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Epson Settles Projector Brightness Lawsuit with Formovie

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Settlement Underscores Epson’s Commitment to Internationally Accepted, Industry-Wide Standards to Help Consumers Make Informed Purchasing Decisions

Epson recently announced it has reached a settlement with Formovie Tech, a projector company jointly established by Appotronics Corporation and Xiaomi Technology, for its recent lawsuit highlighting misleading advertising practices. Under the settlement terms, Formovie will correct misstated white brightness specifications on a couple of their projectors worldwide. The Formovie Theater will be reduced from 2,800 lumens to 1,800 lumens, and the Formovie P1 will be reduced from 800 lumens to 250 lumens to reflect accurate brightness claims. Moving forward, Formovie will use ISO 21118, the internationally recognized standard for measuring a projector’s White Brightness. White Brightness measured in lumens using ISO 21118 is a critically important specification relied on by consumers when making a projector buying decision.

Formovie joins a list of additional recent suits aiming to correct brightness claims that includes:

  • ACROJOY
  • Anker
  • AuKing
  • Dangbei
  • XGIMI
  • VAVA
  • Wemax

“When projector brands use the same, internationally developed and published standards, it protects consumers and establishes trust within the industry,” said Mike Isgrig, vice president, consumer sales and marketing, Epson America. “Formovie’s commitment to use internationally published and accepted standards (such as ISO 21118 for white brightness) moving forward for their entire product line will provide accurate white brightness information for consumers."

The initial complaint against Formovie was made as part of Epson’s ongoing efforts to ensure the implementation of internationally recognized and accepted brightness standards are used by brands to help consumers make informed purchasing decisions. The corrected specifications are now accurate white brightness claims, benefiting consumers, the retail channel, and the larger industry. Unfortunately, there has been an influx of projector brands that are clearly providing misleading brightness claims. Epson cautions shoppers to be wary of misleading metrics listed as “Lux,” “LED lumens,” or “Lamp Brightness” that fail to follow standardized methodology and therefore materially impacts a consumer’s ability to compare performance of projectors, especially when shopping on Amazon and other online marketplaces.

Epson is taking a proactive stance to correct this industry-wide issue, underscored by today’s announcement surrounding a settlement with Formovie for its recent lawsuit highlighting deceptive advertising practices. A full release follows for reference and is available online.

Measurement for projectors is defined by internationally recognized standards groups, including the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Committee for Display Metrology (ICDM). The ICDM publishes the Information Display Measurement Standards (IDMS) where methodology for measuring projector color brightness is defined. The ISO standard that defines projector white brightness is ISO 21118. In addition, the U.S. member body for ISO – ANSI (American National Standards Institute) – has adopted ISO 21118, underscoring ISO 21118 as the industry standard for white brightness. When these standards are followed, there is zero ambiguity regarding how projector brightness is properly measured, advertised and compared.

To learn more about Epson, please visit: epson.com.

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