Submitted by Guest45755 (not verified) on Thu, 12/13/2012 - 10:58pm.
The inverse should also apply. There's a local (sort of) car dealer who's radio commercials consistently play the "fine print" at a volume much lower than the subsequent commercial. Generally, they play "noise" - fireworks, Christmas bells, turkeys gobbling, etc - over the disclaimers that are already at a reduced volume for the sole purpose of hiding what they are saying.
Technically, they provided the hidden info, but they are intentionally misleading potential customers.
The same thing should apply to radio
The inverse should also apply. There's a local (sort of) car dealer who's radio commercials consistently play the "fine print" at a volume much lower than the subsequent commercial. Generally, they play "noise" - fireworks, Christmas bells, turkeys gobbling, etc - over the disclaimers that are already at a reduced volume for the sole purpose of hiding what they are saying.
Technically, they provided the hidden info, but they are intentionally misleading potential customers.