualify this case as an exceptional one.”
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