If you promise "the healthiest air in the world" to buyers of your air-conditioners, you better be prepared to substantiate your claim. Otherwise, your advertisement could be junked.
If you describe a car as "sleek, feline and sophisticated" in an advertisement, and urge potential buyers to "surrender" to it, you are running the risk of treating women as commodities and your ad will be yanked off air.
Nor can your ad show an elderly person sitting inside a refrigerator and reading a newspaper -- this may encourage a child to imitate the act, with fatal consequences.
Companies that resort to hyperbole in ads, beware -- big brother is watching. The Advertising Standards Council of India bans ads that it thinks are not quite proper.
It either withdrew or modified in January-March this year 15 ads that breached its code, citing reasons that ranged from false quality claims to degrading women and encouraging kids to be over-adventurous. The ads were aired mainly by fast moving consumer goods, consumer electronics and automobile companies.
Advertisers that withdrew their advertisements did so because they could not support their product claims with authentic data. The list of advertisers includes LG Electronics, Philips India and Godrej HiCare. Others that were either forced to withdraw their ads or modify them include Hindustan Lever, Nestle India, Dabur