This policy applies only to prize promotions. Inkbunny does not consider the following to be prize promotions:
You may also award a prize without prior announcement to one or more people who have already paid you or done something for you, as they did not do it to enter your promotion. However, if this occurs or is intended to occur more than once, you must treat it as a sweepstakes for the purpose of this policy, including linking to your rules and offering a free means of entry when mentioning the promotion or offering goods or services covered by it.
For all prize promotions, you must provide rules which state in a clear and conspicuous manner:
You may provide some details on another page, as long as it is clearly linked in your communications and remains up until the prize is awarded. All mentions of a sweepstakes must note that there is a free method of entry.
Your rules form a contract between entrants and yourself. If they comply with the rules, you must deliver the prize. The only charges you may make are those related to shipping and handling, if specified in advance.
If another person will provide the prize, you must say so, and it's up to you to make them do it. If the designated provider is unable or unwilling to produce the prize within the time specified in the rules, you must promptly provide the monetary equivalent (before currency exchange) through some means agreed between the parties.
If, despite your best efforts, prizes are not claimed by one or more winners in accordance with your rules, you may declare those results void and re-run the sweepstakes with the remaining entrants.
You must keep records of who entered and how, and be able and willing to produce these and your rules to us on demand for a year after the promotion ends. You must also provide a list of winners to anyone on request. If you wish to use winners' names in subsequent promotions, you should specify this in your rules. You may not represent that any person has won any prize in a promotion unless this is the case.
If entry may be via submission of content, you must explain what this will allow you to do, and any conditions - such as not using trademark characters. If you want to post it on Inkbunny, you should require that it meets our policies.
If you contact members directly regarding your promotion, you must provide a means for people to opt-out of such contact. You may not tell anyone that they've already won a prize or passed an initial round as part of an invitation to participate in your promotion or to purchase goods or services; nor tell them that they have been "personally selected" unless they have been; nor imply that they or their work has any special chance to win a prize.
You may not give the impression that Inkbunny approves of or endorses your promotion, unless we have made statements to this effect. Merely following this policy does not constitute approval.
When running a sweepstakes, you must take care not to let it turn into a lottery. You may offer entry in conjunction with the bona fide sale of goods or services for money or other valuable consideration (including significant effort). However, any consideration must be proportionate to the sale, not the prizes; and you must provide at least one method of entry which does not require consideration.
Inkbunny considers the following to constitute 'free' methods of entry:
This list is not comprehensive; however, the process may not be arduous. If you do business online, one of the free means of entry must be online.
The following would not count as 'free' methods of entry, although they might be a means of entry:
Free methods of entry must have an equal chance to win all prizes, and must be open for the same period as other methods. There can be no separate category for "purchased" entries, nor may they skip any qualifying rounds. Multiple purchases may result in increased chances only if multiple free entries are permitted over an equivalent time period; this should be documented in your rules.
You may respond to entrants with additional offers, such as a price for an upgrade if they win. You may not offer to trade a prize for a chance at another prize; nor imply that accepting additional offers will influence the result; nor limit winners to those who accept or are likely to accept additional offers.
You may not ask people to do something to enter if it is counter to a third party's terms, or if it tends to deceive others. For example, you may not ask people to click on an third-party ad hosted on your own site, to post reviews of a non-purchased product, or to make false statements so that you do not have to pay fees to a transaction processor.
If you offer entry into a promotion with a purchase, you may not disallow returns, nor withdraw entrants who request a return, unless they separately request to withdraw from your promotion.
Prize contests should have no element of chance; if they do, you must also follow the rules for sweepstakes. This includes randomly picking a person who drew your character to win, picking the person who pays the most money to enter (this is a matter of chance from an entrant's perspective), or playing a game which involves chance – even as a means to settle ties.
You must state the criteria by which you or some other competent judge(s) will pick the winner in your rules, including any preliminary rounds, and stick to them. You should also explain what method is used in the case of a tie, and whether multiple entries are permitted. An example:
Each staff member will select up to ten nominations, based on suitability for a T-shirt, site relevance and artistic merit; staff vote on all nominees using range voting; the five entries with the highest combined vote - or more, in the event of a tie - are winners, and the submitters will receive one promotional item up to US$50 per winning entry, in return for a perpetual license to sell promotional items displaying the work.
You may not condition the award or amount of a contest prize on the number of entries. If you think this will be a problem, offer smaller prizes.