• kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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    3 days ago

    How exactly do they advertise the cups? Because my local legislation would demand that if they said a “400ml Coke” I need to get 400ml of liquid Coke, regardless of the size of the container or the ice. But if they sneakily say "do you want a 400ml CUP and later on you decide what goes inside the cup, then yes.

      • kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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        3 days ago

        Over here that would still possibly be a problem depending on the expected association the customer makes.

        “I want some Coke”

        “Got it, and will that be a medium?”

        “What size is a medium?”

        “400ml”

        Then the implicit expectation is 400ml of the Coke being ordered

        • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          “What size is a medium?”

          They’d just grab the cup to show you. Where do you live that the workers would actually reply to you with the actual measurement?

            • cabbage@piefed.social
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              3 days ago

              Also in Europe it would be totally normal to respond with measurements. 200 ml, 0.33, and half liter are the standard ones. In the UK there’s pints and half pints.

              If somebody just pointed at the container for me instead of telling me the size I would probably consider it weird. Maybe it’s normal in fast food joints.

        • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          I believe in America the corporation is given the edge. “We didn’t say you’d get 400ml of coke, we said a medium was 400ml.” Is a legally viable argument. Its only false advertising if taking the statement at face value is provably false, a la “Red Bull gives you wings” was changed to “Red bull gives you wiiiings” because the original was provably false, and the second one can be defended as “wiiiings isn’t a real word so it doesn’t mean anything”