UK advertising regulator orders 50 companies to check cryptocurrency ads

cryptocurrency regulation

The British regulator is once again pointing out the need for better monitoring of the cryptocurrency market. This time it takes aim at the issues of ads and their providers. Those have a limited time to comply with the new guidelines.

1.5 months for verification

The local regulator of the UK advertising market, known as the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), has issued new guidelines on the standards to which the cryptocurrency segment is to be subjected. Companies involved in the sector and encouraging any cryptocurrency-based services have until May 2 to review them and adjust their platforms, as well as the way they communicate, to the new rules. According to preliminary data, the guidelines are expected to affect 50 entities. The list includes all companies that have previously been subject to ASA rulings.

Agency representatives commented on the matter as follows:

“The introduction of the red alert is a priority issue for us, as we have recently banned several companies from crypto advertising on the grounds of misleading consumers, in violation of the principles of comity and business responsibility.”

The red alert requires advertisers to send clear signals to the audience of their content, indicating that cryptocurrencies are unregulated in the UK and the value of investments is volatile, with the risk of deep declines.

The ads are to be designed not to suggest that investments are safe, simple or easy to undertake. They also must not indicate low risk, the need to buy, or create fear of not doing so. After the deadline, advertisers who fail to comply with the new guidelines and the requirements contained therein will be reported to the financial regulator Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

Previous bans

The ASA has interfered in the crypto asset advertising market before. In 2021, it famously banned ads created by Coinbase Europe, eToro, Papa John’s, Luno Money, Exmo Exchange, Payward and Coinburp. The reason was “irresponsible exploitation of consumer inexperience and failure to illustrate investment risk.” However, the regulations were vague at the time. In turn, the companies were not leaning towards socially responsible actions. By creating the red alert, the regulator decided to bail them out in this regard.

Disclaimer: Blockbulletin does not take accountability of investments based on the information of the website. We highly advice readers to make extensive research prior to any invest

Share this article

More news

How big is the NFT space

How big is the NFT space?

Non Fungible Tokens is one of the crypto spaces that has been gaining the most popularity recently. There is a lot of talk about it, however, a…
US Bank to launch Bitcoin custody service

US Bank to launch Bitcoin custody service

One of the largest retail banks in the United States confirms the launch of a custody service for customers holding Bitcoin, Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash.  US Bank…
SEC

SEC takes Circle, issuer of USDC token, to court

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is taking Circle to court. What is the case about? And are stablecoin providers the next victims?  Stablecoins targeted?…
Masses of investors buy Bitcoin during China crash

Masses of investors buy Bitcoin during China crash

China announced the long-awaited announcement of a complete ban on trading and mining cryptocurrencies. This resulted in an aggressive asset sell-off, which investors used as an opportunity…
All articles loaded
No more articles to load

Learn

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Analyses

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Latest news

All articles loaded
No more articles to load