Epson Reaches Settlement With Dangbei Over Deceptive Advertising twice.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from twice.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The latest chapter in Epson’s crusade to out projector companies that aren’t playing by the rules continues with China-based Danbei agreeing to correct a bogus brightness spec for one of its projectors rather than potentially face a court-imposed fine. Under a settlement announced late last week, Dangbei agreed to correct the white brightness specification for its $1,600 Mars Pro projector, reducing the published spec from 3,200 lumens down to a corrected figure of 1,800 lumens
In the latest chapter of Epson’s crusade against deceptive advertising practices in the video projection industry, Chinese portable projection specialist XGIMI today agreed to correct inaccurate brightness specs it had published for four of its projectors. Under the terms of its settlement with Epson, XGIMI has corrected “previously misstated lumens to reflect accurate brightness claims to benefit consumers.” The lumens specs XGIMI publishes for its Horizon Pro (XK03H) and Horizon (XK03K) projectors have been reduced from 2,200 to 1,500.
Gamma Scientific Wins Platinum in 2023 Laser Focus World Innovators Awards optics.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from optics.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Epson has prevailed in a lawsuit charging Wemax, maker of portable and ultra-short-throw (UST) video projectors, with deceptive advertising practices that grossly overstated the brightness of the company’s Nova series of UST projectors. Under the terms of the settlement, Wemax agreed to correct the brightness spec for its Nova projectors from 2,100 lumens to 1,300 lumens, a decrease of 38%.