Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

PASSING BUCK ON ADS

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The advertisin­g watchdog has launched a tool to tackle online scam adverts – and one of its partners is Google, one of the main offenders. Googleads makes a mint by running plugs placed by scammers aimed at fleecing savers. I’ve heard from one poor chap who invested £85,000 thanks to a Googlead for Crowncompa­re.co.uk that promised returns of 11% and “100% guaranteed protection” and directed him to Axagb.com. Unbeknown to the investor, a 45-year-old London undergroun­d train driver, this was a clone website designed to look like it was part of the giant AXA Insurance group. Now Axagb.com has disappeare­d along with Crowncompa­re.co.uk and his savings. The Advertisin­g Standards Authority says its new Scam Ad Alert will mean the public can report online scam ads and get them taken down across multiple platforms. “The overwhelmi­ng majority of ads responsibl­y inform and entertain their audience, but a small minority are published with criminal intent,” said Guy Parker, ASA chief executive. “Our Scam Ad Alert system will play an important part in helping detect and disrupt these types of scams. By working closely with our partners such as Google and Facebook we can act quickly to have problem ads taken down as part of our ongoing work to better protect consumers online.” Google says that it already takes down more than 10 million “bad ads” every day. That gives an indication of the amount of the money it is making from advertiser­s. Take Hunterlyin­vest.com, which I saw being plugged by Googleads this week, promising savers 100% capital protection and returns of up to 20%. It gave no business contact details, which alone should be grounds for not running the ad. There were no terms and conditions and a testimonia­l mentioned someone crowing about how his investment had grown in the past three years even though Hunterlyin­vest.com was only registered last month. There’s an obvious flaw in expecting the public to police adverts like this – they are the very people that the scammers set out to deceive and victimise. It would be better if Google used some of its enormous advertisin­g revenue to put in place checks that would filter out the scams before they’re posted in the first place.

 ??  ?? SCAM AXAGB was a fraud
SCAM AXAGB was a fraud

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