From a legal perspective the Pepsi Harrier didn't tread any new ground.
But it was sensationalized and landed at a time when McDonalds had just been hammered for their Monopoly game being rigged, so the popular sentiment was that companies were more full of shit than normal.
It's more lasting impact was that companies moved to a "codes under caps" gimmick, where you could get things like music downloads (as mp3's became a thing).
From a legal perspective the Pepsi Harrier didn't tread any new ground.
But it was sensationalized and landed at a time when McDonalds had just been hammered for their Monopoly game being rigged, so the popular sentiment was that companies were more full of shit than normal.
It's more lasting impact was that companies moved to a "codes under caps" gimmick, where you could get things like music downloads (as mp3's became a thing).
Right. Even if she hadn't spilled it, a restaurant should not be selling coffee that would kill you if you drank it.
Except it wouldn’t, it didn’t, and consumers demanded it. Do you need rubber padding for sharp corners?