If I were to run a series of events and advertised that someone attending every event being involved could win a 18ct gold watch for free and at the end of the series I gave away a gold plated watch, could the person that I gave it to claim a Gold watch? Its like saying you could win a rolls royce but you got a reliant robin. Where would I dtand leagally?
not sure; in the absence of the words 'solid' or 'plated' in the advert it is difficult to say. My instinct says that your advert is implying a solid gold watch.
Potentially an offence under the Consumer Protection regulations. The 'winner' could claim your advertisement was misleading by not stating 'gold plated'.
The blurb refers to a 'golden' gun, which would probably be accepted as a colour description. But in the banner above it states Gold Gun, and I think they're on dodgy ground there.
Anyone who is prepared to think you can make a gun barrel out of 24k gold deserves to be ripped off in my opinion but just put plated in the title it's not going to make any difference- no-one but the terminally stupid would have thought it would be solid gold anyway- it's just a trophy thing.
i think you would be in trouble as if the person who won was anything like some of the people on here - they would take umbrage and fight you all the way - on principle... as it is clearly a deliberate attempt to deceive rather than a genuine error or misunderstanding
just put gold plated -
i very much doubt many people would attend an event solely because of the chance of winning a solid gold watch! - who in their right mind would make that the deciding factor? simply because their chances are so slim - its just a nice little extra, but not the main reason for attending.
I might be wrong but I believe the OP had seen this prize offered and asked his question in a roundabout way to see if what the website was doing was legit. Rather than it's him that is offering the prize, if you get me...um
Chinajan your right, my lad showed it to me and I told him it would be gold plated but he argued that it was real. I was just wondering hop many kids would be fooled and how the company stood legally
That is a very misleading advert. As has been said 24ct gold is far too soft for a gun barrel even a paint ball gun (which is what that is) i think it will be a minature replica of a gun , no where does it give a size or say it is a working gun. 24ct Gold has to be solid not plated, but then again it does not say it is hall marked which is a legal requirement for any Gold from 9 to 24ct.
A full size gun with a 24 ct barrel would cost several thousand £ plus be unusable.