A. Overview

SECTION A OVERVIEW

 

Updates since Sept 2022 (slimmed)

ACM case H&M & Decathlon (EN) Sept 2022

Influencer rules assembled by DDMA Oct 2022 (NL)

Shell CO2 offset ruling Jan 2023 SRC newsletter (NL)

Media Act January 2023 link (NL)

Sustainability Advertising Code (NL) Feb 1, 2023 

EN translation of the above here Feb 7, 2023

ACM Sustainability Guidelines (EN) June 2023

Commentary on above CMS/ Lex July 11, 2023

ACM: Clear Information on Sustainability Aug 28, 2023 (EN)

Taylor Wessing on the above and ACM guidelines Nov 6, 2023

AFM Sustainability Claims Guidelines October 2023

ING environmental advertising ruling (NL); vid here (EN)

Primark, Arla foods smackdown Taylor Wessing 

Above re green claims February 2, 2024

DLA Piper Environmental Advertising Claims Guide 

Above from August 7, 2024 includes The Netherlands

Advertising, Marketing & Promotion Comparative Guide

Hoogenraad Haak July 2, 2024. Inc Netherlands 

Mineral Sunscreen Spray ruling Aug 7, 2024 (NL)

MSC Cruises Environmental Claims. Oct 2, 2024 (EN)

Recent rulings of the Advertising Code Commission (NL)
Above from Bureau Brandeis October 4, 2024

SRC Newsletter (NL) November 7, 2024

 

ISSUES/ NEWS

 

 Hague Court of Appeal: Shell win 2nd round v Milieudefensie
Burges Salmon November 14, 2024

The Hague world’s first city to ban fossil fuel-related ads

The UK Guardian September 13, 2024

Netherlands Media Authority fines influencer for the first time (EN)
CMS Netherlands July 17, 2024

ACM intensifies supervision of greenwashing (EN)
Maverick. June 6, 2024. Good round-up

 

SELF- REGULATION

 

Stichting Reclame Code (SRC) is the Self-Regulatory Organisation in the Netherlands. The SRC publishes the Dutch Advertising Code (DAC) NL / EN, which applies to all advertising regardless of the medium. The DAC is in three sections: General Section (EN); a section of various Special Advertising Codes; and a General Recommendations section (EN). The General section contains a body of rules with which all advertising should comply. The special codes apply to advertising for specific products and services, or using specific channels; see channel header below. There is also the:

 

Children/ Young People Advertising Code (EN) and the

Sustainability Advertising Code (NL; EN Feb 2023)

 

CONSUMER AND BUSINESS PROTECTION LEGISLATION

 

Articles 193a-193j (EN; not up to date - see later entry in this para/ NL) of Section 3A, Book 6 of the Dutch Civil Code prohibit various unfair practices by traders towards consumers, implementing the key provisions of the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive UCPD 2005/29/EC, whilst articles 194-196 (NL / EN; amend to art. 194 here) of Section 4 regulate comparative advertising as derived from Directive 2006/114/EC. These rules are accurately reflected in the DAC referenced and linked above - see Table of Concordance under Annex 2. The Act of 30 March 2022 (NL) amends articles 193c to g of Book 6 of the Civil Code in connection with the implementation of Directive 2019/2161, providing new clauses related to search rankings and consumer reviews, also expressed in the Dutch Advertising Code (EN) under article 8. See Fake Reviews; Really Misleading from Hoogenraad & Haak advocaten/Lex March 23, 2023 which includes a significant ruling from SRC/ ACC. The statutory authority ACM - see below - is also aggressive in this space: ACM takes action against fake reviews from Bird&Bird September 23, 2024 has some examples.

 

There is a particularly active competition authority in The Netherlands; the recent work of ACM Authority for Consumers and Markets is discussed here (NL) by Maverick Advocaten/ Lex September 13, 2022. Also see environmental claims header below: 'greenwashing' is very much in the ACM's sights.

 

SELF-REG CHANNEL (I.E. PLACEMENT) RULES

 

The 7 channel codes from the DAC are: 

Code for distribution of advertisements by e-mail EN

Social Media and Influencer Advertising Code 2022 NL / EN 

Letterbox advertising, door2door sampling and direct response advertising EN

Advertising Code for the use of the postal filter 2021 EN

Code for the distribution of unaddressed printed advertisements EN and

Field Marketing Advertising Code NL (2023) EN (2023)

 

Rules from these are set out under the relevant headers in our channel section C

 

AV LEGISLATION AND AUTHORITY/ INFLUENCERS

 

Statutory regulation of Dutch audiovisual media in the Netherlands is from the 2008 Media Act (NL, Jan 2023). The linked act includes amends brought about by the 2018/1808 Directive which amends the AVMS Directive 2010/13/EU, ‘in view of changing market realities’ meaning inter alia that video-sharing platforms are now in scope of the Media Act (Chapter 3a; NL). There was some debate about the application of the rules as they relate to an ‘on-demand audiovisual media service’ and whether this definition ‘catches’ vloggers. In May 2022, the Media regulator CVDM issued New rules for video uploaders (NL summary) effective July 1, 2022. These require that influencers who are active and have more than 500,000 followers/ subscribers must register with CVDM no later than July 15 and with the Dutch SRO and NICAM. An overview of the rules is here (NL, non-binding translation here). A registration check is on the CVDM website and can be found from the preceding link. Influencer rules are 'bundled' by channel here (NL)

 

CHANNEL - DIRECT ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS 

 

The Telecommunications Act (NL link is to the May 2022 version incorporating amends that prohibit unsolicited calls and abolish the 'do not call me' register) NL / EN (key clauses only) article 11.7 implements the e-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC on the consent requirements for sending unsolicited commercial communications by email, fax, phone, and automated calling systems. Article 11.7a implements the cookie provision, allowing cookies after obtaining informed consent of the user. Tracking cookies are presumed to entail the processing of personal data under the DPA, meaning prior unambiguous consent of the user is required. There may also be implications from the introduction in May 2018 of the GDPR. See below. 

 

Requirements for information society services and sending of online commercial communications per Directive 2000/31/EC can be found in articles 15d and15e Book 3 Dutch Civil Code EN / NL (Nov 2022). The translated file does not reflect the latest NL link, but the clauses referenced remain in force.

 

DATA PROCESSING/ PRIVACY

 

Privacy Sandbox news and updates

DPA issues new guidance & steps up supervision
Osborne Clarke/ Lex Feb 15, 2024

 

Privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors 

 

From May 25 2018, the Dutch Personal Data Protection Act was repealed in the light of Regulation 679/2016, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which repeals Directive 95/46/EC which the Dutch act transposed. The European Commission page on GDPR is here. The GDPR 'implementing' act in the Netherlands is here (NL). The Authority Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens AP supervises processing of personal data; their advice on the introduction of the GDPR is here, albeit only in Dutch at this point. Purely commercial interest also a legitimate interest? courtesy of Stibbe/ Lex July 27, 2022 reports on a significant exchange between AP and the Council of State on the subject of legitimate interest and a 'wrongly imposed' €575,000 fine on VoetbalTV.

 

SPECIFIC CLAIM AREAS 
Pricing

 

ECJ '30 day' judgement Aldi promotional pricing Sept 24, 2024

The case is here; Pinsent Oct 4 commentary here 

Directive 2019/2161/EU has promotional pricing rules under art. 2; see below (and above)

 

When a price is mentioned in advertising, the final/ total price should be indicated, including VAT and all other price components; see recent ‘Scooter’ case EN. The basis of this ruling was from the UCPD (per above, under consumer protection), as reflected in article 193 of the Dutch Civil Code EN. In the Netherlands, the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC is implemented in the Product Pricing Decree PPD NL (Jan 2023) / EN (key clauses inc. 2022 amends). Also known as the Price Labelling Regulations, they apply to advertising (Art. 5.1 PPD). With amendments from the Directive 2019/2161, the 98/6 Directive incorporated a new article 6a, which sets out provisions for reduced/ promotional pricing, commission guidance for the application of which is here. The ACM (Authority for Consumers and Markets) addresses the issue of new rules on promotional pricing in their news item of 27/5/22 here (NL), which states that rules will come into force 'later this year' (see decree entry above); commentary on the decree, which came into force January 1 2023, is here (EN) from Maverick Advocaten NV/ Lex Feb 1. The ACM also has a note on price promotions EN and advertised prices of new cars EN and both the Dutch Advertising Code, supplemented by the SRC Check on Unfair Advertising, and the Civil Code Book 6, Section 3A, include further pricing provisions such as use of the term ‘free’ and ‘Bait and Switch’ advertising. See our following content section B for details, or the linked files.

 

Environmental claims

 

Sustainability ad code: a year's lessons Stibbe Sept 26, 2024 (NL)

Ads from Greenpeace & Weerribben Zuivel deemed misleading 

Baker McKenzie September 16, 2024 (EN)

The risks & pitfalls of sustainability ads in the Netherlands
Baker McKenzie September 16, 2024 (EN)

ACM intensifies supervision of greenwashing 
Maverick. June 6, 2024. Good round-up

Greenwashing in the spotlight - recent developments in the Netherlands

Another good round-up. Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer April 25, 2024

 

Key legal and self-regulatory measures

 

The use of environmental claims in advertising may be assessed against general misleadingness legislation articles 193a-j from Book 6 of the Civil Code (EN; does not incorporate new clauses here) on unfair commercial practices (EN) and Section A (EN) of the DAC, articles 7 and 8. See also December 2021 Commission Guidance on application of the UCPD for such claims, section 4.1.1. From a specific self-regulatory perspective, the SRC’s 2023 Sustainability Advertising Code (NL / EN) applies. This is supplemented by the SRC Check: Environment and Sustainability (NL), as well as the SRC Checklist. Additional guidance on environmental claims can be found in the ICC Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communications (November 2021), which includes an environmental claims checklist. Our following content section B for details of all of the above, or see the linked files.

 

ACM and AFM activity

 

The ACM (Authority for Consumers and Markets, per above) publish Guidelines Sustainability Claims (EN 2023 version; NL here), on which CMS Netherlands comment in a July 2023 article here (EN). According to Maverick Advocaten NV June 2021, ACM has asked more than 170 companies in the energy, dairy and clothing sectors to check the accuracy of their product range against the guidelines. In September 2022, clothing retailers H&M and Decathlon agreed to remove or adjust all environmental claims from their clothes and websites 'and make donations of 400,000 euros and 500,000 euros respectively to different sustainable causes to compensate for their use of unclear and insufficiently substantiated sustainability claims.' Case report from the ACM in English here and commentary from GALA here. From Stibbe/Lex January 2023 Key developments in sustainability claims in 2022 is a very good round-up of ACM activity, together with some EU context. AFM, the authority for financial markets, published Guidelines on Sustainability Claims (EN) in October 2023 for financial institutions and pension providers.

 

SRO rulings

 

This August 2021 ruling (NL) from SRC against Shell is instructive; context and commentary from Jones Day here (in English), and this April 2022 ruling (NL) versus KLM's 'carbon zero' claims, which was found to have lacked sufficiently strong evidence for an 'absolute' claim, is also significant and is separately followed up in the courts under UCPD; June 2023 update here and see March 2024 entry above under Issues/ news. This case (NL) about Albert Heijn's bananas being CO2 neutral demonstrates the danger of unsupported statements. Finally, this Shell CO2 offset ruling Jan 2023 SRC newsletter (NL) to book-end the August 2021 equivalent. Not quite finally, as Chewing Gum Argument: Natural Gum Or Not? from Hoogenraad/ Haak March 23, 2023 sets out the case of Perfetti vs. Benbits with the SRO ruling and a judgement in the Amsterdam District Court. The Advertising Code Committee and Sustainability Advertising October 22, 2024 from Baker McKenzie is worth a quick read for context.

 

Global measures

 

The WFA launched their Planet Pledge in April 2021 and Global Guidance on Environmental Claims April 2022. This latter has been 'diligently developed with SROs and other associations.' On 7 October 2021, Google launched a new monetisation policy for Google advertisers, publishers and YouTube creators that will prohibit ads for, and monetization of, content that contradicts well-established scientific consensus around the existence and causes of climate change. More here. The ICC's Advertising and Marketing Communications Code addresses under Chapter environmental claims. DLA Piper's August 2024 Environmental Advertising Claims Guide covers all key markets including The Netherlands. 

 

 

 

 

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Read more

B. Content Rules

SECTION B CONTENT RULES

 


This section is longer than most. To help navigate it, some of the text is 'anchored' and linked to respective headings immediately below

 

1. SELF-REGULATION

1.1. Section A General rules, Dutch Advertising Code

Good taste and decency

Unfairness and misleadingness

Invitation to purchase

Identifiability

Comparative advertising 

Aggressive advertising

Blacklist: annex 1 and 2

 

1.2. Section C of the Dutch Advertising Code

Deleted by SRC as of Jan 2023

Use of ‘comparable retail value’

Superlatives, guarantees

The term ‘recommended price’

Advertising for branches

Pictures of the product 

 

1.3. Advertising Checker service from SRC

 

2. LEGISLATION

2.1. Comparative advertising

2.2. Misleading commercial practices

2.3. Invitation to purchase

2.4. The Blacklist

 

3. SPECIFIC CLAIM AREAS

3.1. Pricing

3.2. Environmental claims

 

1. SELF-REGULATION

 

Note: where the English version of the Dutch Advertising Code below does not accurately reflect the Dutch version, or the European Directives from which part is derived, we have ‘tweaked’ it for presentation in the articles that follow, for easier understanding. The applicable code for adjudication purposes is anyway the Dutch version, and you can always refer back to the SRC English version. We have extracted the most important of the rules and in some cases linked particular explanations; the full code in English is linked here 

 

 Section A. General rules

 

  • Definition of Advertising (Art. 1): any form of public and/ or systematic direct or indirect commendation of goods, services and/ or ideas by an advertiser or, either wholly or partly, on behalf of him, with or without the help of a third party. The solicitation of services is also defined as advertising. Explanation of Art. 1 in full

 

Good taste and decency

 

  • Advertising must be in accordance with the law, the truth, good taste and decency (Art. 2. Explanation)
  • Advertising must not contravene the public interest, public order or good morals (Art. 3)
  • Advertising must not be gratuitously offensive or constitute a threat to mental and/or physical public health (Art. 4)
  • The form and content of advertising must not undermine confidence in advertising (Art. 5)
  • Without justifiable cause, advertising must not arouse feelings of fear or superstition (Art. 6)
     
  • This ruling, which did not uphold a complaint about a Zeeman underwear commercial, is good context
  • As is this December 2021 ruling for a G-Star jeans commercial, also not upheld 
 

 Unfairness and misleadingness

 

