ICYMI, the White House's 2023 budget proposal includes $490 million for the FTC, reflecting a substantial increase ($139 million) over the FTC's current budget of $351 million.
ICYMI, the White House’s 2023 budget proposal includes $490 million for the FTC, reflecting a substantial increase ($139 million) over the FTC’s current budget of $351 million. To.
found a danger in the manufacturing of any other good, you could sue under product liability law saying, that object is defective and dangerous in it s very design. the one thing that you cannot do that with is the product that is designed to kill people yeah, i mean, if you look across all industries, right, from automobiles to tobacco, to most consumer products, even opioid manufacturers, legal accountability has driven innovation. and it includes new safety features and responsible sales, and marketing practice, all things that are designed to stale save lives. and because congress gave the gun manufacturers and dealers this immunity, they really been
yeah, i mean, if you look across all industries, right, from automobiles to tobacco, to most consumer products, even opioid manufacturers, legal accountability has driven innovation. and it includes new safety features and responsible sales, and marketing practice, all things that are designed to stale save lives. and because congress gave the gun manufacturers and dealers this immunity, they really been shielded against efforts to hold reckless actors accountable. what is disheartening is that this shelve what is heartening is that this shield is not impenetrable. we are making real progress in state houses and court houses across the country. for example, western new york, it really put up a new law that will allow gun manufacturers there to be sued that goes up against the governor of new jersey is talking about doing something similar. this should sound as a wake up
We recently sat down with seven leading business-to-business marketers (B2B) to talk about where the industry’s heading and whether the distinction between B2B and business-to-consumer (B2C) is collapsing. With B2B and B2B arguably converging, some commentators are heralding a new synthesis: human-to-human marketing. We couldn’t help taking the opportunity for a bit of buzzword-busting: do our experts see something new there, or just a trendy new phrase?