HomeInsightsAdvertising Standards Authority publishes results of compliance sweep that used “Avatar” monitoring technology to identify ads for food and soft drink products high in fat, salt or sugar (HFSS) on children’s websites and YouTube channels

Contact

The Avatar monitoring found that 2.3% of the 41,030 ads served to child Avatars across general interest and youth interest websites and YouTube channels were for HFSS products. It found that, in general, brands were sticking to the advertising rules when it comes to HFSS products on websites, but there was a problem on some children’s channels on YouTube, where a number of HFSS ads were found to have broken the rules.

Child Avatars are programmes that simulate the online profiles of children, in order to identify ads served to child profiles across the internet. Over a two week monitoring period in the run up to Christmas last year, the ASA captured information on online display ads which appeared on 210 websites and 87 YouTube channels in non-logged-in environments. While the Avatars simulated child profiles, the monitoring was not representative of children’s browsing activity over a two week period.

The monitoring identified breaches of the advertising rules by eight brands through ads for HFSS products appearing inappropriately alongside videos on YouTube channels directed at children. The brands were contacted by CAP to take immediate steps to ensure that the ads identified would no longer appear. The companies were also asked to provide information on the mechanisms they had in place to ensure their ads are not served inappropriately in future. CAP has also engaged YouTube to ensure all parties understand the findings and can take the action necessary to avoid repeat breaches of the rules.

The monitoring exercise did not identify any clear evidence of HFSS advertisers actively targeting child Avatars, or serving ads which were directed, through their content, at children under 12 through use of celebrities or licensed characters popular with children or promotions.

In addition, the monitoring found:

  • over two-thirds of HFSS ads on websites and YouTube were for products likely to be of little interest to children e.g. ads for supermarkets, high-end cheese and condiments;
  • 26 of the 39 websites clearly aimed at children did not serve a single ad for a HFSS product during the monitoring exercise. The 13 remaining children’s websites served a total of 8,534 ads, 43 of which were for HFSS products, 0.5% of all ads served on those sites; and
  • the monitoring captured information on ads appearing on 87 YouTube channels. 490 ads for HFSS products were served on 55 of the YouTube channels aimed at children.

During the same two week period, the ASA also monitored openly-available online content from a selection of the 50 top UK food and soft drink brands. The monitoring covered content posted on the brands’ official websites and social media accounts, which was visible to non-logged-in users. It did not include paid advertising on the social media platforms.

The ASA says that it intends to conduct follow-up Avatar monitoring and enforcement exercises, including extending this work to logged-in environments, especially logged-in social media platforms. To read the ASA’s press release in full, click here.