  • Advertising must not be unfair. Advertising is considered to be unfair if it contravenes the requirements of professional diligence, and if it materially distorts or is likely to materially distort the economic behaviour of the average consumer reached, or targeted, as regards the product. Misleading and/ or aggressive advertising is considered to be unfair in all cases (Art. 7. Explanation)
  • When assessing whether or not an advertisement is misleading, account must be taken of all its characteristics and circumstances, the factual context, the limitations of the communication medium, and the intended audience (Art. 8.1)
  • Any advertising which contains incorrect/ false information, or information that is unclear or ambiguous for the average consumer in respect of one or more of the elements as listed in points a - g hereunder, and causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have otherwise taken, is considered to be misleading (Art. 8.2):

 

  1. The existence or nature of the product
  2. The main features of the product, such as availability, benefits, risks, execution, composition, accessories, customer service and complaint handling, method and date of manufacture or provision, delivery, fitness for purpose (suitability for use), usage, quantity, specification, geographical or commercial origin, expected results, or the results and essential characteristics of tests and controls performed on the product
  3. The extent of the obligations of the advertiser, the motives for advertising and the nature of the sales process, any statement or symbol related to direct or indirect sponsorship, or recognition/ approval of the advertiser or the product
  4. The price or the way in which the price is calculated, or the existence of a specific price advantage
  5. The need for a service, spare part (component), replacement or repair
  6. The nature, characteristics and rights of the advertiser or his agent, like for example his identity, his assets, qualifications, status, approval, affiliation, connections; ownership of industrial, commercial or intellectual property rights, or his prizes, awards and distinctions
  7. The legal rights of the consumer, including the right of replacement or refund, or the risks he might run/ face

 

  • Advertising is also regarded as misleading if it causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise, and it involves the following (Art. 8.3. Explanation Where the medium used for advertising involves limitations of space or time, these limitations as well as measures taken by the advertiser to make the information available to consumers by other means, shall be taken into account when deciding whether information has been omitted. Essential information consists, among other things, of all information the advertiser has to provide pursuant to the law)
     
    1. Marketing of a product in a way that could lead to confusion with a competitor’s products, trademarks, trade names and other distinguishing marks
    2. Non-compliance by the advertiser with a code of conduct by which he has undertaken to be bound, insofar as the commitment/ obligation is capable of being verified and the advertiser indicates (in advertising) that he is bound by the code of conduct
    3. Omitting, keeping hidden, or providing in an unclear, unintelligible, ambiguous or untimely manner, essential information that the average consumer needs in order to make an informed transactional decision
    4. When, within a website, consumers are provided with the possibility to search for products offered by different dealers, general information on the main parameters determining the ranking of products presented as a result of this search and the relative importance of those parameters, must be made available in a specific section of the online interface that is directly and easily accessible from the page where the results are presented
    5. When an advertiser provides access to consumer reviews of products, whether and how is ensured that the published reviews originate from consumers who have actually used or purchased the product, must be explained.

 

​Above clauses d and e added May 2022 in transposition of Directive 2019/2161

 

Invitation to purchase

 

(Art. 8.4. Explanation An invitation to purchase is defined as a commercial message stating the characteristics and the price of the product in a way appropriate to the medium used, and thus enabling the consumer to make a purchase. If the advertisement contains an answering or ordering mechanism, it is always considered to be an invitation to purchase. In case such a mechanism is missing, it depends on the circumstances whether there is a matter of an invitation to purchase. A key factor is whether the consumer can base a decision about the transaction on the information in the advertisement. If the advertisement states a (starting from) price, the consumer usually has sufficient information to decide to make a transaction)

 

  • In case an advertisement serves as an invitation to purchase, which does not relate to a distance contract or off-premises contract, the following information shall be supplied:

 

  1. The main characteristics of the product, to an extent appropriate to the medium and the product
  2. The geographical address and the identity of the advertiser, in particular, his trading/ business name and, where applicable, the geographical address and the identity of the trader on whose behalf he is acting
  3. The price including taxes, or where the nature of the product means that the price cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the manner in which the price is calculated, as well as, where appropriate, all additional freight, delivery or postal charges or, where these charges/ costs cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the fact that such additional charges/ costs may be payable
  4. The arrangements for payment, delivery, performance and the complaint handling policy, if they depart from the requirements of professional diligence
  5. For products and transactions involving a right of withdrawal/ revocation or cancellation, the existence of such a right

 

Invitation to purchase in relation to a distance or off premises contract

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenDACArt8I2Pexp.pdf

 

  • The methods of advertising which are considered misleading under all circumstances are set out in Annex 1 (EN) of the Dutch Advertising Code (Art. 8.5. Explanation The methods of advertising referenced in Annex 1 of the Dutch Advertising Code are misleading under all circumstances. Therefore, it is not necessary to consider whether they are misleading for the average consumer, or if the economic behaviour of the average consumer is materially distorted or is likely to be materially distorted)
  • Testimonials, commendations or expert statements that are used in advertising must be based on the truth and must be in line with the latest accepted scientific views (Art. 9)
  • In advertising intended for the general public, scientific terms, statistical data and quotations shall be used with the utmost care in order to prevent/ avoid confusion of ideas. If use is made of statistics that are valid only within certain limits, such limits shall be stated clearly (Note: e.g. where statistics are based on provisional figures or for a certain period of time, these qualifications should be mentioned, otherwise it could be misleading). No technical terms, descriptions, illustrations or pictures that are manifestly intended to suggest in a quasi-scientific or misleading manner the presence of non-existent properties of goods or services, shall be used (Art. 10)

 

 Identifiable advertising 

 

  • Advertising must be identifiable as such by virtue of its lay-out, presentation, content or otherwise, taking into account the public for which it is intended (Art. 11.1)
  • Advertising in audio-visual media must be clearly distinct from the rest of the programming by optical and/ or acoustic means. The use of subliminal techniques is prohibited. The use of elements from a broadcast programme in advertising is also prohibited in the event it can be reasonably assumed that the viewers or listeners would be misled or confused by it. The appearance in advertising of people who may be deemed, by virtue of their participation in broadcast programmes, to have influence or instil confidence in certain sections of the public is prohibited (Art. 11.2 Explanation The term audio-visual media particularly refers to programmes broadcast on radio and TV. Subliminal techniques refer to techniques that employ inserted images and/ or sounds of very brief duration in an attempt to influence viewers or listeners, possibly without their knowledge or ability to perceive them)

 

Comparative advertising EN (Art. 13)

 

Aggressive advertising (Art. 14. Explanation Undue Influence’ is defined as taking advantage of a dominant position in order to apply pressure on the consumer even without the use of violence or threat of violence, in such a way that the consumer’s ability to make a well-informed decision is considerably reduced. The methods of advertising as referenced in Annex 2 of the Dutch Advertising Code are considered aggressive under all circumstances)

 

  • Aggressive advertising is prohibited. An advertisement is considered to be aggressive in the event that, taking into account all its features and circumstances, the factual context, the limitations of the communication medium and the intended audience, it significantly impairs or is likely to significantly impair the average consumer’s freedom of choice or conduct with regard to the product, by means of intimidation/ harassment, coercion, including the use of physical violence, or undue influence, which thereby causes him or is likely to cause him to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise (Art. 14.1)
  • The methods of advertising which are considered aggressive under all circumstances are listed in Annex 2 of the Dutch Advertising Code
  • At the request of the Advertising Code Committee or the Board of Appeal the advertiser must demonstrate the accuracy or fairness of the advertisement, should this be disputed for good reasons (Art. 15)
  • The Dutch Advertising Code must not only be applied according to the letter of its provisions but according to its spirit as well (Art. 16)
  • In the case of Special Advertising Codes, the General Section of the Dutch Advertising Code shall remain fully in force (Art. 17)
  • Companies as well as consumers have the right to submit a complaint about violations of the Dutch Advertising Code with the Advertising Code Authority (SRC). This means that where in this part of the General Code reference is made to consumers, corporate bodies are also covered (Art. 18)

 

Blacklist: Annex 1 and 2

 

Annex 1 contains advertising practices considered misleading under all circumstances, whilst Annex 2 lists advertising practices considered aggressive under all circumstances. The following blacklist clauses are added in the DAC, having been transposed May 2022 as a result of Directive 2019/2161 amends

 

  1. Providing search results in response to a consumer’s online search query without clearly disclosing any paid advertisement or payment specifically for achieving higher ranking of products within the search results
  2. Stating that reviews of a product are submitted by consumers who have actually used or purchased the product without taking reasonable and proportionate steps to check that they originate from such consumers
  3. Submitting or commissioning another legal or natural person to submit false consumer reviews or endorsements, or misrepresenting consumer reviews or social endorsements, in order to promote products.

 

1.2. Section C of the DAC: General recommendations

 

This section was deleted from the DAC January 2023

 

The topics below are set out in full here (EN)

 

Use of words ‘comparable retail value’

Superlatives, guarantees

Use of the term ‘recommended price’

Advertising for branches

Pictures of the product 

 

1.3. Advertising Checker Service from the SRC

 

Context

 

This is a service in Q&A/ Do’s and Don’ts format that is intended to help with some of the major issues such as taste and decency, information requirements etc. that can be encountered when developing advertising. Those issues are set out below largely by way of linked files, as their exploration is quite intricate and lengthy. The information below and linked has been translated from sites that are amended on a regular basis. Whilst we try to keep the translation updated, for the most recent information it may be best to check the Dutch version linked above

 

Taste and decency

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckT_DChecklist.pdf

Recognition of advertising

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckIdentifiabilityChecklist.pdf

For guidance on identifiability across several issues/ channels, including example cases

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckIdentifiabiltyMedia.pdf

Unfair advertising

https://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckGenUnfair.pdf

A section on the ‘Blacklist’, i.e. those commercial practices in all circumstances considered unfair

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckUnfairBlacklist.pdf        

 

Information requirements

Last updated by SRC 10/10/2017 NL

Key extracts in English here:

https://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckInfo.pdf

 

2. LEGISLATION

 

While advertising regulation is largely a self-regulatory system, legislation is influential in channel especially, but also in content. Issues of unfair commercial practices and comparative advertising can end up in the courts, so it’s best to know what the laws say, albeit they are largely echoed in self-regulation, in the Netherlands in particular

 

Applicable legislation

 

  • Articles 193a - 193j, Section 3A, Book 6 Civil Code: EN (trans does not include clauses transposed from Directive 2019/2161, available separately here / link to NL version Jan 2023). Covers unfair commercial practices, including e.g. misleading advertising and is the principal marketing legislation derived in part from the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC. Incorporates the ‘Blacklist’ of practices that are 'misleading in any circumstances' which now carries provisions related to search rankings and consumer surveys from the 2019 Directive linked above; clauses shown below
  • Articles 194 -196, Title 3, Section 4, Book 6 Civil Code (linked above; amend to art. 194 hereMisleading and comparative advertising; B2B and B2C with the exception of article 193a (2d). Similarly to the construct of Section 3A above, these rules derive from MACAD, the Misleading and Comparative Advertising Directive 2006/114/EC
  • Articles 15d, paras 1&2, and 15e para 1. Book 3 Dutch Civil Code: EN / NL (2022) covers material Information requirements in an e-Commerce context and in this case transposed from the e-Commerce Directive 2000/31/EC. The translation linked earlier does not reflect the latest NL version but the clauses concerned are anyway unchanged. We have not set those out below; see the linked files

 

2.1. Comparative advertising (Art. 194a Book 6 CC (EN))

 

1. Comparative advertising means any advertising that explicitly or by implication identifies a competitor or goods or services offered by a competitor

2. Comparative advertising shall, as far as the comparison is concerned, be permitted when the following conditions are met:

 

a. It is not misleading or a misleading commercial practice referred to in Articles 193c to 193g

b. It compares goods or services meeting the same needs or intended for the same purpose

c. It objectively compares one or more material, relevant, verifiable and representative features of those goods and services, which may include price

d. it does not create confusion in the market place between the advertiser and a competitor or between the advertiser's trademarks, trade names, other distinguishing marks, goods or services and those of a competitor

e. It does not discredit or denigrate the trademarks, trade names, other distinguishing marks, goods, services, activities, or circumstances of a competitor

f. For products with designation of origin, it relates in each case to products with the same designation

g. It does not take unfair advantage of the reputation of a trade mark, trade name or other distinguishing marks of a competitor or of the designation of origin of competing products

h. It does not present goods or services as imitations or replicas of goods or services bearing a protected trademark or trade name

 

3. Any comparison referring to a special offer shall indicate in a clear and unequivocal way the date on which the offer ends or, where appropriate, that the special offer is subject to the availability of the goods and services, and, where the special offer has not yet begun, the date of the start of the period during which the special price or other specific conditions shall apply

 

2.2. Misleading commercial practices (Article 193c Book 6 CC)

 

  • A commercial practice is misleading if information is provided which is actually incorrect or which deceives or is likely to deceive the average consumer, whether or not by means of an overall presentation of the information, like with respect to (Art. 193c (1a-g):

 

  • The existence or the nature of the product
  • The main characteristics of the product, such as its availability, benefits, risks, execution, composition, accessories, after-sale customer assistance and complaint handling, method and date of manufacture or provision, delivery, fitness for purpose, usage, quantity, specification, geographical or commercial origin or the results to be expected from its use, or the results and material features of tests or checks carried out on the product
  • The trader's commitments, the motives for the commercial practice and the nature of the sales process, any statement or symbol in relation to direct or indirect sponsorship or approval of the trader or the product
  • The price or the way in which the price is calculated, or the existence of a specific price advantage
  • The need for a service, part, replacement or repair
  • The nature, attributes and rights of the trader or his agent, such as his identity and assets, his qualifications, status, approval, affiliation or connection and ownership of industrial, commercial or intellectual property rights or his awards and distinctions
  • The consumer's rights, including the right to repair or replace the supplied asset or the right to a price reduction, or the risks he may face

 

which causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision which he otherwise would not have taken

 

  • Paragraph 2 of the same article, found in the link to Book 6 above, provides a 'confusion with competition' clause and a code of conduct clause. Additionally, the English translation is not up-to-date with amendments from Directive 2019/2161 one of which is under this article 193c in the Jan 2023 version of Book 6 (NL): Also misleading is: 'marketing of a good in one Member State, whereby the good is presented as identical to a good marketed in other Member States, while the composition or characteristics of that good differ significantly, unless justified by legitimate and objective factors'

2.3. Misleading purchase invitation (Art. 193e Book 6 CC)

 

In the case of an invitation to purchase Definition Art. 193a(1g): invitation to purchase: a commercial communication which indicates characteristics of the product and the price in a way appropriate to the means of the commercial communication used and thereby enables the consumer to make a purchase if not already apparent from the context, the following information shall be regarded as material in the sense of Article 6:193d paragraph 2 (misleading omission):

 

