• @Haui@discuss.tchncs.de
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    189 months ago

    Everyone will call me naive again but how about we actually hold people to their word?

    Why is it not illegal for say politicians to say one thing and do the opposite?

    If a game studio says „we‘re gonna make the greatest game ever!“ I would like to make them prove it or refund everyone.

    You can’t say „contains no nuts“ and put nuts in it, why is there a caveat for other stuff? Just keep to the truth. Why is it so hard to normalize advertising without tons of hyperbole?

    (I‘m autistic and I see telling the truth as a good thing. I don’t understand why someone would like to be lied to. Omit something to not hurt them, ok. But outright lying is wrong on a binary level imo. As in not ok ever.)

    • @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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      39 months ago

      It’s very difficult to draw the line between lying and someone being mistaken

      A politician can want to do X then learn it’s impossible

      A game can promise X then run out of money before accomplishing it

      • @Haui@discuss.tchncs.de
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        19 months ago

        I agree 100%. In business, you have to prove your innocence when subject to a lawsuit. Same goes for lying imo.

        If you ran out of money to keep your promise, you will be able to prove that. Same goes for having to compromise to get some other benefit.

        The initial point I was trying to make is that we are so accustomed (imo) to being lied to that we don’t make people prove that they didn’t plan that from the beginning.

        For example: where I live, it is common practice to make food pictures for ads or menus that a) dont resemble the final product and b) are made with completely different, often inedible substances to look like a better version of the real deal. Something that an hones picture can never achieve. This needs to be illegal. This is not someone running out of money or compromising but premeditated lying.