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Millions of YouTube product reviews may flout advertising rules

An analysis of YouTube videos and Pinterest pins has found that around 90 per cent of affiliate marketing links are not disclosed, in contravention of advertising rules
Wanna buy it?
Wanna buy it?
Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Use YouTube a lot and you will invariably stumble across affiliate marketing at some point. The term is used to describe a review or mention of a product where a link to buy that product is pasted in the video’s description.

The practice is lucrative for many YouTube stars, who get a cut on sales generated via the link. It is also perfectly legal, so long as you are transparent about the fact your video is essentially an advert.

Now a study by Princeton University’s Arunesh Mathur and his colleagues has found that around 90 per cent of affiliate marketing is not disclosed at all. That is in contravention of rules drawn up by the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), the bodies which protect consumer rights in each country.

The FTC disclosures to be “clear and conspicuous”, while the ASA “affiliate links and any related content must be identified as such.”

“There’s a clear, pervasive problem of non-compliance,” says Rebecca Tushnet, a legal scholar at Harvard Law School. “You need to disclose that so consumers can decide what weight to put on your recommendation.”

Widespread problem

Mathur and his colleagues randomly sampled half a million videos on YouTube and two million pins on Pinterest then checked them for links to 33 of the most popular affiliate marketing programs, including Amazon’s. Just under 1 per cent of the samples contained an affiliate link.

Of those, 89.5 per cent of YouTube videos and 93 per cent of Pinterest pins did not disclose them in the correct way. The number may well be higher as coupon or voucher codes, for example, were not picked up by the analysis.

There were an estimated four billion videos on YouTube by the end of 2016 (and 400 hours are uploaded every minute) so millions of affiliate marketing reviews may be in breach of the rules.

YouTube did not respond to a request for comment, while a Pinterest spokesman said: “We have a policy that requires users that have a relationship with a brand to consult with the FTC’s endorsement guidelines. We encourage users to report content that violates our policies.”

The impetus should be on affiliate marketing firms, not social media sites, to compel their users to disclose ties, says Tushnet. “Education and a few enforcement actions, which tend to ruffle feathers, would be helpful.”

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Topics: Internet