  1. The main characteristics of the product, to an extent appropriate to the medium and the product
  2. The geographical address and the identity of the trader, such as his trading name and, where applicable, the geographical address and the identity of the trader on whose behalf he is acting
  3. The price inclusive of taxes, or where the nature of the product means that the price cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the manner in which the price is calculated, as well as, where appropriate, all additional freight, delivery or postal charges or, where these charges cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the fact that such additional charges may be payable
  4. The arrangements for payment, delivery, performance and the complaint handling policy, if they depart from the requirements of professional diligence
  5. If there is a right of withdrawal or cancellation, the existence of such a right

 

In May 2022, Paragraphs 2 and 3 were added to this article as a result of amendments from Directive 2019/2161 related to search rankings and consumer reviews. These are shown in the 2023 NL version of the article, which appear to be transposed faithfully from the Directive and are shown here in a separate EN file 

 

2.4. The commercial practices ‘Blacklist’ EN / NL (Jan 2023)

 

  • Article 193g sets out commercial practices which are misleading in all circumstances (and therefore unfair under Article 193b (3a) Book 6 CC)
  • Art. 193i lists commercial practices which are aggressive under all circumstances (and therefore unfair under Article 193b (3b) Book 6 CC)
  • The EN version of Book 6 linked above is out of date regarding amendments from Directive 2019/2161, some shown elsewhere in this section 
  • Regarding the blacklist in particular, four clauses have been added:  

 

 

  1. providing search results in response to a consumer's online query without clearly identifying a paid advertisement or payment made specifically to rank products higher
  2. re-selling events tickets to consumers if the trader has obtained them by using automated means to circumvent any set limits on the number of tickets a person may purchase or other rules applicable to the purchase of tickets;
  3. stating that product reviews are submitted by consumers who have actually used or purchased the product, without taking reasonable and proportionate steps to verify that those reviews are actually from such consumers;
  4. posting or causing the posting of false consumer reviews or recommendations or misrepresenting consumer reviews or social media endorsements in order to promote products

 

3.  SPECIFIC CLAIM AREAS

 

3.1. Pricing


Note: stating prices correctly in advertising can be difficult from a regulatory perspective. If uncertain, check with your/ your client’s lawyers. The following, as with all of the contents of this website, does not constitute advice, just what the rules say

 

Applicable self-regulation

 

  • Dutch Advertising Code Section A (EN) General 
  • SRC Check for Unfair Advertising and Information Obligations - Total Price
  • Advertising Code Committee Case Kia Picanto 2012/00088 EN
  • Chairman’s Decision ‘Scooter’ Case No. 2017/00281 EN

Applicable legislation and guidance

 

Note:  the Decree under the second bullet point below transposes elements of the Product Pricing Directive (PPD) 98/6/EC relating to the requirement for total/ final prices to be stated. With amendments from the Directive 2019/2161, the PPD incorporated a new article 6a, which sets out provisions for reduced/ promotional pricing. The ACM - the Dutch consumer protection authority - has May 2022 news here (NL) and this March 2022 article from Maverick Avocaten is helpful

 

  • European Commission guidance for the application of article 6a of the Directive referenced above (PPD) is here
  • The Product Pricing Decree NL / EN (both links reflect Jan 2023 legislation) is the implementation in the Netherlands of the Product Price Directive (PPD) 98/6/EC; see article 5 of the decree in particular. Article 5a is the transposition from the PPD of new promotional pricing rules 
  • Dutch Civil Code Book 6 NL / EN (the EN trans is out of date regarding amendments from Directive 2019/2161 shown above under 2.2. to 2.4 inc. but the price-related articles we reference in this point remain applicable); title 3, Section 3A Unfair Commercial Practices articles 193b (3a); 193c (1d); 193d (1-4); and 193e (c); amend to art. 194 here
  • ACM Authority for Consumers and Markets Price Promotions note EN, albeit dated December 2016
  • Case law: Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) C‑476/14 (Citroën/ZLW) Judgement and AG Opinion 

 

Self-regulatory clauses

 

  • Art. 8.3 DAC: Advertising is also regarded as misleading if it causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would not have taken otherwise, and it involves the following:
  1. Omitting, keeping hidden, or providing in unclear, unintelligible, ambiguous or untimely manner essential information which the average consumer needs in order to make an informed transactional decision
  • Art. 8.4 DAC In the case of an invitation to purchase in advertising, which does not relate to a distance contract or off-premises contract, the following material information must be provided:
  1. The price including taxes, or where the nature of the product means that the price cannot reasonably be determined beforehand, the manner in which the price is calculated, as well as, where appropriate, all additional freight, delivery or postal charges or, where these costs cannot reasonably be calculated in advance, the fact that such additional costs may be payable
  • In case the medium used for advertising has its limitations in space or time, these limitations as well as the measures taken by the advertiser to supply the information in another way, will be taken into account when deciding whether information has been omitted. Essential information consists among other things of all information the advertiser has to provide pursuant to the law (explanation of article 8.3)

 

New article 8.6 Price reduction; transposed from the Directive 2019/2161 which amended the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC


Advertisements that mention a price reduction for a particular product, always state the lowest price that the advertiser has applied for that product prior to the promotion during a period of at least thirty days before the discount takes effect. The foregoing does not apply to goods that deteriorate or expire rapidly, for products that have been on the market for less than thirty days and for price reductions that are progressively increased, in accordance with the Product Price Indication Decree.

 

Example case: Kia Picanto EN. Extracts below

 

  • In May 2012, the Board of Appeal (CVB) of the Advertising Code Committee made an important ruling on the stated price of a Kia Picanto in a TV commercial and on the Kia website as “from” and “available from” €7,995. The complaint was that the car could not be bought for that price; there were mandatory additional costs amounting to c. €700
  • The Board ruled that this advertising constituted an invitation to purchase, which must always state the “total price” i.e. a price in which all costs are included in so far as these costs (1) can be determined in advance (2) are unavoidable and (3) are not apparent from the context of the advertisement
  • The entry-level price excluded “ready-for-use” (delivery) costs, as well as other admin charges and recycling fees. The Board ruled that these costs would have been known at the time of publication, and so should have been included in the advertised price. Because the delivery costs were considerable, and led to a "significantly higher purchase price" compared to the price quoted, the average consumer may have been enticed to make a purchase decision that he would not otherwise have taken
  • The total price not being shown was ruled to be a misleading omission under Article 8.3 (c) DAC in connection with Article 8.4 (c). The Appeal Board therefore considered the advertising to be unfair in the sense of article 7. The article Advertising shall not be dishonest. Advertising is considered to be dishonest if it contravenes the requirements of professional commitment, and if it substantially disrupts or may disrupt the economic behaviour of the average consumer reached, or targeted, as regards to the product. Misleading and/ or aggressive advertising is considered to be (by any means) dishonest

 

The Chairman’s scooter

 

The 2017 'Scooter' case (Chairman’s Decision Case No: 2017/00281 EN). Because the final price is not stated, the Chairman considers the advertising in violation of art. 8.4c DAC in conjunction with article 2b of the Prices Act and article 3 paragraph 1 of the Product Pricing Decree (EN)

 

Comparing prices

 

  • See article 13c and final paragraph of that article of the DAC Section A 
  • SRC Check Advice Unfair Advertising

 

Other types of pricing deception within the DAC; Annex I

 

  • Bait Advertising/ Limited Supply Offer: Offering products for a specified price without disclosing the existence of any reasonable grounds the advertiser may have for suspecting that he might not be able to supply, nor have another advertiser/ trader supply, these products or similar products at that price, for a period that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable, taking into account the product itself, the range/ scale of the advertising campaign for this product and the price offered (Pt. 5, Annex I DAC). See SRC Check advice here
  • Bait and Switch: Offering a product for a specified price and subsequently:

 

  • Refusing to show the consumer the offered product; or
  • Refusing to accept an order or refusing to deliver the product within a reasonable term; or
  • Showing a defective example of the product

 

        With the intention to promote another product (Point 6 (a-c), Annex I DAC)

 

  • Free: Describing a product as “gratis” (gratis); “free” (voor niets); “without charge/ complimentary” (kosteloos) or similar if the consumer has to pay anything other than the inevitable cost of responding to the offer and collecting or paying for delivery of the product (point 19, Annex I DAC). See SRC ‘Checker’ advice on ‘Free’ here:
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NlGenSRCCheckFreeNote.pdf (EN)

 

Case law 

 

Key points from case C‑476/14 Citroën/ZLW):

 

  • Where an advertisement mentions the price of a product, the selling price must be stated; this means the final price including VAT and include the unavoidable and foreseeable components of the price, components that are necessarily payable by the consumer and constitute the pecuniary consideration for the acquisition of the product concerned (para. 37 Citroën case). Other price components = integral parts of the final price (para. 23)

3.2. ENVIRONMENTAL CLAIMS

 

Self-regulation

 

  • Code for Environmental Advertising; Special Advertising Code, Section B: Dutch Advertising Code NL / EN
  • Sustainability Advertising Code (NL; SRC EN translation here) applicable from February 1, 2023 and replacing the Code for Environmental Advertising
  • SRC Check: Environment and Sustainability: NL

 

SRC Check: Environment and sustainability

 

The SRC are the Self-Regulatory Organisation in The Netherlands. The ‘Check’ system helps guide agencies and advertisers through the various codes. It has not yet been formally translated. The extracts below have been translated by GRS, the owners of this website. As is always the case, the applicable rules are anyway those in the original Dutch. The file here is the full Check section on Environment and sustainability. Read it if you want further background and help on environmental claims:

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckEnvironment.pdf

The original:

http://www.checksrc.nl/check/milieu_en_duurzaamheid/

Adjudication: File No. 2017/00812; 20/12/2017

Link no longer active; summary below

 

  • Coca-Cola published an ad “Our packaging is 100% recyclable”
  • Greenpeace filed a complaint that the advertising was misleading, in violation of Arts 2,3, and 10 of the Environmental code, and overstating something that was not unique (PET bottles are always 100% recyclable)
  • Also that CC was inferring that its bottles were 100% recycled, and that the recyclability of the packaging was of little value in practice because much packaging isn't recycled
  • The complaint was dismissed. The strapline "Our packaging is 100% recyclable" was not a suggestion by Coca-Cola of any positive differentiation from its competitors. Coca-Cola was not suggesting that its packaging was made entirely from recycled materials, as consumers appreciate the difference between recyclable and recycled
  • The Committee ruled that there were sufficient facilities available for recycling Coca-Cola packaging, so this was not simply a theoretical possibility under article 10

 

ACM Is the Dutch consumer and markets authority, a stautory body. This is a significant document from an organisation empowered to take action against companies they consider to be in breach. The linked document (above) contains some explanations of the core 'rules of thumb' below, the legal context and some relevant cases. Clauses in italics are the amends from the 2021 version. Helpful commentary from CMS Netherlands here

 

  • Rule of thumb 1: Use correct, clear, specific, and complete sustainability claims
  • Rule of thumb 2: Substantiate your sustainability claims with facts, and keep them up-todate
  • Rule of thumb 3: Make fair comparisons with other products or competitors 
  • Rule of thumb 4: Describe your future sustainability ambitions in concrete and verifiable terms
  • Rule of thumb 5: Make sure that visual claims and labels are useful to consumers, not confusing

 

European Commission guidance

 

Commission Guidance on the application of the UCPD December 2021; section 4.1.1. Environmental claims. This is an important document with definitive guidance on the application of the most important European legislation for this commercial communications context

 

Comparisons

 

Comparative environmental claims should be assessed under the criteria from the Directive on Misleading and Comparative Advertising MACAD Article 4 / Article 194a Book 6 Civil Code EN / Article 13 Dutch Advertising Code (EN). These criteria apply to advertising that compares the environmental impact or benefit of different products. Under these provisions, such a comparison should therefore, among other things:

 

  • Not be misleading within the meaning of the UCPD (EN)
  • Compare goods or services meeting the same needs or intended for the same purpose 
  • Objectively compare one or more material, relevant, verifiable and representative features of those goods and services

 

 

 

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C. Channel Rules

1. TV/Radio/VOD

SECTION C: TV & RADIO/ AV

 

 

KEY RULES AND SOURCES 

 

  • The content rules shown in our earlier section B apply to these channels; the principal source of rules is the Dutch Advertising Code (DAC; EN)
  • The DAC is the official repository for content rules transposed from the AVMS Directive; under the terms of the Media Act 2008 (NL, Jan 2023) articles 3.6 and 2.92 for commercial and public broadcasters respectively, broadcasters are required to be affiliated with the DAC
  • The latest English version of the DAC does not reflect the amendments to content rules, albeit not really significant in this context, that Directive 2018/1808 provided to the AVMS Directive; content amends to the directive are shown here. It does now
  • The principal channel  (i.e. placement) rules in this context are from the Media Act 2008 implementing aspects of the AVMS Directive and its amendment Directive 2018/1808, e.g. rules on sponsorship and product placement 
  • There is some uncertainty around the Act’s 2020 provisions transposed from the amending Directive, the purpose of which was to recognise and address a media landscape shaped by ‘the ongoing convergence of television and internet services’ (recital 1, 2018/1808 Directive). This uncertainty manifests itself especially with regard to Influencers/ vlogging, as they can fall under the definition of a ‘media service on demand’. See this helpful piece from Field Fisher Netherlands here and a significant article from the DDMA (Data Driven Marketing Association of the Netherlands) counsel here (NL)
  • An important view on the above issue is from the regulator group ERGA whose December 2021 paper Analysis and recommendations concerning the regulation of vloggers carries an annex with national examples, which includes the Netherlands (5)
  • Meanwhile, the Dutch Media Authority (CVDM; link is to the page on the amended Media Act) supervises compliance with the Media Act 2008, issuing regulations/ guidelines related to the Act's requirements. These are linked below in their respective contexts and for our (advertising) purposes address principally product placement and sponsorship, essentially unchanged in the amended Media Act, in part because these elements are unchanged in the revised Directive
 

COMMERCIAL CHANNELS
Incorporates TV and Radio and On-demand

 

  • Arts 3.6 - 3.14 Media Act 2008 (NL March 2022) sets out the base rules for advertising/ teleshopping, 3.15 - 3.19 for sponsorship and 3.19a-c for product placement 
  • Dutch Media Authority (CVDM) regulations (these look dated but remain on the CvDM website as at January 2022):

 

CVDM Policy on advertising, commercial media organisations 2012 (EN)

CVDM Policies sponsoring commercial media organisations 2012 (EN)

CVDM regulation on product placement by commercial media institutions 2014 (EN)

 

The 2022 policy rules for advertising, sponsorship, product placement and on-demand are linked in the landing page below; these are currently only available in Dutch, but there's helpful commentary in English from CMS Netherlands/ Lex here and they anyway reflect the amends to the Media Act separately conveyed

https://www.cvdm.nl/uploader/meer-weten

 

PUBLIC CHANNELS 

 

Summary

 

STER (Stichting Ether Reclame) Foundation for Broadcast Advertising is the independent agency handling advertising on Public Broadcasting's television, radio and online outlets. Advertising rules are applicable to all their media services including, for example, websites or media services on demand (Art. 2.98 Media Act). STER is affiliated to the SRC self-regulatory advertising authority and is legally obliged to observe the Dutch Advertising Code (Art. 2.92 Media Act)

 

  • Advertising is permitted, but with less frequency than on commercial channels
  • Product placement is prohibited for public broadcasting services (Art. 2.88b (3b))
  • Sponsorship is allowed in public broadcasting services under strict conditions, limited to, for example, arts and sports programmes (Arts 2.107-2.108)
  • As with commercial broadcasting, rules are a combination of requirements from the Media Act and the Media Authority’s (CVDM) regulations:

 

CVDM Policy rules on advertising for public media institutions 2019 (NL) (EN)

CVDM Policy rules for sponsorship, public media institutions 2018 (NL) (EN)

Checking for updates per above commercial amends 

 

 

 

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2. Cinema/Press/Outdoor

SECTION C: CINEMA, PRINT, OUTDOOR

 

     

  CINEMA

 

  • Content rules set out in our earlier section B apply in cinema; the key set of rules is the Dutch Advertising Code (EN)
  • Under this ‘General’ tab, the cinema medium does not attract specific channel (i.e. placement) rules. Some regulation-sensitive product categories, such as alcohol, are subject to cinema-specific rules. See sector tabs on the WikiRegs home page
  • SAWA is the Screen Advertising World Association: http://www.sawa.com/.

