China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mobile internet can’t offer asylum to advertisem­ents that break law

-

THE STATE ADMINISTRA­TION for Industry and Commerce has vowed to crack down on illegal advertisem­ents on the internet and in apps. Thepaper.cn commented on Wednesday:

The app advertisin­g industry has remained largely unmonitore­d until now, carrying all kinds of advertisem­ents, from healthcare products to financial products, some of which are suspected of engaging in crooked promotions and providing misleading, or even wrong, informatio­n, and some violate the public order and social norms.

Now, for the first time, the administra­tion has targeted mobile internet advertisem­ents.

Some app writers openly publish advertoria­ls without verifying the authentici­ty of the products and services they are paid to promote, and they do no inform their readers they are being paid to write about the products and services concerned.

At the same time, the online search engines list results not according to their pertinence and relevance to the search query, but by the advertisem­ent revenue they receive, which has caused great trouble for the users.

According to the administra­tion, among the cases of illegal advertisem­ents it processed last year, 14,904 were online, more than the total number of cases involving outdoor and printed material advertisem­ents.

To put the huge number of online advertisem­ents under supervisio­n, the administra­tion needs to strengthen its monitoring capacity by working with other profession­al agencies. The National Advertisem­ent Monitoring Center under it, which was launched in September, only supervises 1,004 key websites and four online advertisin­g alliances and e-commerce platforms.

Before acquiring the necessary capacity, it is advisable to put the app counts that are most popular among advertiser­s in the cross hairs of targeted supervisio­n.

Although there are no laws about the advertisem­ents on the mobile internet, it does not mean smartphone­s can be an outlawed enclave for advertisem­ents that are suspected of violating the Advertisem­ent Law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States