Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
International

FTC announces $2M settlement with game developer Lumosity over brain-boosting claims

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jan, 2016 11:52 AM
    WASHINGTON — The developer of Lumosity "brain training" games will pay $2 million to settle federal allegations that it misled customers about the cognitive benefits of its online apps and programs.
     
    The Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday the company's advertisements deceptively suggested that playing the games a few times a week could boost performance at work, in the classroom and even delay serious conditions like dementia. Under the settlement, Lumos Labs must contact its customers and offer them an easy way to cancel their subscriptions.
     
    The San Francisco company aggressively promoted its service through national TV and radio stations including CNN, Fox News and National Public Radio. The company also used Google advertising programs to drive traffic to its website, the FTC said in a statement.
     
    "Lumosity preyed on consumers' fears about age-related cognitive decline, suggesting their games could stave off memory loss, dementia, and even Alzheimer's disease," said Jessica Rich, a director in FTC's consumer protection unit. "But Lumosity simply did not have the science to back up its ads."
     
    Customers pay anywhere from $15, for a monthly subscription, or up to $300 for a lifetime membership to Lumosity's online and mobile apps.
     
    An FTC spokesman said Tuesday's action is the first government settlement with a maker of apps intended to boost brain health.
     
    Lumosity is one of the most visible companies in the burgeoning brain training industry, which has estimated sales of over $1 billion per year, according to trade publications.
     
    Under federal law, only products that have been reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration can claim to treat or prevent serious diseases or conditions. To date, the FDA has not approved any brain training programs.
     
    In 2014, more than 70 prominent neurology and psychology researchers published a consensus statement critical of the brain training industry, citing its "frequently exaggerated" marketing.
     
    "The aggressive advertising entices consumers to spend money on products and to take up new behaviours, such as gaming, based on these exaggerated claims," the experts said.
     
    While studies have shown that gaming participants can improve their performance on simple tasks, the experts concluded there is no compelling evidence that games "reduce or reverse cognitive decline."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries

    UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries
    In a huge global endorsement for yoga, 175 out of 193 members of the UN, countries as diverse as the US and Syria, Russia and Britain, and China and the Philippines, agreed by acclamation Wednesday to declare June 21 the International Yoga Day, recognizing the ancient Indian science's "holistic approach to health and well-being".

    UN Adopts Modi's Yoga Day Proposal, Backed By 175 Countries

    Five Al Qaeda India militants held in Pakistan

    Five Al Qaeda India militants held in Pakistan
    Pakistan police claimed to have arrested five militants belonging to the newly formed Al Qaeda India (AQI) group for their alleged involvement...

    Five Al Qaeda India militants held in Pakistan

    Two more MH17 crash victims identified

    Two more MH17 crash victims identified
    Two more victims of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 crash in eastern Ukraine have been identified, raising total number of the identified victims to...

    Two more MH17 crash victims identified

    Imran Khan's party imposes shut-down in Karachi

    Imran Khan's party imposes shut-down in Karachi
    Cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan's party, protesting since August against the alleged rigging in the 2013 parliamentary elections...

    Imran Khan's party imposes shut-down in Karachi

    'MH17 wreckage should return to Malaysia'

    'MH17 wreckage should return to Malaysia'
    Former prime minister of Malaysia Mahathir Mohamad said that the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 should be brought back...

    'MH17 wreckage should return to Malaysia'

    Evacuations, Rescue In Landslide That Partially Buried Vancouver Island House

    Evacuations, Rescue In Landslide That Partially Buried Vancouver Island House
    QUALICUM BEACH, B.C. — A dozen homes on southern Vancouver Island are under evacuation order at risk of a landslide after a bank collapsed, partially burying a two-storey home with a man inside.

    Evacuations, Rescue In Landslide That Partially Buried Vancouver Island House