 

PRINT

 

  • See Direct Postal Mail entries later in this channel section for mailshots/ print advertising in mail
  • Content rules set out in our earlier section B will apply; the key set of rules is the Dutch Advertising Code (EN)
  • Under this ‘General’ tab, the print medium does not attract specific channel rules. Some regulation-sensitive product categories, such as cars and alcohol, do have print-specific requirements. See sector tabs on the WikiRegs home page

 

OUTDOOR

 

  • Content rules set out in our earlier section B will apply
  • Under this ‘General’ tab, the outdoor medium does not attract specific channel rules. Some regulation-sensitive product categories, such as alcohol and gambling, do carry outdoor-specific requirements. See sector tabs on the home page of this website

 

 

The international association for OOH advertising is the World Out Of Home Organisation (WOO); membership list here

 

 

 

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3. Online Commercial Communications

SECTION C: ONLINE COMMERCIAL COMMUNICATIONS

 

 

CONTEXT 

 

This section provides the broad regulatory picture for the commercial digital environment. More specific channel rules such as email, OBA etc. follow. Advertising online is subject to the rules in owned and (some) earned space as well as paid, which makes the definition of advertising important, especially as there is so much content in a ‘blurred’ online environment The DAC definition is ‘any form of public and/ or systematic direct or indirect commendation of goods, services and/ or ideas by an advertiser or, either wholly or partly, on behalf of him, with or without the help of a third party.’  The impact of GDPR is shown under individual channel sections; in broad, when processing personal data lawful processing rules from the GDPR may now apply. Privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors

 

....................................................

 

  • Per the introduction above, online advertising is subject to the rules set out in content section B. The key set of rules is from the Dutch Advertising Code (EN). A significant issue in online’s less structured environment is the identification of advertising, hence in this case opening with recognisability rules, but if it’s advertising, it’s in remit and therefore subject to all the rules

 

RECOGNISABILITY: SELF-REGULATION

 

  • Article 11.1 DAC: An advertisement shall be recognisable as such by virtue of its lay-out, presentation, content or otherwise, taking into account the public for which it is intended
  • SRC Check Recognisability NL: on the Internet, an advertisement must be easily identifiable as such. When content on websites is specifically associated with a particular product, advertising will usually be involved. Under no circumstances may the consumer be misled, for example by giving the impression that it is an ‘official‘ newsflash/ message. See case 2011/00311 

 

RECOGNISABILITY: LEGISLATION

 

  • Article 15e (1) Book 3 Civil Code (EN) from the e-Commerce Directive 2000/31/EC: Where commercial communications form part of, or constitute, an information society service Definition Any service which is usually performed in exchange for a financial consideration, at or from a distance by electronic transmission, at the individual request of the consumer of the service without parties having been simultaneously present at the same placethe one who has instructed to use this way of communication must ensure that: 

 

  1. The commercial communication is clearly recognisable as such
  2. That his identity can be deduced from the commercial communication
  3. That the commercial communication, as far as it encloses promotional offers, competitions or games, contains a clear and unambiguous indication of the nature and the conditions which have to be met to qualify for them
  4. That unrequested commercial communication, sent electronically, is clearly and unambiguously recognisable as such as soon as it is received by the recipient

 

  • The Dutch Civil Code Book 6 (EN; not up-to-date with May 2022 clauses; see section A Overview and section B Content), home of some commercial communication rules from the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive 2005/29/EC, includes misleading omission rules under article 193d; under article 193g - Commercial practices which are misleading in all circumstances - point v: falsely claiming or creating the impression that the trader is not acting for purposes relating to his trade, business, craft or profession, or falsely representing oneself as a consumer; and k: using editorial content in the media to promote a product where a trader has paid for the promotion without making that clear in the content or by images or sounds clearly identifiable by the consumer (‘advertorial’)
  • The Media Act (NL; Jan 2023), since its amendment as a result of Directive 2018/1808 bringing video sharing platforms into remit, is interpreted to include Influencers/ 'video uploaders' in its scope. The media authority CvdM issued rules (NL; EN summary here) in May 2022, effective July 1, 2022 which require Influencers with more than 500k subscribers/ followers and who post more than 24 videos annually to register with CvdM, with the advertising SRO and with NICAM, the latter for child protetction measures. There is considerable emphasis in the rules on recognisability of posts where these are commercial. Registration was by July 15, 2022

 

 INFORMATION REQUIREMENTS 

 

  • Dutch Advertising Code Arts 8.2, 8.3c and 8.4 for specific 'invitation to purchase' Definition A commercial communication which indicates characteristics of the product and the price in a way appropriate to the means of the commercial communication used and thereby enables the consumer to make a purchase requirements 
  • The above linked code in English does not include May 2022 rules set out in the NL version under article 8.3. and transposed from the 2019/2161 Directive requiring consumer reviews to be verified and search results to be transparent. The clauses in English are shown here  
  • SRC Check Information Obligations NL. The link will take you to the SRC Check service, which sets out Information requirements according to the ad and the channel. The automatic translation facility provides a pretty solid gist. We have also translated requirements by Group or ‘Column’, as below:

 

  1. General advertising, without price/ product
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckCol1.pdf
  2. Non digital offers (not specific to this context but to show how the versions differ)
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckCol2.pdf
  3. Digital offer (webshop)
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckCol3.pdf
  4. Medium/ product
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckCol4b.pdf

 

OTHER MEASURES BY CHANNEL AND RE CONTENT CREATORS

 

  • Social Media and Influencer Advertising Code EN / NL. This code, amended July 2022 for more specific Influencer Marketing provisions in light of new rules from the media authority (CvDM; see above) sets out terms so that advertising via bloggers, vloggers and content creators generally, is clearly recognisable as such. Some clauses are set out under the Marketers’ Own Websites header following in this channel section C, or see the linked files
  • SRC Checklist: Social Media NL; EN. Social media information obligations SRC Check NL; Social media recognisability SRC Check NL
  • Social code: YouTube NL / EN The code was developed by a group of 20 YouTubers in collaboration with the Dutch Media Authority CvdM
  • The SRC published in January 2021 What are the rules for fair and transparent advertising on TikTok? (NL)

 

Regulatory authorities

 

 

 INFORMATION REQUIREMENTS FROM LEGISLATION

 

  • Art. 15d Book 3 Civil Code (EN) from the e-Commerce Directive 2000/31/EC: Accessibility of data and information. See the linked file for requirements or under the Marketers’ Own Websites header later in this channel section C. Note: the information must be made ‘directly, easily and permanently accessible.’

  • The Telecommunications Act NL / EN Article 11.7 implements the e-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC on the consent requirements for sending unsolicited commercial communications by email, fax, phone, and automated calling systems. Article 11.7a implements the cookie provision, allowing cookies after obtaining informed consent. See provisions from the linked files or under the email header later in this channel section C. If data processing related to electronic communications involves personal data (that which identifies individuals), then the GDPR may apply. Check with advisors

  • Article 193e from Book 6 of the Dutch Civil Code (EN) on 'Invitation to Purchase' covers information requirements for this type of advertising. Provisions are almost word-for-word per the DAC article 8.4 referenced above,  as both sources derive from the UCPD 2005/29/ECIn May 2022, Paragraphs 2 and 3 were added to this article as a result of amendments from Directive 2019/2161 related to search rankings and consumer reviews. These are shown in the NL version of the article, which appear to be transposed faithfully from the Directive and are shown here in a separate EN file 

  • The Media Act (NL March 2022) carries provisions from the AVMS Directive 2010/13/EU and its amending Directive 2018/1808 to extend scope online and in particular to video-sharing platforms (Chapter 3a), who must recognise the DAC/AVMS rules for commercial communications relating to recognisability; additionally, article 3a/5 pt. 4 requires that user-generated videos that contain commercial communications, in the event that the service provider is aware of this, must be clearly notified to the user by the service provider
  • Reference the above, in May 2022 the media authority CvdM published rules (NL) for 'video uploaders' as they are now considered to be in scope of the Media Act. Influencers with more than 500k followers/ subscribers and who post more than 24 videos in a calendar year must register with CvdM and with the SRC
  • The DSA: Consequences of the use of digital advertising from Dentons/ Lex August 30, 2022 covers the significant implications of this EU legislation (the Digital Services Act) on the advertising industry; in force 1 January 2024

 

 

 

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4. Cookies & OBA

SECTION C: COOKIES AND OBA

 

 

 

COOKIES

 

Privacy Sandbox news and updates
DPA issues new guidance & steps up supervision
Osborne Clarke/ Lex Feb 15, 2024

The EU "Cookie Pledge" Preiskel & Co/ Mondaq 12 June 2023. Pledge here 
Privacy Sandbox next steps May 18, 2023

 

  • Key statutory provision: article 11.7a Telecommunications Act (TA) NL / EN implements article 5.3 of the e-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC, amended by Directive 2009/136/EU, aka the cookie clause
  • When cookies identify individuals, then GDPR 2016/679 lawful processing rules may apply (the above linked Telecoms Act clauses have been amended to reflect/ recognise GDPR). Privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors
 

Guidance

 

 

OBA

 

European Union: Targeted advertising on social networks: Is consent mandatory? (EN)
Haas Avocats 19 September 2023

CJEU Landmark Data Protection Ruling for Online and Behavioural Advertising

William Fry/ Lex September 8, 2023. Connects with Meta news below 

Privacy rules for targeted advertising in the UK and EU. Reed Smith/ Lex August 2023

EU Rules on Online Targeted Advertising Covington Burling Aug 2022 on existing targeting rules and DSA (in force January 2024)

Facebook's Meta to ban adverts that target people on 'sensitive topics' politics, race and sexual orientation.

Effective 19 January 2022

 

 

Self-regulation

 

  • OBA, as with any other advertising, is ‘in remit’, i.e. subject to the DAC (EN) and the other rules set out in content section B
  • Refer to the International tab for details of the self-regulatory initiative for OBA, which is underpinned by the IAB Europe OBA Framework and the EASA Best Practice Recommendation OBA 2021. The European Interactive Digital Advertising Alliance (EDAA) is the non-profit organisation responsible for enacting key aspects of the self-regulatory initiative for online behavioural advertising (OBA) across Europe
  • EDAA’s principal purpose is to licence the ‘OBA Icon’ to companies involved in online behavioural advertising across Europe; the OBA icon is a consumer-facing, interactive symbol that links consumers to an online portal, www.youronlinechoices.eu, where they can find easy-to-understand information on the practice of OBA as well as a mechanism for exercising informed choice; if they wish, consumers may ‘turn off’ OBA from some or all companies

 

 

 

 

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5. Emails & SMS

SECTION C: DIRECT ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS

 

 

KEY RULES AND THEIR SOURCE 

 

  • Marketing communications via email/ SMS/ MMS are subject to the content rules set out in section B; the principal rules are from the Dutch Advertising Code (EN)
  • In this channel rules context, the main regulatory issues are from self-regulation and legislation that deals with consent and information requirements. The Code linked above is comprehensive and reflects legislation closely, so the provisions below are largely self-regulatory, though there is a collection of statutory requirements at the base of this page
  • If data processing involves personal data (that which identifies individuals), then lawful processing rules from the GDPR may apply
  • If applicable (check with advisors), the core GDPR articles on Information to be provided to data subjects and their right to object are assembled here 

 

SELF-REGULATION

 

Email code from section B of the Dutch Advertising Code EN / NL. Key points from the code (below as EC):

 

  • Opt-in consent: email advertising is in principle permitted if the recipient of the e-mail advertising has actively granted permission in advance to the database owner (1.3a EC)
  • Soft opt-in: email advertising is also in principle permitted if the database owner has obtained the email address within the scope of a sale to or donation by the recipient and is used for offering similar products or services (including asking for donations by idealistic or charitable institutions), as long as no use is made of the possibility to unsubscribe in the same way as meant in article 5 of this code (the Right to Object). The obligation will not be met solely by including either a provision in the General Terms and Conditions or a privacy statement (1.1a EC)

 

Identification 

 

  • Advertising by email must be clearly identifiable as such by layout, presentation, content or otherwise (Art. 2.1 EC)
  • The advertiser shall take care that the database owner identifies himself in each email in such a way that he is easily and actually accessible to the recipient of the email by means of the contact data of the database owner. At least his name, postal address and contact data shall be specified or an active link shall refer to these data(Art. 2.2 EC) Note: Contact details also means phone number, from case 2017/00361 in which a name, address and email address was not considered sufficient
  • The database owner must include his label in the 'From' field. At the same time, his email must contain an active reply-address in the Reply to - field, where a response will be received (Art. 2.3 EC)

 

The right to object

 

  • The advertiser must ensure that the recipient is given the opportunity, in each message, to object (to the database owner), free of charge and in a simple electronic way, to the use of his email address for the distribution of advertising messages. (Art. 5.1 EC)
  • This right of objection must be made possible in a simple, clear and preferably uniform manner. The database owner must ensure that the request is actioned immediately (Art. 5.1 EC)
  • The recipient must be given the opportunity in every instance to opt-out - as per Art. 5.1 - of receiving advertising messages for the label, product, or service for which the email address was compiled. The opt-out may cover several or all labels, products or services (Art. 5.2 EC)

 

Note: In the old B2B Email code, opt-in was not required for e-mails sent to generic addresses (i.e. info@ or sales@). No mention of this exemption in the new Email code. SRC (the Self-Regulatory Organisation for the Netherlands) state it no longer applies, meaning opt-in required for these addresses

 

LEGISLATION

 

As the self-regulatory email code is comprehensive, clauses from legislation are not spelt out in this section

 

  • The Telecommunications Act (NL; May 2022) article 11.7, which deals with cookie regulation and establishes the opt-in principle from the e-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC; key clauses EN
  • Book 6 of the Civil Code (EN; amend to art. 194 here) carries the rules from the UCPD 2005/29/EC including misleadingness provisions and e.g. ‘invitation to purchase’ informational requirements (article 193e); this translation does not carry the May 2022 rules transposed from the 2019/2161 Directive relating to the veracity of consumer surveys and the transparency of search results; the Jan 2023 Book 6, Section 3A is here in Dutch and the relevant clauses are in English here 
  • Articles 15d and 15e of Book 3 of the Civil Code (EN) also carry identification and informational requirements, in this case in the context of e-Commerce, transposed from Directive 2000/31/EC 
  • As above, if data processing related to electronic communications involves personal data (that which identifies individuals), then the GDPR may apply. Check with advisors if uncertain
  • See this November 2021 judgement from CJEU re unsolicited 'Inbox advertising' and related article from GALA/ Lex here 

 

 

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6. Own Websites & SNS

SECTION C: MARKETERS' OWN WEBSITES

 

 

CONTEXT

 

The same principle that applies in paid space also applies in owned, such as marketers’ own websites and SNS spaces: if the communication from the owner is advertising, it’s in remit. Advertising is defined in the applicable Dutch Advertising Code (EN) as ‘any form of public and/ or systematic direct or indirect commendation of goods, services and/ or ideas by an advertiser or, either wholly or partly, on behalf of him, with or without the help of a third party.’ Clearly, much content on owned websites won’t be advertising; for clarification of exemptions, e.g. UGC, see the EASA Recommendation linked below.

