Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Q-Ray PWNED

Last week, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a judgement obtained by the Federal Trade Commission against the charlatans behind the Q-Ray bracelet. The opinion was written by Chief Judge Frank Easterbrook and is a model for dealing with this type of malarkey.

Take that, stupid, non-effective bracelet whose only effect is to relieve suckers of their money!

Select juicy quotes from
the opinion are below. The entire opinion is short and well worth the read.

The bracelet is touted as “enhancing the flow of bio-energy” or “balancing the flow of positive and negative energies”; these empty phrases have no connection to any medical or scientific effect. Every other claim made about the mechanism of the bracelet’s therapeutic effect likewise is techno-babble.
. . .
But how could this conclusion assist defendants? In our example the therapeutic claim is based on scientific principles. For the Q-Ray Ionized Bracelet, by contrast, all statements about how the product works—Q-Rays, ionization, enhancing the flow of bio-energy, and the like—are blather. Defendants might as well have said: “Beneficent creatures from the 17th Dimension use this bracelet as a beacon to locate people who need pain relief, and whisk them off to their homeworld every night to provide help in ways unknown to our science.”
. . .

Although it is true, as Arthur C. Clarke said, that “[a]ny sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic” by those who don’t understand its principles (“Profiles of the Future” (1961)), a person who promotes a product that contemporary technology does not understand must establish that this “magic” actually works. Proof is what separates an effect new to science from a swindle. Defendants themselves told customers that the bracelet’s efficacy had been “test-proven”; that statement was misleading unless a reliable test had been used and statistically significant results achieved. A placebo controlled, double-blind study is the best test; something less may do (for there is no point in spending $1 million to verify a claim worth only $10,000 if true); but defendants have no proof of the Q-Ray Ionized Bracelet’s efficacy. The “tests” on which they relied were bunk. (We need not repeat the magistrate judge’s exhaustive evaluation of this subject.) What remain are testimonials, which are not a form of proof because most testimonials represent a logical fallacy: post hoc ergo propter hoc. (A person who experiences a reduction in pain after donning the bracelet may have enjoyed the same reduction without it.

Thanks to Rebecca, the Skepchick.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I notice their website has removed any mention of medical/health benefits.

Anonymous said...

It's good that one part of the FTC does something that the public likes. It isn't the part I work in unfortunately.

ahtitan said...

So, is there a number I can call to get my money back, then?

Ipecac said...

You're too smart for that. Just in case, though, try this:

http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/complaint.shtm

Eric Haas said...

I’m still seeing "Smiling Bob" commercials, though.