ETHICS ADVISORY OPINION
20-01
UPON THE REQUEST OF A MEMBER OF THE SOUTH CAROLINA BAR, THE ETHICS ADVISORY COMMITTEE HAS RENDERED THIS OPINION ON THE ETHICAL PROPRIETY OF THE INQUIRER'S CONTEMPLATED CONDUCT. THIS COMMITTEE HAS NO DISCIPLINARY AUTHORITY.
S.C.R. Prof. Conduct: Rules 7.1, 8.4(c), 8.4(d)
Factual Background: A lawyer seeks to enhance her internet presence with the use of keyword advertising. The lawyer inquires whether she may engage in keyword advertising by using her competitors鈥 names as search terms for placement of her advertisement.
Question Presented: May a lawyer bid on and use the names of other lawyers and law firms as part of a competitive keyword advertising strategy?
Summary: A lawyer may use internet competitive keyword advertising that includes the names of competing lawyers and law firms. The lawyer should be mindful of all additional advertising rules and should avoid any tactics where use of competitive keyword advertising would create an ad that contained or implied derogatory or uncivil statements.
Response:
The Ethics Advisory Committee is asked to consider the permissibility of competitive keyword advertisements in specific online search engine platforms. A lawyer pays a search engine entity to insert her ads when a searcher types a competitor鈥檚 name into an internet search engine. Advertisements may appear to the right of the page on certain search engines, or they may appear marked as an 鈥渁d鈥 above the returned organic search results on other search engines.
For example: a searcher/potential client would type 鈥淛ohn Doe鈥 into a search engine in an attempt to locate the website of, or other information regarding John Doe, the lawyer. As a result of her payment for the advertising and her choice of certain specific words including the name 鈥淛ohn Doe鈥, Jane Roe鈥檚 advertisement would appear on the same page as John Doe鈥檚 as a 鈥渟ponsored鈥 entry or 鈥渁d鈥 when the searcher received the results. While Jane Roe鈥檚 advertisement would be marked as such, placement of the ad could vary depending upon the search engine and the price paid.
For clarity, Competitive Keyword Advertising is distinct from Search Engine Optimization (SEO). SEO may be defined as the process of increasing the visibility of a web page by users of a search engine. SEO is a process directed at optimization of unpaid placement results, referred to as 鈥渙rganic鈥 results or hits, and is distinct from paid placement or keyword advertising placement. This opinion is limited to discussion of Competitive Keyword Advertising.
There are several aspects of law that are to be considered in a discussion on this topic, including trademark law [Rosetta Stone v. Google, 676 F3d 144 (US Ct. App. 4th Cir. 2012)]. and publicity rights law [Habush v. Cannon, 828 NW 2d 876 (Wis Ct. App. 2013)]; While this Committee鈥檚 task is to opine on lawyer keyword advertising relevant to the SC Rules of Professional Conduct, Committee considered these cases in debate and discussion on the matter. See also Regulation of Lawyers鈥 Use of Competitive Keyword Advertising U. Ill. L. Rev. (2016).
In 2019, the New Jersey Advisory Committee on Professional Conduct received nearly the identical inquiry as is posed to the SC Bar鈥檚 Committee. The issue has also been addressed by Texas, Wisconsin, and North Carolina.[1]
In New Jersey, the inquirer asked whether the purchase of a competitor鈥檚 name as a keyword would violate Rule 7.1. That Advisory Committee decided that the purchase does not violate the Rule, because the Rule applies to lawyers鈥 communications and, 鈥渢he keyword purchase of a competitor lawyer鈥檚 name is not, in itself, a 鈥榗ommunication.鈥欌
The New Jersey Committee also addressed purchase of a competitor lawyer鈥檚 name as it relates to Rule 8.4(Misconduct). The Committee looked to existing similar opinions from both Texas and Wisconsin, concurred in their reasoning, and determined that the purchase of a competitor鈥檚 name as an advertising keyword is not conduct that involves dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation. They said:
The websites of the keyword purchasers鈥 law firm and the competitor鈥檚 law firm will, presumably, both appear in the resulting search. The keyword purchaser鈥檚 website ordinarily will appear as a paid or 鈥渟ponsored鈥 website, while the competitor lawyer鈥檚 website will appear in the organic results (unless the competitor has purchased the same keyword, in which case it will also appear as a paid or 鈥渟ponsored鈥 website.) The user can choose which website to select and the search engine ordinarily will mark the keyword-purchased website as paid or 鈥渟ponsored.鈥 This is not deceptive, fraudulent or dishonest conduct within the meaning of Rule 8.4(c).
The Texas State Bar Professional Ethics Committee, to which the New Jersey opinion refers, found that keyword advertising is a business practice used by many different commercial endeavors, and 鈥渟uch use by Texas Lawyers in their advertising is neither dishonest nor fraudulent nor deceitful and does not involve misrepresentation.鈥 State Bar of Texas Professional Ethics Committee (July, 2016).
Wisconsin鈥檚 opinion, from the Appellate Court, found that a lawyer鈥檚 purchase of competitor lawyer鈥檚 name for use in internet advertising does not violate the Wisconsin privacy statute because the 鈥渦se鈥 of the competitor鈥檚 name is not visible to the consumer. While this is a court鈥檚 decision, and not an ethics opinion, New Jersey applied the Wisconsin Court鈥檚 reasoning to its opinion. Habush v. Cannon, 828 N.W.2d 876, 346 Wis. 2d 709, 2013 WI App. 34 (Wis. Ct. App. 2013).
Florida Bar鈥檚 Board of Governors reversed an earlier opinion from its Standing Committee on Ethics and opined that, 鈥淭he purchase of ad words is permissible as long as the resulting sponsored links 91黑料爆料arly are advertising based on their placement and wording, and because meta tags and hidden text.... may be dealt with via existing rules prohibiting misleading forms of advertising.鈥 ( at p. 6).
In addition, a concern raised during the SC Ethics Committee鈥檚 consideration and drafting process was that a potential client could be misled by the appearance of an advertisement for one lawyer on the page where the 鈥渙rganic鈥 search results for another lawyer were located. Texas apparently had similar discussions, and opined that, 鈥溾 person familiar enough with the internet to use a search engine to seek a lawyer should be aware that there are advertisements presented on web pages showing search results.鈥 We concur.
Finally, the SC Committee, consistent with Texas, has determined that a lawyer鈥檚 use of a surreptitious direct link that would 鈥減ose鈥 as a competitor鈥檚 internet location but would reroute a user to the lawyer鈥檚 own website would be deceitful conduct in violation of Rule 8.4 (d). Committee note: In TX, the Rule subsection cited is Rule 8.4(c), in SC, the corresponding Rule subsection is 8.4(d).
The SC Ethics Advisory Committee concurs with the reasoning of New Jersey, Texas and Wisconsin. Accordingly, and consistent with those states鈥 opinions and with our SC Rules of Professional Conduct, a lawyer may purchase an internet competitive advertising keyword that is the name of another lawyer or law firm, in order to display a 鈥渟ponsored鈥 website advertisement. The lawyer should be mindful to comply with all advertising rules and should use care to ensure that no derogatory or uncivil message is conveyed. In addition, surreptitious redirection from a competitor鈥檚 website to a lawyer鈥檚 own web page via a hyperlink is prohibited under our Rules.
[1] North Carolina State Bar 2010 Formal Ethics Opinion 14 (April 27, 2012) (purchasing another lawyer鈥檚 name as a keyword for an internet search is 鈥渘either fair nor straightforward鈥 and therefore is dishonest conduct that violates Rule 8.4(c)).