 

In the event that data processing identifies individuals, then lawful processing rules from the GDPR may apply. Privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors

 

 SELF-REGULATION

 

  • The Dutch Advertising Code (EN) applies; in particular in this context articles 8.2, 8.3c; Invitation to Purchase in relation to a distance contract, article 8.4 (f-s). article 11, Recognisable advertising
  • In May 2022, new clauses were introduced under article 8.3 of the DAC that transpose requirements from Directive 2019/2161 that address the transparency of search results and the veracity of consumer reviews. These provisions were also placed in legislation - in Book 6 of the Civil Code. Translations from the SRC are now completed; the relevant clauses can be found in the DAC linked above under article 8
  • ‘SRC Check’ for Information Obligations NL. The preceding link will take you to the SRC Check service, which sets out Information requirements according to the ad and the channel. The automatic translation facility provides a pretty solid gist. The specific ‘column’ requirements for digital offers/ webshops are more formally translated here:
    http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenSRCCheckCol3.pd
  • EASA’s Best Practice Recommendation Digital Marketing Communications 2023 establishes some exemptions in this context, such as User-Generated Content (unless endorsed by the marketer), under section 2 of the linked document
  • ACM, the Authority for Consumers and Markets, and the Dutch Data Protection Authority AP, have combined to produce a joint ruling on ‘Tell-a-friend’ systems on websites here (EN)
  • Email Code 2012 EN; from section B of the Dutch Advertising Code S.1.5; clauses set out in the earlier email header or from the linked code 
  • Social Media and Influencer Advertising Code 2019 (SMAC) EN / NL; set out below. Explains disclosures on 'relevant relationship' with content creators. Influencer Marketing: Active Monitoring Mandatory! from GALA/ Lex October 2021 reports that advertisers can't rely on a contractual arrangement with influencers to protect themselves, but that they must 'make an active effort to ensure that the influencer complies with the rules'
  • Social Code YouTubers NL / EN. This is a code written by YouTubers for YouTubers 

 

 

LEGISLATION

 

See linked documents for clauses. These are not set out below 

 

  • Article15d Book 3 Civil Code EN requires ‘Providers of Information Society Services’ Definition Any service which is usually performed in exchange for a financial consideration, at or from a distance by electronic transmission, at the individual request of the consumer of the serviceto make available to users certain information about the operator and its services; transposed from the e-Commerce Directive 2000/31/EC; clauses shown below 
  • Article 193e from Book 6 of the Dutch Civil Code (EN) on Invitation to Purchase Definition Commercial communication which indicates characteristics of the product and the price in a way appropriate to the means of the commercial communication used and thereby enables the consumer to make a purchase
  • In May 2022, Paragraphs 2 and 3 have been added to the above article as a result of amendments from Directive 2019/2161 related to search rankings and consumer reviews. These are shown in the NL version of the article, which appear to be transposed faithfully from the Directive and are shown here in a separate EN file 
  • If communicating with users, then personal data may be processed, which may require observation of the GDPR; equally, consent to marketing communications from the Telecommunications Act Article 11.7 (EN), which deals with cookie regulation and establishes the opt-in principle, may apply; check with advisors
  • The Media Act (NL, March 2022) carries provisions from the AVMS Directive 2010/13/EU and its amending Directive 2018/1808 to extend scope online and in particular to video-sharing platforms (Chapter 3a), who must recognise the DAC/AVMS rules for commercial communications relating to recognisability; additionally, article 3a/5 pt. 4 requires that user-generated videos that contain commercial communications, in the event that the service provider is aware of this, must be clearly notified to the user by the service provider
  • Building on the above, the media authority CvdM issued rules (NL; EN summary here) in May 2022, effective July 1, 2022, which require Influencers/ 'video uploaders' with more than 500k subscribers/ followers and who post more than 24 videos annually to register with CvdM, with the advertising SRO and with NICAM, the latter for child protection measures. There is considerable emphasis in the rules on recognisability of posts where these are commercial. Registration was by July 15, 2022. While the rules apply to Influencers, advertisers and agencies obviously need to be aware of them for contractual issues. Helpful commentary here from Osborne Clarke/ Lex May 2022
 

1.1.  Social Media and InfluencerAdvertising Code 2022 EN

 

Explanation

https://www.reclamecode.nl/social-toelichting/ (NL)

Advice tool

https://www.reclamecode.nl/adviestool-reclame-code-social-media/ (NL)

Guidance document

https://www.reclamecode.nl/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Toolkit-Guidance-doc-RSM.pdf (NL)

FAQs

https://www.reclamecode.nl/category/reclamecode-social-media-influencer-marketing/ (NL)

 

Note July 2022: we are not sure whether the above have been amended in light of the update to the code itself

 

Key clauses article 3: disclosure and identifiability of ‘Relevant relationship’

 

  1. Advertising via social media must, in line with Article 11 NRC, be clearly recognisable as such 
  2. If a Distributor has a Relevant Relationship with the advertiser, this must be explicitly stated in the advertisement
  3. The requirements referred to in points a and b can be met in any event if the content and nature of the Relevant Relationship is disclosed clearly and in an easily accessible manner, e.g. by means of layout and/ or presentation. The content and nature of the Relevant Relationship is in any event clearly recognisable if it is formulated in accordance with the suggestions in the explanation to this article (see file linked above for explanation; it's a bit lengthy to place here)

 

Manipulation ban

 

  • Modifying posts or other communications on social media in such a manner that the average consumer may be misled is prohibited (Art. 4a SMAC)
  • b. If the advertiser modifies, or has another party modify, posts or other communications on social media in order to recommend a product, service or activity, either from the advertiser or from a third party, the advertiser must disclose this in a clear and accessible manner (Art. 4b SMAC)
  • c. If posts or other communications on social media are modified, selected or compared within the context of recommending a product, either from the advertiser or from a third party, the advertiser must do everything necessary to clearly disclose the nature of the Relevant Relationship (Art. 4c SMAC)
  • The advertiser is furthermore prohibited from systematically creating and/ or using false or non-existent identities in bulk to communicate about a product and/ or service through social media. The use of fake likes and fake followers is also not allowed (Art. 4d SMAC)

 

Teasers

 

Teasers are permitted except when the teaser causes or is likely to cause the average consumer to make a decision about a transaction that he would not otherwise have made

 

Children

 

If there is advertising via social media aimed at children, the Children's and Youth Advertising Code applies in full in addition to this code and the DAC (Art. 5 SMAC)

 

Duty of care

 

1.  The Advertiser must:
 
a. Make the Distributor aware of the contents of this code;
b. Require the Distributor working on his instructions to comply with the relevant law and regulations, including the Dutch Advertising Code as well as this Code
c. If the Distributor is permitted to use third parties: to draw the Distributor’s attention to the fact that such third parties must also comply with the obligations referred to in b
d. Actively endeavour to hold the Distributor to the obligations cited in b. and c. and actively to take measures against transgressions referenced in b. and c
 
2. The Advertiser cannot excuse himself/ herself from the obligations referenced in 1 based simply on the fact that the Distributor does not respect the instruction
3. If the Advertiser has complied with the obligations above, the Advertiser has made the best efforts that can reasonably be expected to ensure that Distributors comply with the rules
4. The Advertiser and Distributor each bear their own responsibility for compliance with Articles 3, 4 and 5 of this Code. When a complaint is accepted, the Advertising Code Committee and, on appeal, the Board of Appeal, can designate the party to which non-compliance with this Code can be attributed

 

Example case (Identification)

 

https://www.reclamecode.nl/cases-uit-de-praktijk-van-de-nederlandse-reclame-code/chips-maken-bij-de-boer/

 

YouTubers Code NL / EN website:

 

www.desocialcode.nl

 

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The European Data Protection Board published April 2021 Guidelines 8/2020 on the targeting of social media users (EN)

 

 

 

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7. Native Advertising

SECTION C: NATIVE ADVERTISING

 

 

CONTEXT

 

Also known as sponsored or branded content, this is online and offline advertising designed to fit in with its ‘habitat’, to give consumers a visually consistent experience. IAB Europe’s December 2016 How to Comply with EU Rules Applicable to Online Native Advertising provides some categories of Native ads, some good practice recommendations, and a summary of EU rules and their December 2021 Guide to Native Advertising provides 'up-to-date insight into native ad formats and key considerations and best practices for buyers.' The key issue, obviously, is that of advertising identifiability, though native advertising is like any other advertising in as much as it should observe the rules spelt out in our earlier content section B, primarily those from the Dutch Advertising Code (EN - translation does not include May 2022 clauses here)

 

SELF-REGULATION 

 

  • Article 11 Recognisability of advertising. Dutch Advertising Code (DAC) Section A (EN)
  • Art. 8.5 DAC; Annex 1 points 10 and 21
  • SRC Check: Unfair advertising
  • Case example: file number 2014/00327 NL, re an article on www.voetbalzone.nl about football matches and winning chances, which turned out to be advertising for Unibet, while it was presented as editorial content

 

Identifiable/ recognisable as advertising (Art. 11)

 
  • Advertising must be identifiable as such by virtue of its lay-out, presentation, content or otherwise, taking into account the public for which it is intended (Art. 11.1)
  • Advertising in audio-visual media must be clearly distinct from the rest of the programming by optical and/ or acoustic means. The use of subliminal techniques is prohibited. The use of elements from a broadcast programme in advertising is also prohibited in the event it can be reasonably assumed that the viewers or listeners would be misled or confused by it. The appearance in advertising of people who may be deemed, by virtue of their participation in broadcast programmes, to have influence or instil confidence in certain sections of the public is prohibited (Art. 11.2)

 

SRC Check: Unfair advertising - always unfair: Blacklist NL

 

  • Advertising in editorial articles (Native). An advertorial should also be easily recognisable as advertising. If advertising is paid for and not recognisable as advertising, that is by definition a violation of number 10 of the blacklist of Annex 1 of the DAC (see below). If the word 'advertorial' (advertorial) or 'advertisement' (advertentie) is sufficiently clear with the piece, or the consumer is otherwise sufficiently clearly informed that the piece contains advertising, then it is permitted
 

Blacklist: Misleading under all circumstances and thus unfair advertising under Article 7 DAC

 

  • Annex 1: Advertising is considered misleading under all circumstances in the event of:
     
    • 10. Using editorial content in the media to promote a product, where the advertiser has paid for the promotion without making that clear in the content or by images or sounds clearly identifiable by the consumer (advertorial)
    • 21. Falsely claiming or creating the impression that the advertiser is not acting for purposes relating to his trade, business, craft or profession, or falsely representing oneself as a consumer

 

LEGISLATION

 

As self-regulation is comprehensive on advertising recognisability, we show below only links to the relevant legislation, rather than spelling out each clause

 

  • Article 15 (e) (1) Book 3 Civil Code; requirements for online commercial communications EN
  • Article 193g (k) and (v) Book 6 Civil Code. Blacklist, i.e. circumstances in which a commercial practice is misleading and therefore an unfair commercial practice, under article 193b (3a) Book 6 CC) EN / NL (May 2022). The EN translation of Book 6 does not include new clauses in the blacklist and some other articles related to commercial practices. As these are not directly related to native advertising we don't show them here but they can be found under Content Section B, point 2
  • Article 193d misleading omission; Book 6 Civil Code per links immediately above; see note also above 

 

 

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8. Telemarketing

 

 

Following feedback, we no longer cover Telemarketing 

9. Direct Postal Mail

SECTION C: DIRECT POSTAL MAIL

 

 

Includes unaddressed door-to-door

 

  • Content of commercial communications via Direct Postal Mail and other form of distribution shown below is subject to the rules of the Dutch Advertising Code (EN) and other statutory content rules set out in our earlier content section B except where those are online-specific 

SELF-REGULATION

 

  • Letterbox advertising, door-to-door sampling and direct response advertising code Abbrev. LDDR. Most relevant in this context is letterbox advertising, defined as all advertising material which is distributed via the mail box or post box, whether by direct mail (addressed) or door-to-door (unaddressed), and is not an integrated part of another medium such as newspapers or magazines (Art. 1a LDDR) EN / NL
  • Advertising code for the use of the postal filter 2021 EN / NL
  • Flowchart for sending Direct Mail (addressed advertising via postal mail) here
  • Code for the distribution of unaddressed printed advertisements 'Sticker Code' SC  EN / NL

 

Addressed Direct Postal Mail - definitions and terms 

 

  • Checklist for sending direct mail (addressed advertising mail): Post Filter Code Flowchart (as above)
  • Letterbox advertising: all advertising material which is distributed via the mail box or post box and is not an integrated part of another medium such as newspapers or magazines (Art. 1a LDDR) Note: applies to direct mail (addressed) or door-to-door (unaddressed); unaddressed door-to-door is covered separately below
  • Direct response advertising: all advertising in which the goods, services or information offered can be obtained directly from the provider by means of a written, electronic or telephone response (Art. 1c LDDR)

 

