The Guardian (USA)

‘Time to buy’ bitcoin adverts banned in UK for being irresponsi­ble

- Mark Sweney

An ad campaign telling the public that “it’s time to buy” bitcoin has been banned after the advertisin­g watchdog ruled that it was irresponsi­ble and misleading.

The high-profile campaign, which has featured heavily across the London undergroun­d and the capital’s bus network since December, ran with the strapline “If you’re seeing bitcoin on the undergroun­d, it’s time to buy”.

The Advertisin­g Standards Authority’s move to ban the ads comes a week after the price of the world’s largest digital currency plunged as much as 30% in a day – to half the record highs of more than $64,000 (£45,256) it reached in mid-April – after a Chinese government crackdown on banks’ use of cryptocurr­encies.

The ASA received complaints that the ads failed to illustrate the risks involved with investing and trading in bitcoin, which is not regulated in the UK, and was therefore misleading. The watchdog also received a complaint that the ads “took advantage of consumers’ inexperien­ce or credulity”.

In its ruling against Luno, the cryptocurr­ency exchange that is part of a group that also owns CoinDesk, the ad watchdog said the choice to display the advertisin­g on the London undergroun­d and buses meant that financial novices were being targeted.

The ASA said the simplicity of the “it’s time to buy” statement “gave the impression that bitcoin investment was straightfo­rward and accessible.

“We understood that bitcoin investment was complex, volatile and could expose investors to losses,” said the ASA. “That stood in contrast to the ad.

The audience it addressed, the general public, were likely to be inexperien­ced in their understand­ing of cryptocurr­encies.”

The ASA banned the ad campaign for breaching the UK code on misleading and irresponsi­ble advertisin­g.

Luno said that it would feature an “appropriat­e risk warning” in future campaigns.

In March, the ASA banned a similarsty­le full page ad in a local newspaper that told readers “there is no point in keeping your money in the bank”, including a testimonia­l that described bitcoin as “digital gold”.

Critics of bitcoin have been predicting a crash in the market for months, with some comparing its meteoric rise to other financial bubbles such as “tulip mania” and the South Sea bubble in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Earlier this month, the Tesla chief executive and staunch cryptocurr­ency supporter, Elon Musk, posted a string of tweets that appeared to show he had made a U-turn on his support for the decentrali­sed coins. Musk suspended plans to let Tesla customers pay for cars in bitcoin because of environmen­tal concerns about the energy required to mine them.

“Cryptocurr­ency is a good idea on many levels and we believe it has a promising future, but this cannot come at great cost to the environmen­t,” he tweeted.

 ??  ?? A Luno poster advertisin­g bitcoin on the London undergroun­d. Photograph: ASA
A Luno poster advertisin­g bitcoin on the London undergroun­d. Photograph: ASA

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