This doesn’t make sense. If there’s 3% variance in their manufacturing, they should be advertising it as 97% of their target amount because overpromising in advertising is a major legal liability. Telling people you’re giving them 618 ml when you actually given te 582 ml is basis for some kind of lawsuit I would wager.
Giving people less than you say you’re giving them is more of a crime than giving them more than you say you’re giving them.
This doesn’t make sense. If there’s 3% variance in their manufacturing, they should be advertising it as 97% of their target amount because overpromising in advertising is a major legal liability. Telling people you’re giving them 618 ml when you actually given te 582 ml is basis for some kind of lawsuit I would wager.
Giving people less than you say you’re giving them is more of a crime than giving them more than you say you’re giving them.
I’d be stunned if today’s machinery has more than 0.1% error rate.
I’d expect 3% variance to be the legally allowed but their machines are much, much more accurate