  • Advertising is addressed if the address of the recipient (post office box or home address) and city is stated. It is not important whether a name is included in an address; printed advertising that is addressed to “the occupant of” a specific address is therefore still considered to be 'addressed' (Taken from explanation of Art. 1.1.d. SC)
  • Identification: The advertiser must be identified in such a way that he/ she is easily recognisable to the recipient and effectively contactable/ accessible by the recipient. The name and address of the advertiser/ client must be stated in the offer, for which it is not sufficient to state the PO Box number (Art. 2 LDDR)

 

Content of the offer

 

  • The goods and/ or services that are offered shall be depicted and/ or described clearly and truthfully (Art. 3 LDDR)
  • Every offer must contain a brief, simply worded summary of the rights and obligations attached to acceptance of the offer, in particular: the cash price, the costs and conditions for paying in instalments, any postal charges/ shipping costs and other conditions such as whether or not the offer is on approval without obligation, so that the recipient knows exactly what is being offered and what his rights and obligations are should he accept the offer (Art. 4 LDDR)
  • For vouchers/ coupons, discount vouchers, and savings/ currency stamps, the advantage or reduction for the recipient must be easily identifiable and verifiable by him, and the offer's term of validity must be indicated, as well as any other restrictions (Art. 5 LDDR)
  • Right to object: Should the recipient state in writing that he does not want addressed advertising, the advertiser shall ensure that this wish is honoured unconditionally, as soon as possible and in any case within a period of three months of receipt of the request (Art. 14 LDDR)

 

Advertising code for the use of the Postal Filter (PFC)

 

  • Businesses that send unsolicited addressed advertising material by post must comply with this code, which forms part of the Dutch Advertising Code; unsolicited advertising material, with the exception of market research, which is addressed (whether or not with name/ surname, so will apply to material addressed as “resident of”) and physically sent by post to a person with whom the advertiser does not have an existing relationship - is permitted (without the need for obtaining prior consent from the individual) provided that:

 

  • The recipient has not opted-out of receiving advertising material by registering on the Postal Register or via an heir/ directly concerned person on the National Register of Deceased Persons via www.postfilter.nl (Art 2/3 PFC)
  • Prior to making use of addresses from prospects Definition A person with whom an Advertiser does not have an existing customer relationship and whose contact data has been used by an Advertiser, either directly or via a third party (Art. 1.8 PFC) in order to send direct mail, the advertiser must always check the Postal Register and National Register of Deceased Persons. It is prohibited to contact a prospect whose personal data has been recorded in either register (Art. 5.1 and 5.2 PFC)
  • Consultation of such registers must take place no longer than a maximum of 6 weeks before the direct mail is sent (Art. 5.3 PFC)

 

  • If the recipient is an existing customer and has not previously opted-out, direct mail can be sent without having to consult the National Postal Register; if the existing customer is registered, direct mail (addressed advertising mail) can still be sent. The National Register of Deceased Persons should still be consulted; if a deceased person is registered, it is not permitted to send direct mail (addressed advertising mail). See Flowchart
  • The recipient of any commercial communication should be notified of his right to object. This may include a reference to the National Register of Deceased Persons or the Postal Filter (see Flowchart/ Art. 7 PFC)

 

Unaddressed advertising and free local papers

 

  • Letter box/ mailbox advertising, door-to-door sampling and direct response advertising code (abbrev. LDDR); most relevant in this case is letterbox advertising Definition Defined as all advertising material which is distributed via the mail box or post box, whether by direct mail (addressed) or door-to-door (unaddressed), and is not an integrated part of another medium such as newspapers or magazines (Art. 1a LDDR) EN / NL
  • Code for the distribution of unaddressed printed advertisements; Sticker Code ‘SC’ EN / NL

 

LEGISLATION

 

As self-regulation is comprehensive on advertising recognisability, we show below only links to the relevant legislation, rather than spelling out each clause

 

  • Art. 193i (c) Book 6 Civil Code EN / NL (May 2022) which prohibits making persistent and unwanted solicitations by telephone, fax, e-mail or other remote media (italics ours) except in circumstances and to the extent justified under national law to enforce a contractual obligation. The English translation linked here is not up-to-date; see note below
  • The same legislation provides rules in the event of communications that constitute an ‘Invitation to Purchase’ (often the case in postal mail). See article 193e. In May 2022, Paragraphs 2 and 3 have been added to this article as a result of amendments from Directive 2019/2161 related to search rankings and consumer reviews. These are shown in the NL version of the article, which appear to be transposed faithfully from the Directive and are shown here in a separate EN file 
  • In the event that data processing identifies individuals, then lawful processing rules from the GDPR apply. GDPR/ privacy issues should be reviewed with specialist advisors

 

 

 

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10. Event Sponsorship/ Field Marketing

SECTION C: EVENTS/ SPONSORSHIP

 

 

NEWS/ ISSUES

 

Ambush marketing: the European summer of sport
Taylor Wessing May 16, 2024

The IP Dos And Don'ts Of The Olympic And Paralympic Games

Novagraaf March 14, 2024

France: Juridische dos en don'ts voor de Olympische en Paralympische spelen in Parijs 2024

Novagraaf February 16, 2024

Netherlands: Ambush Marketing: Harmless Fun Or Harmful IP Infringement?

Novagraaf February 15, 2024

GUIDE: The Olympic Games 2024 - Beating around le ambush (EN). Lewis Silkin 25 Jan, 2024

Revised SRC field marketing code July 2023; see below. EN translation here

 

SELF-REGULATION 

 

The DAC Field Marketing Code 2023 is linked below (EN)

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenCodeFMAug2023EN.pdf

And in the original Dutch here:

https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc/code-voor-fieldmarketing-cfm/ (2023)

This code applies to advertising relating to sale and promotion off-premise

 

EVENT SPONSORSHIP

 

  • There is no sponsorship code per se in the Netherlands, though some elements of sponsorship activities are covered above
  • Sponsorship material should observe the content rules set out in our earlier section B
  • Some product categories, such as alcohol, will be restricted to adult audiences by general clauses on the avoidance of minors. See relevant sectors on the Wikiregs home page
  • The ICC Sponsorship Code is a solid ‘catch-all' for sponsorship activity nationally and internationally. This is set out in Chapter B of the ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (EN); articles are under the following headers 
 

 B1. Principles Governing Sponsorship

B2. Autonomy and Self-Determination​

B3. Imitation and Confusion

B4.  'Ambushing of Sponsored Properties

B5.  Respect for the Sponsorship Property and the Sponsor​

B6. The Sponsorship Audience

B7.  Data Capture/ Data Sharing

 B8.  Artistic and Historical Objects

B9.  Social and Environmental Sponsorship​

 B10.  Charities and Humanitarian Sponsorship

B11. Multiple Sponsorship

B12.  Media Sponsorship

B13. Responsibility

 

 

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The European Sponsorship Association (ESA) may also be able to help/ inform

 

 

 

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11. Sales Promotion

SECTION C: SALES PROMOTIONS

 

 

CONTEXT 

 

This website was created to provide international rules on marketing communications; it does not claim authority on specific Sales Promotions (SP) regulation, especially retail and SP administration legislation. However, in the course of extensive research in marketing, relevant rules will be included. National self-regulatory codes and consumer protection legislation around pricing, for example, are checked for any provisions that affect SP and included below. Note that promotional schemes requiring a purchase to take part, and offering prizes only on the basis of random chance, are considered to be a lottery and are generally illegal. As promotional advertising might be more ‘aggressive’, we include the measures from legislation and self-regulation related to aggressive/ unfair advertising. Promotional activity can be fraught with regulatory issues; plans should be checked with specialist advisors.

 

SOME STANDARD RULES 

 

  • Sales promotional material should observe the rules set out in our earlier content section B; principal source of rules is the Dutch Advertising Code (EN)
  • Price Promotions ACM note: promotions must be genuine promotions EN
  • The Field Marketing Code, updated July 2023, carries rules related to promotional activities, especially those off-site NL / EN

 

LEGISLATION 

 

  1. Code of Conduct for Promotional Games of Chance (Gedragscode Promotionele Kansspelen) NL / EN 
  2. Information obligations: Article 15e Book 3 Dutch Civil Code EN / NL (Nov 2022); sets out rules in e-Commerce re recognisability and the provision of e.g. promotional conditions
  3. Blacklist: Article 193i (h) Book 6 Civil Code: commercial practices which are aggressive in all circumstances EN / NL (Jan 2023). Covers some other promotional aspects in e.g. pricing and (separately) the abuse of the promise of prizes. The English translation of Book 6 does not include some clauses transposed May 2022 from the Directive 2019/2161. See our content section B under point 2

1. Promotional Games of Chance 
Includes prize promotions such as prize draws/ sweepstakes

 

  • Under Article 1 Betting and Gaming Act (BGA), games of chance are defined as those that ‘provide an opportunity to compete for prizes or premiums if the winners are designated by means of any calculation of probability over which the participants are generally unable to exercise a dominant influence, (italics ours) unless a licence has been granted therefore, under this law’. The player does not have to place a stake; the law does not differentiate between games of chance with or without monetary stakes
  • So the BGA takes a ‘prohibited unless licensed’ approach (Art. 1); a licence must be granted for all types of games of chance unless they comply with the Code of Conduct for Promotional Games of Chance. If the Code is not observed, then the games are unlawful under the BGA. See Preamble of Code of Conduct; points 1 and 2

 

A promotional game of chance must:

 

  • Promote a product, service or organisation and must not form a standalone service (preamble; Point 4)
  • Be free to enter, with the exception of communication costs of up to €0.45 per participant (Arts 3.1, 3.2)
  • Be temporary with up to 20 draws being permitted annually, per good, service or organisation (Art. 2) More than one winner may be designated in any one draw (Explanation of Art. 1)
  • Involve prizes or premiums with a total value not exceeding EUR100,000 per promotional game per year (Art. 4.1)
  • Require minors to get permission from a parent or legal guardian to participate (Art. 6.4)
  • Not gather any personal details of minors, nor permit these to be gathered, without verifiable permission from a parent of the minor, unless that is necessary to request the minor to provide contact details of his/her parent for the purpose of gaining permission for distributing prizes or premiums (Art. 6.3)
  • Make sure the general conditions (T&Cs) for games (see Art. 7.2) are made available to participants and potential participants free of charge and easily available (Art. 7)
  • Not have as its sole purpose the collection of personal data of the participants.  It has to be for product, service, or brand promotion; the collection of the personal data of participants can only be an additional benefit (Notes accompanying Art. 1)
  • Ensure the marketing (invitation to participate) as well as the terms and conditions are not misleading, incomplete or give rise to false expectations in the participants (Art. 5.1)
  • Contain the name of the product, service or organisation to be promoted (Art. 5.1)
  • Take care not to encourage excessive participation in the promotional games of chance organised by the supplier (Art. 5.2)

 

Notes accompanying Article 5: Promotion Definition Every form of promotion, whether direct or indirect, of the public profile of an organisation or the sales of goods or services (Art. 1.6)

Promotion may not be misleading in any way. Some examples of what may be misleading include the following:

 

  1. The suggestion that the recipient is already the winner of a prize, for example by means of reporting the name of the recipient in an excerpt from the list of winners
  2. The use of imitations of cheques or other valuable papers, without inclusion of the printed word ‘specimen’ or other indication that its use involved an example of no value whatsoever
  3. The suggestion that the recipient had a greater chance of receiving a prize than other participants, for example by providing another name together with the printed word ‘loser’
  4. Stating in large print that the recipient is already a prize winner, while it appears from the general conditions that the recipient only has a chance at winning a prize
  5. Not depicting the chance of the recipient winning in a sufficiently fair light by giving the impression that the recipient has already won a prize, while this is not refuted in the mailing itself, but only in the appendix or appendices or the regulations; and
  6. By designating every recipient of a sweepstake as ‘winner’ (‘everybody wins’ method), whereby only one prize of minimal value will be awarded

2. Information obligations when using commercial communications (Art. 15e Book III DCC)

 

1. Where commercial communication forms a part of a service of the information society or makes out such a service itself, the one who has instructed to use this way of communication has to ensure:
 

  1. That the commercial communication is clearly recognisable as such
  2. That his identity can be deduced from the commercial communication
  3. That the commercial communication, as far as it encloses promotional offers, competitions or games, contains a clear and unambiguous indication of the nature and the conditions which have to be met to qualify for them (italics ours)

 

3. Blacklist/ Commercial practices considered unfair in all circumstances (Art. 193g Book 6 Civil Code):

 

  • Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price without disclosing the existence of any reasonable grounds the trader may have for believing that he will not be able to offer for supply or to procure another trader to supply, those products or equivalent products at that price for a period that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable having regard to the product, the scale of advertising of the product and the price offered (‘bait advertising’)
  • f. Making an invitation to purchase products at a specified price and then: 1. Refusing to show the advertised item to consumers, or; 2. Refusing to take orders for it or supply it within a reasonable time, or 3. Demonstrating a defective sample of it, with the intention of promoting a different product (‘bait and switch’)
  • g. Falsely stating that a product will only be available for a very limited time, or that it will only be available on particular terms for a very limited time, in order to elicit an immediate decision and deprive consumers of sufficient opportunity or time to make an informed choice
    Art. 193g Book 6 Civil Code (EN)
  • The English translation of Book 6 does not include some clauses transposed May 2022 from Directive 2019/2161. See our content section B under point 2
 

SELF-REGULATION 
Advertising contests and promotions 

 

Under the Dutch Advertising Code, Section B (Special Codes): c. Contests: advertisements for prize promotions and contests in print and electronic media must contain at least the following information:

 

  • The name and address of the organiser of the promotion or contest
  • The number of prizes available with a description from which their monetary value is known or can be easily derived
  • The submission deadline
  • Any exclusions or disqualifications from participation
  • The date and manner in which the results will be announced; and
  • In the event special conditions apply to be able to participate in the contest, a short description of those conditions

 

............................................................

 

​Annex II Dutch Advertising Code EN; SRC Check Unfair advertising NL echoes the Blacklist rules shown above under point 3. Rule are shown under the linked Annex 2 document

 

............................................................

 

From the ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code (EN), Chapter A. Key headers are 

 

Article A2. Terms of the offer
Article A4. Administration of promotions
Article A5. Safety and suitability
Article A6. Presentation to consumers​
 
 

 

....................................................................
Read more

D. Advice & Clearance

SECTION D

 

ADVICE 

 

 

The Self-Regulatory Organisation SRC Stichting Reclame Code provides copy advice for a standard fee to advertisers, for example to those who have to adapt or withdraw an advertisement, to ensure that the amended advertisement complies with the decision of the Advertising Code Committee and/ or Board of Appeal. This advice is available only to advertisers who pay their annual financial contribution to the SRC. Advertisement copy advice is informal and non-binding; access is provided at: http://www.checksrc.nl/copy_advies. SRC also offers training on the rules of the DAC; you can check their website for the current offer or if you want a tailor-made training, you can contact the Compliance department of the SRC.

