Falsity Is Enough
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 1 active question. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Torts1
Example wrong choices
20605_scripture_quiz_whisper · TORTS · Choice ANo, because false light requires commercial use of Daniel’s identity.
Why it's attractive
The choice is attractive because it says No and uses a real privacy-sounding commercial-use concept. The breaker is that commercial identity use belongs to appropriation, not the false-light publicity call.
Why it's wrong
This choice imports the commercial-use element from appropriation rather than answering the false-light publicity call.
Spot it next time
Ask whether the reason belongs to false light or to a neighboring privacy tort.
20605_scripture_quiz_whisper · TORTS · Choice CYes, because the accusation cast Daniel in a false light.
Why it's attractive
The choice is attractive because the accusation really did make Daniel look dishonest. The breaker is that false impression alone skips the broad-publicity threshold.
Why it's wrong
This choice proves only the false-impression element and skips the publicity gate.
Spot it next time
Run the Gold Key: false light needs broad publicity.
20605_scripture_quiz_whisper · TORTS · Choice DYes, because false light and defamation are the same tort.
Why it's attractive
The choice is attractive because false light and defamation both involve false statements and often appear together. The breaker is that they are not identical, and false light has its own publicity gate.
Why it's wrong
This choice collapses false light and defamation into the same tort.
Spot it next time
Treat 'same' and 'identical' as danger words when two neighboring torts are being collapsed.
Practice the questions that use this trap as a distractor and get full Wrong Answer Forensics on submit.
Practice questions using this trap →