Originally posted by: SyahM
Originally posted by: oLLie
This is kind of like saying the CircuitCity legal team is incompetent. I think they know the definition of an advertisement and if it was their policy to only pricematch NEWSPAPER advertisements, I think they would have made that clear in their pricematch policy and not left this giant loophole in there. But, you could be right. I tried Irvine, Newport Beach, Santa Ana, Huntington Beach.Originally posted by: russw Ollie: Which OC stores have you tried?It's not an ad.Why would a shelf tag in a store open to the public not constitute an advertisement?...russ
from Merriam-Webster online
One entry found for <B>advertisement</B>. Main Entry: <B>ad·ver·tise·ment</B>
Pronunciation: <TT>"ad-v&r-'tIz-m&nt; &d-'v&r-t&z-m&nt, -t&-sm&nt</TT>
Function: <I>noun</I>
Date: 15th century
<B>1</B> <B>:</B> the act or process of <a href="dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=advertising">advertising</A>
<B>2</B> <B>:</B> a public notice; <I>especially</I> <B>:</B> one published in the press or broadcast over the air
Does BB published their WD HD's shelf tag in the paper or over the air? </FORM>
Is a shelf tag in a store open to the public and with customer service available by phone considered an act of advertising? I'd say yes. Is it a public notice? I'd say yes. Not everyone goes in the store or calls the store you say? Not everyone gets a newspaper, either. Pull the stick out of your ass, SyahM and re-read the bolded part of my post.