 

Besides Copy Advice and Training, SRC offers advertisers two websites (in Dutch) with explanations of the advertising rules: (1) www.checkdereclamecode.nl and (2) www.checksrc.nl. The first site offers a practical tool that makes it possible to check an advertisement or a campaign on the basis of a few simple questions. The second site offers advertisers the opportunity to go into a little more depth on specific subjects, such as misleading advertising, rules for children, and identification of advertising.

 

 

CLEARANCE 

 

Pre-clearance is mandatory for Alcohol advertising on radio and television and in cinemas. Requests should be e-mailed to STIVA (the alcohol industry body) advies@stiva.nl and consist of a script, storyboard or video. Cost is €350 ex VAT; advice within 5 working days. Otherwise: 

 

Direct to broadcaster

Allow 3-5 days TV/VOD

For help contact the Traffic Bureau administration@trafficbureau.net

 

 

 

E. Links

SECTION E SOURCES/ LINKS

 

 

EUROPEAN LEGISLATION

 

GDPR

 

Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of The European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC (General Data Protection Regulation). The GDPR came into force on May 25 2018

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2016/679/oj 

The GDPR is accompanied by Directive 2016/680, which is largely concerned with supervising procedures, and which should have been transposed into member states’ legislation by 6th May 2018. 

 

European Data Protection Authority

Article 29 Working Party/ EDPB

 

The Article 29 Working Party was established under Article 29 (hence the name) of Directive 95/46/EC, the Personal Data Protection Directive. The arrival of the GDPR heralded the demise/ re-working of A29WP, and its replacement by the European Data Protection Board:

https://edpb.europa.eu/.

All documents from the former Article 29 Working Party remain available on this newsroom

Article 29 Working Party archives from 1997 to November 2016: 

http://ec.europa.eu/justice/article-29/documentation/index_en.htm.

 

Five more recent, significant papers in the GDPR context:

 

 

Commercial practices: UCPD


Directive 2005/29/EC of The European Parliament and of The Council of 11 May 2005 concerning unfair business-to-consumer commercial practices in the internal market and amending Council Directive 84/450/EEC, Directives 97/7/EC, 98/27/EC and 2002/65/EC and Regulation (EC) No 2006/2004 (the ‘Unfair Commercial Practices Directive’ UCPD). This is the legislation that most impacts marketing and advertising in Europe and whose origins form the foundations of Self-Regulatory regimes. The core provisions relate to unfair commercial practices, defined as ‘likely to materially distort the economic behaviour with regard to the product of the average consumer.’ In turn, unfair commercial practices are those that:

 

  1. are misleading (misleading actions or misleading by omission) as set out in Articles 6 and 7, or
  2. are aggressive as set out in Articles 8 and 9: ‘use of harassment, coercion and undue influence.’ This clause more often relates to ‘active conduct’.

 

Annex I (known as ‘the blacklist’) contains the list of those commercial practices which ‘shall in all circumstances be regarded as unfair’. These are the only commercial practices which can be deemed to be unfair without a case-by-case test (i.e. assessing the likely impact of the practice on the average consumer's economic behaviour). The list includes e.g. encouragement to children to ‘pester’ (28), clear identification of commercial source in advertorial (11) and making ‘persistent and unwanted solicitations’ (26). The UCPD includes several provisions on promotional practices e.g. Article 6 (d) on the existence of a specific price advantage, Annex I point 5 on bait advertising, point 7 on special offers, points 19 and 31 on competitions and prize promotion, and point 20 on free offers. Some amendments to Directive 2005/29/EC are provided in Directive 2019/2161 linked below; these are supposed to be transposed by November 2021 and in force in member states by May 2022.

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2005/29/oj
​Guidance: on 17 December 2021, the European Commission adopted Commission Notice on the interpretation and application of the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (‘the UCPD Guidance’), updating the 2016 version.

 

The Omnibus Directive 

 

Directive (EU) 2019/2161 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 November 2019 amending Council Directive 93/13/EEC and Directives 98/6/EC, 2005/29/EC and 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the better enforcement and modernisation of Union consumer protection rules. This directive, which 'aims to strengthen consumer rights through enhanced enforcement measures and increased transparency requirements', sets out some new information requirements related to search rankings and consumer reviews under the UCPD 2005/29/EC and pricing information under Directive 2011/83/EU in the context of automated decision-making and profiling of consumer behaviour, and price reduction information under the Product Pricing Directive 98/6/EC. More directly related to this database, and potentially significant for multinational advertisers, is the clause that amends article 6 (misleading actions) of the UCPD adding ‘(c) any marketing of a good, in one Member State, as being identical to a good marketed in other Member States, while that good has significantly different composition or characteristics, unless justified by legitimate and objective factors’. Recitals related to this clause, which provide some context, are here. Helpful explanatory piece on the Omnibus Directive 2019/2161 from A&L Goodbody via Lexology here. Provisions are supposed to be transposed by November 2021 and in force in member states by May 2022. 
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2019/2161/oj

 

Pricing

 

Directive 98/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 February 1998 on consumer protection in the indication of the prices of products offered to consumers. The purpose of this Directive is to stipulate indication of the selling price and the price per unit of measurement of products offered by traders to consumers in order to improve consumer information and to facilitate comparison of prices (Article 1). For the purposes of this Directive, selling price shall mean the final price for a unit of the product, or a given quantity of the product, including VAT and all other taxes (Article 2a). While this legislation seems prima facie most suited to ‘goods on shelves’ as it requires unit prices (the final price, including VAT and all other taxes, for one kilogramme, one litre, one metre, one square metre or one cubic metre of the product), the Directive was used as the basis for a significant ECJ judgement on car pricing in advertising. Some amendments to Directive 98/6/EC related to price reduction information are provided in Directive 2019/2161 linked above; these are supposed to be transposed by November 2021 and in force in member states by May 28, 2022. The article concerned, 6a, is extracted here. Commission guidance on its application is below this entry.

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=celex:31998L0006

 

Commission notice: Guidance on the interpretation and application of Article 6a of Directive 98/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council on consumer protection in the indication of the prices of products offered to consumers:

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:52021XC1229(06)&from=EN

 

Comparative advertising

 

Directive 2006/114/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2006 concerning misleading and comparative advertising. Article 4 of the MCAD provides that comparative advertising is permitted when eight conditions are met. The most significant of those for our purposes are a) it is not misleading within the meaning of Articles 2 (b), 3 and 8 (1) of this Directive or articles 6 and 7 of Directive 2005/29/EC (see above) and b) it compares goods or services meeting the same needs or intended for the same purpose. There are other significant conditions related to denigration of trademarks and designation of origin, imitation and the creation of confusion. Codified version:

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32006L0114

 

Audiovisual media

 

Directive 2010/13/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 10 March 2010 on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States concerning the provision of audiovisual media services: the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, or AVMSD. This is the codified version of the much-amended Directive 89/552/EEC and represents the core European broadcast legislation, providing significant structural and content rules, applied largely consistently across member states.  From a marcoms perspective, the core articles are 9 (Discrimination, safety, the environment, minors and some prohibitions), 10 (Sponsorship), 11 (Product Placement) and 22 (Alcoholic beverages rules).

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=CELEX%3A32010L0013

 

AVMSD amendment

 

Directive (EU) 2018/1808 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 November 2018 amending Directive 2010/13/EU on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States concerning the provision of audiovisual media services (Audiovisual Media Services Directive) in view of changing market realities. The background to this significant development of the AVMSD is here. In broad terms, the Directive addresses the changes in media consumption in recent years and pays particular attention to the protection of minors in that context, extending rules to e.g. shared content on SNS. There are ‘strengthened provisions to protect children from inappropriate audiovisual commercial communications for foods high in fat, salt and sodium and sugars, including by encouraging codes of conduct at EU level, where necessary’. See article 4a. Rules for alcoholic beverages are extended to on-demand audiovisual media services, but those provisions (social/ sexual success etc.) are not amended.

Article 28b addresses video-sharing platform providers (VSPS), containing requirements to prevent violent, criminal, or otherwise offensive material and bringing the 'general' AV commercial communication rules such as those for the environment, human dignity, discrimination, minors etc. into these platforms. VSPS must also provide a functionality for users who upload user-generated videos to declare whether they contain commercial communications as far as they know or can be reasonably expected to know; VSPS must accordingly inform users. There has been some debate as to whether vloggers/ influencers are in scope, i.e. they or their output constitute an audiovisual media service. Definitive opinion/ recommendation is from the European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services (ERGA) paper 'Analysis and recommendations concerning the regulation of vloggers.' The annex of the paper contains national examples. The Directive entered into force 18th December 2018; member states were required to have transposed into national law by 19th September 2020. 

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2018/1808/oj

 

e-Privacy

 

Directive 2002/58/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 July 2002 concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector (Directive on privacy and electronic communications, the ‘E-privacy Directive’). This Directive ‘provides for the harmonisation of the national provisions required to ensure an equivalent level of protection of fundamental rights and freedoms, and in particular the right to privacy and confidentiality, with respect to the processing of personal data in the electronic communication sector.’ The directive was amended by Directive 2009/136/EC; the ‘Cookie directive’, provisions found under article 5.3 of the E-Privacy Directive. Article 13 for Consent and ‘soft opt-in’ requirements

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/dir/2002/58

 

The ‘Cookie Directive’ 2009/136/EC amending Directive 2002/58/EC concerning the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the electronic communications sector. Article 2 provides amends to the E-privacy Directive above

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32009L0136

 

e-Privacy Regulation draft (10 February 2021)

 

Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council concerning the respect for private life and the protection of personal data in electronic communications and repealing Directive 2002/58/EC (Regulation on Privacy and Electronic Communications):

https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-6087-2021-INIT/en/pdf

Statement on the ePrivacy Regulation and the future role of Supervisory Authorities and the EDPB. Adopted on 19 November 2020:
https://edpb.europa.eu/sites/default/files/files/file1/edpb_statement_20201119_eprivacy_regulation_en.pdf

February 2022 Clifford Chance/ Lex E-Privacy check-in: where we are, and where we're headed
March 2022 Härting Rechtsanwälte/ Lex ePrivacy Regulation: EU Council agrees on the draft

 

e-Commerce

 

Directive 2000/31/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2000 on certain legal aspects of information society services, in particular electronic commerce, in the Internal Market ('Directive on electronic commerce')‘information society services’ are defined as ‘any service normally provided for remuneration, at a distance, by electronic means and at the individual request of a recipient of services.’ Article 5 covers general information such as contact details from the ‘service provider’, which information should be made easily, directly and permanently accessible to the recipients of the service’. The Directive also sets out under article 6 more specific information requirements for commercial communications which are part of, or constitute, an information society service. These include identifiability requirements and accessibility to conditions for promotions.

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=CELEX:32000L0031

 

The Digital Services Act

 

Regulation (EU) 2022/2065 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 October 2022 on a Single Market For Digital Services and amending Directive 2000/31/EC (Digital Services Act). European Commission pages on the DSA are here. Wikipedia entry is here. Helpful legal commentary, which also addresses the Digital Markets Act, is from DLA Piper/ Lex February 2023: Online advertising: A regulatory patchwork under construction. Key marcoms issues for advertisers/ platforms are the identification of advertising material and parameters used for its targeting and the prohibition of advertising based on profiling that uses using special data categories such as religious belief, health data sexual orientation etc. (art.26), or if the platform has reason to believe the recipient is a minor (art. 28). The Regulation applies from February 2024. 

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32022R2065

 

The Digital Markets Act

 

Regulation (EU) 2022/1925 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 September 2022 on contestable and fair markets in the digital sector and amending Directives (EU) 2019/1937 and (EU) 2020/1828 (Digital Markets Act). European Commission pages are here; from those: 'Some large online platforms act as "gatekeepers" in digital markets. The Digital Markets Act aims to ensure that these platforms behave in a fair way online. Together with the Digital Services Act, the Digital Markets Act is one of the centrepieces of the European digital strategy.' Wikipedia entry is here.  Article 2a prohibits the processing, for the purpose of providing online advertising services, personal data of end users using services of third parties that make use of core platform services of the gatekeeper, unless the end user has been presented with the specific choice and has given consent within the meaning of Article 4, point (11), and Article 7 of Regulation (EU) 2016/679. The Regulation entered into force on 1st November 2022 and applied on 2nd May, 2023. Gatekeepers will be identified and they will have to comply by 6th March 2024 at the latest.

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/1925

 

 

NATIONAL LEGISLATION

 

Consumer protection

 

Book 6 Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek Boek 6) Title 3 Unlawful acts; Section 3A Unfair Commercial Practices inserted into Book 6 by Article 2A of the Law of 25 September 2008 (NL) implementing the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive UCPD 2005/29/EC into national law by amending Books 3 and 6 of the Dutch Civil Code and the Consumer Protection (Enforcement) Law 2007. Section 4 Misleading and Comparative Advertising. Act of 28 March 2002 aligning Book 6 of the Civil Code with Directive 97/55/EC of European Parliament and of the Council of 6 October 1997 amending Directive 84/450/EEC concerning misleading advertising so as to include comparative advertising; subsequently updated by Act of 25 September 2008 bringing Volumes 3 and 6 of the Civil Code and other Acts into line with Directive 2005/29/EC. Enforced by the Dutch Consumer Authority, since April 2013 the Dutch Authority for Consumers & Markets ACM. Book 6 was further amended in May 2022 as a result of transposition of commercial practices provisions set out in Directive 2019/2161, which inter alia amended the UCPD Directive 2005/29/EC to introduce new rules related to transparency of parameters for search results and the integrity of consumer reviews. Articles 193c and 193e are amended together with additions to the 'blacklist' set out under article 193g.

