Watching a favourite influencer chow down on the latest fast food fad
or cocktail may feel like entertainment, but those posts are likely
adverts in disguise, the EU said Wednesday (14 February).
The European Union is concerned about the growing impact of social media content creators — on everything from physical and mental health, to politics and the spread of disinformation.
With influencer marketing believed to have a reaped a global total of around €20 billion last year, the European Commission launched a probe into the practice.
The results were unequivocal: it found that 97% of influencers published posts with commercial content but only 20% “systematically disclosed” it as advertising.
The study looked at 576 influencers in 22 member states as well as
Iceland and Norway as part of a “sweep” to check their compliance with
EU consumer law — which compels creators to disclose all advertising
activity. (...)
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