NL: https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0005289/2023-01-01

English translation below does not include amends via Act of March 29, 2016 consisting of three new paras under article 194; amend shown below the first link; neither does the translation include new clauses as outlined above as a result of amends from Directive 2019/2161. The key clauses are shown in English in a separate file here.

http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/civilcodebook066.htm

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLGenDCCBk6Art194AmendsEN.pdf

 

Authority

 

ACM: Autoriteit Consument & Markt; Consumers and Markets Authority. The Consumer Authority, Competition Authority, and the Independent Post and Telecommunications Authority joined forces appropriately on April 1st 2013, creating a new regulator: the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets. This merger has been authorised in the Establishment Act of the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets (NL). ACM is an independent regulator that champions the rights of consumers and businesses, is charged with competition oversight, sector-specific regulation, and enforcement of consumer protection laws. Importantly in this context, the ACM publish Guidelines Sustainability Claims (EN 2023 version) which provides their 5 'rules of thumb' related to sustainability claims, included within which document is the legal context and relevant cases. This is a significant addition to the regulatory line-up for environmental claims. The ACM announcement of ‘Stricter Rules for Online Sellers’ (NL) May 27, 2022 includes reference to the new search and review rules from Directive 2019/2161 as well as plans for promotional pricing rules (see below).
https://www.acm.nl/en

 

Pricing

 

Product Pricing Decree.(Besluit prijsaanduiding producten). Decree of 21 May 2003 containing rules relating to the price indication of products to replace the Decree on the price indication of goods 1980 in connection with the adaptation to the system and terminology of the EC Directive on the stating of the price of products offered to consumers. Transposes the Product Pricing Directive (above under EU legislation):

https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0015104/2023-01-01

Unofficial non-binding translation:

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLProductPricingDecree2022ENb.pdf

 

Prices Act (Prijzenwet) Act of March 24, 1961, laying down rules on the prices of goods and services. This law provides intervention powers for the minister of Finance in the form of price-capping during extreme economic circumstances. It is also the vehicle, under article 2b, for further regulation of price reduction announcements, which is drawn from new promotional pricing provisions from Directive 2019/2161. Explanatory note March 2022 from Maverick Avocaten/ Lexology here.

https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0002353/2022-05-28

 

Channel legislation

 

Media Act 2008 (Mediawet). Act No. 583 of 29th December 2008 established the Media Act, entry into force 01/01/2009. Act No. 552 of 10th December 2009 amended the Media Act to implement the Audiovisual Media Services (AVMS) Directive 2010/13/EU, and the Act of 30 September 2020 amended the Media Act according to Directive 2018/1808, which amended the AVMS Directive. The Act sets requirements for both public and commercial broadcasters, including rules for commercials, sponsorship, product placement and teleshopping, as well as online 'audiovisual media services', the implications of which are in debate. Chapter 3a (NL) brings video-sharing platforms into scope: article 3a/5 pt. 4 requires that user-generated videos that contain commercial communications, in the event that the service provider is aware of this, must be clearly notified to the user by the service provider. The content rules from the Directive, i.e. those to do with protection of young people, health and safety, the environment etc., are transposed into the DAC, with which commercial and public broadcasters must be affiliated under the terms of articles 3.6 and 2.92 respectively. Programmes on public channels may accordingly carry advertising; product placement is prohibited but permitted for commercial channels subject to the conditions outlined in Arts 3.19a/b. Sponsorship is allowed in both, but subject to strict conditions for public broadcasting services. STER (Stichting Ether Reclame) Foundation for Broadcast Advertising is the Independent agency handling advertising on Netherlands Public Broadcasting's television, radio and online outlets (Art. 2.91(2)).

https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0025028/2023-01-01 (NL)

 

Media Decree (Mediaregeling) 2008 NL. December 18, 2008, a ministerial regulation implementing rules of the Media Act 2008. Chapter II, Title 2.2.2 Advertising and Teleshopping Messages, Articles 10 and 11. The Media Regulation 2008 contains implementing rules related to articles in the Media Act 2008.

 

 

Regulatory authority

 

The Dutch Media Authority: Commissariaat voor de Media (CvdM). This body upholds the rules formulated in the Media Act and Media Decree. The CvdM is an independent administrative body responsible for audiovisual content and distribution matters. It grants licences to broadcasters, registers VOD services, and systematically monitors compliance with the rules on quotas, advertising and protection of minors. The CvdM can also develop policy rules for public and commercial media, and publishes brochures in relation to those (see below): https://www.cvdm.nl/english/   

 

  1. Regulation of Media Authority of 10 July 2012 on policy regarding the permissibility, recognition and delineation of advertising and teleshopping messages in the media offer commercial media institutions EN / NL Leg. website NL 
  2. Regulation of the Media Authority of 10 July 2012 concerning policy on commercial sponsorship, media institutions EN / NL Leg. website NL
  3. Regulation of the Media Authority of 18 November 2014 containing rules concerning product placement of commercial media institutions 2014 NL / EN Leg. website NL

 

The 2022 policy rules for advertising, sponsorship, product placement and on-demand are linked in the landing page below; these are currently only available in Dutch, but there's helpful commentary in English from CMS Netherlands/ Lex here

https://www.cvdm.nl/uploader/meer-weten

 

Influencers/ 'video uploaders'

 

CvdM issued rules (NL; EN summary here) in May 2022, effective July 1, 2022, which require Influencers/ 'video uploaders' with more than 500k subscribers/ followers and who post more than 24 videos annually to register with CvdM, with the advertising SRO and with NICAM, the latter for child protection measures. There is considerable emphasis in the rules on recognisability of posts where these are commercial. Registration by July 15, 2022. While the rules apply to Influencers, advertisers and agencies obviously need to be aware of them for contractual issues. Helpful commentary here from Osborne Clarke/ Lex May 2022.

 

Public broadcasting

 

  1. Regulation of the Media Authority of 17 May 2016 containing policy rules regarding sponsorship of public media institutions and rules regarding title/ heading sponsorship 2018 NL 
  2. Regulation of Media Authority concerning policies relating to the eligibility, recognition and delineation of advertising and teleshopping messages in the media provision of public media institutions 2019 NL 

 

CvdM re linked advertising 

 

Public Media Broadcasting: ‘Aanhakende’ (Tie-in/ Linked) Advertising Brochure Dutch Media Authority Version 1.1 June 2011 NL. Tie-in / linked advertising is when there is a deliberate reference to a commercial entity close to editorial that covers the same subject. The brochure provides examples of such advertising, which violates the Media Act Article 2.89, which prohibits avoidable expressions (advertising/ teleshopping excluded) that clearly lead to the purchase of products or services being promoted.

 

e-Commerce

 

Book 3 Dutch Civil Code, Articles 15d and 15e. The act of 13th May 2004 implemented the E-commerce Directive 2000/31/EC; Article 1C of Act of 13/05/2004 inserted Article 15d and 15e into Book 3 of the Civil Code, which relates to requirements from an Information Society Service provider (i.e. commercial websites, broadly) NL:

https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0005291/2022-11-04#Boek3

English version Book 3:

http://www.dutchcivillaw.com/civilcodebook033.htm

 

e-Privacy

 

Telecommunications Act (Telecommunicatiewet). Article 11.7 implements Article 13 of the e-Privacy Directive 2002/58/EC on the sending of unsolicited commercial communications by email, fax, automated calling systems, for which opt-in consent is required, notwithstanding soft opt-in exception in Article 11.7 (2/3). Article 11.7a implements article 5.3 of the e-Privacy Directive, sometimes called the cookie clause, via Act 10th May 2012 NL and further amended by Act 4th Feb 2015 NL; the amends included an additional exception shown in Article 11.7a (3b) to the required prior informed consent rule for the placing of cookies and similar software, and a ban on the use of cookie walls by public agencies (Art. 11.7a (5) TA). The amendment in May 2018 took account of the arrival of the GDPR, recognised in this legislation, and there was a further amendment in July 2021 that prohibits unsolicited calls to consumers and abolishes the Do Not Call Register.

https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0009950/2023-06-01 (NL)

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/NLTelecomsActJuly2021versionNoteEN.pdf (EN key clauses)

 

 

Data protection

 

National GDPR implementation and authority

 

Implementation Act General Data Protection Regulation. (Uitvoeringswet Algemene Verordening gegevensbescherming 'UAVG'). Law of 16 May 2018, laying down rules for implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data and repealing Directive 95/46/EC:

http://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0040940/2018-05-25

 

The Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens - AP)

AP website (EN):

https://autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en

Guidance on advertising and direct marketing:
https://autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/nl/onderwerpen/internet-telefoon-tv-en-post/direct-marketing (NL)

 

 

SELF-REGULATION

 

 

Stichting Reclame Code (SRC); The Advertising Code Foundation, the Netherlands Self-Regulatory Organisation. In addition to dealing with complaints, the SRC also helps advertisers to avoid any violation of the Dutch Advertising Code (DAC) e.g. via www.checksrc.nl, which helps the advertiser check whether their advertising message complies. The SRC site provides the DAC rules, judgements from the Advertising Code committee and the Board of Appeal since 2007, Check SRC, and under certain conditions, access to copy advice for draft advertising.

 

 

Industry codes

 

The Dutch Advertising Code (Nederlandse Reclame Code - NRC) 

Section A: General EN; Blacklist in Annexes 1 and 2 EN

May 2022 clauses resulting from the transposition of Directive 2019/2161 in English here 

Section B: Special Advertising Codes (EN). A selection of these is below. See the linked ‘Section B’ for the full complement

Section C: General Recommendations:
https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc_taxonomy/algemene-aanbevelingen/ (NL)
https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc/general-recomendations/?lang=en (EN)

 

Social Media and Influencer Advertising Code 2022. This code requires that advertising via bloggers, vloggers and content creators must be clearly recognisable as such, and sets out examples by platform on how this should be achieved. The code was amended in July 2022 in light of new rules from the media authority CvDM (see above). 

https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc/reclamecode-social-media-rsm/ (NL)

https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc/advertising-code-for-social-media-influencer-marketing-rsm-2019/?lang=en (EN)

 

 

Full Dutch Advertising Code in English:

https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc_taxonomy/general/?lang=en

And in Dutch:

https://www.reclamecode.nl/nrc/

 

Social media

 

Social Code: YouTube. The code was developed by a group of 20 YouTubers in collaboration with the Dutch Media Authority (Commissariaat voor de Media CvdM) following an investigation by CvdM, which concluded that 75% of popular vlogs on YouTube contained surreptitious advertising. The code was also discussed with other parties, including the Advertising Code Foundation (SRC - Stichting Reclame Code), Multi-Channel Networks (MCNs) and interest groups/ agencies.  Social Code: YouTube NL / EN. CvdM commentary:

https://www.cvdm.nl/nieuws/youtubers-ontwikkelen-hulp-commissariaat-media-code-om-transparanter-reclame/#

 

 

DDMA

 

Data Driven Marketing Association (DDMA). The DDMA is the trade organisation for data driven marketing & advertising in the Netherlands. DDMA represents the interests of users, service providers and media/ carriers of data driven marketing, both in the Netherlands and at a European level. The DDMA has 300 member organisations. http://www.ddma.nl/

Full list of DDMA Codes can be found here:

https://ddma.nl/juridisch/

 

DDMA codes are incorporated within the Dutch Advertising Code Section B

 

Opt-out registers 

 

Telemarketing: Dutch regulator ACM and Stichting Infofilter run the don’t-call-me register, from 1/10/2009. Article 11.7 (6-12) of the Telecommunications Act contains provisions related to opt-out registers. The Telemarketing Code within the Dutch Advertising Code also refers to the opt-out register and places the onus on the advertiser to inform the consumer in every conversation of the existence of the Do-not-call-registry. Companies cannot register i.e. no ‘legal persons’ https://www.bel-me-niet.nl/. The ACM enforces legislation on telemarketing.

 

Direct Mail:  Since 1st October 2009, Stichting Postfilter has been responsible for The National Post Register, which allows consumers to opt out of receiving unsolicited advertising mail. The Stichting Reclame Code oversees the enforcement of the rules. The Advertising Code for the Use of The Postal Filter also contains relevant provisions:

http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/DACPostalFilterCode2015.pdf

https://www.postfilter.nl/

 

 

INTERNATIONAL SELF-REGULATION

 

ICC

 

ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code 2018:

https://iccwbo.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/09/icc-advertising-and-marketing-communications-code-int.pdf (EN)

 
ICC Advertising and Marketing Communications Code 2024:
 
Chapter A . Sales Promotion 
Chapter B . Sponsorship 
Chapter C . Direct Marketing and Digital Marketing Communications 
Chapter D . Environmental Claims in Marketing Communications
Chapter E. Children and Teens (2024 code)

 

Additional ICC guidance and frameworks 

(non-exhaustive)

 

The ICC Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communications 2021. 'The updated 2021 Environmental Framework provides added guidance on some established environmental claims and additional guidance on some emerging claims' and 'a summary of the principles of the ICC Code including those outlined in Chapter D on environmental claims and supplements them with additional commentary and guidance to aid practitioners in applying the principles to environmental advertising.' Appendix I carries an Environmental Claims Checklist 'that marketers may find useful in evaluating their environmental claims.' 
http://www.g-regs.com/downloads/iccenvironmentalframework_2021.pdf

ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Online Behavioural Advertising: It’s a ‘resource guide’, rather than rules per se, showing: explanation of global framework available for OBA self-regulation, checklist from existing OBA self-regulatory mechanisms on how to implement the global principles and links to further resources. The ICC's OBA rules are under C22 of their General Code; we have extracted the rules here

https://iccwbo.org/news-publications/policies-reports/icc-resource-guide-for-self-regulation-of-online-behavioural-advertising/ (EN)

Mobile Supplement to the ICC Resource Guide for Self-Regulation of Interest-based Advertising 

https://iccwbo.org/news-publications/policies-reports/mobile-supplement-icc-resource-guide-self-regulation-interest-based-advertising/ (EN)

ICC Guide for Responsible Mobile Marketing Communications

https://iccwbo.org/news-publications/policies-reports/icc-guide-responsible-mobile-marketing-communications/

The ICC’s Guidance on Native Advertising Is in English here:

https://iccwbo.org/news-publications/policies-reports/icc-guidance-on-native-advertising/ (EN)

 

EASA

 

The European Advertising Standards Alliance is a non-profit organisation based in Brussels; it brings together national advertising self-regulatory organisations (SROs, such as the ARPP) and other organisations representing the advertising industry in Europe and beyond. EASA is "the European voice for advertising self-regulation". The following link provides access to alliance membership:

http://www.easa-alliance.org/members

 

EASA’s Best Practice recommendations 

 

Digital Marketing Communications (2023)

Online Behavioural Advertising (2021)

Influencer Marketing (2023)

 

IAB NL/ Europe

 

From the national website (GT): ‘IAB is the trade association for digital advertising and marketing innovation. IAB accelerates digital growth and makes a structural contribution to the qualitative development of the market.’

https://www.iab.nl/

How to Comply with EU Rules Applicable to Online Native Advertising December 2016:

https://www.iabeurope.eu/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/IAB-Europe-Online-Native-Advertising-Guidance.pdf

IAB Transparency and Consent Framework:

https://iabeurope.eu/transparency-consent-framework/

 

WFA

 

From their website: 'WFA is the only global organisation representing the common interests of marketers. It brings together the biggest markets and marketers worldwide, representing roughly 90% of all the global marketing communications spend, almost US$ 900 billion annually. WFA champions responsible and effective marketing communications':

https://www.wfanet.org/

This is the ‘GDPR Guide for Marketers’:

http://info.wfa.be/WFA-GDPR-guide-for-marketers.pdf

The WFA launched their Planet Pledge in April 2021

And Global Guidance on Environmental Claims April 2022

 

ESA

 

The European Sponsorship Association can be found at:

www.sponsorship.org

 

 

FEDMA

 

Federation of European Direct and Interactive Marketing. FEDMA is the principal source of knowledge of the DM channel across Europe:

http://www.fedma.org/index.php?id=30

 

 

 

 

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