The prohibition will cover advertising of initial coin offerings (ICOs) -
crowd funding used to raise cash by creating new coins - as well as
token sales. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The prohibition will cover advertising of initial coin offerings (ICOs) - crowd funding used to raise cash by creating new coins - as well as token sales, the San Francisco-based firm told Reuters on Monday.
- The new policy, which will be rolled out over the next 30 days, will also ban ads by cryptocurrency exchanges and cryptocurrency wallet services, unless they are public companies listed on certain major stock markets.
- For Japan, these will be limited to crypto exchanges regulated by its national financial regulator, Twitter said.
Twitter Inc will start banning cryptocurrency advertising from
Tuesday, joining Facebook and Google in a clampdown that seeks to avoid
giving publicity to potential fraud or large investor losses.
The
prohibition will cover advertising of initial coin offerings (ICOs) -
crowd funding used to raise cash by creating new coins - as well as
token sales, the San Francisco-based firm told Reuters on Monday.
The
new policy, which will be rolled out over the next 30 days, will also
ban ads by cryptocurrency exchanges and cryptocurrency wallet services,
unless they are public companies listed on certain major stock markets.
For Japan, these will be limited to crypto exchanges regulated by its national financial regulator, Twitter said.
The firm had said this month it was taking measures to prevent
crypto-related accounts from “engaging with others in a deceptive
manner”, but faced calls to go further after bans from Facebook Inc
(FB.O) and Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) Google.
Facebook has restricted crypto-related adverts, while Google announced a ban that comes into force in June.
The
price of bitcoin, already 4 percent in the red on Monday, fell further
after the Twitter announcement. It traded at $7,920 BTC=BTSP on the
Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange at 1740 GMT, down more than 6 percent
on the day.
Regulators' warnings
Regulators
have stepped up warnings that bitcoin and other virtual currencies are
highly speculative and that some could be fraudulent, and that investors
should be prepared to lose everything.
But last week the G20 group of rich nations failed to reach a consensus on how to supervise them.
Adverts
for virtual coins or ways to trade them have appeared everywhere from
London’s transport network to Japanese television as demand for them has
soared.
“With the increasing number of ICOs coming to
market, it is an impossible task for anyone, much less platforms like
Twitter or Facebook, to keep on top of which ICOs and cryptocurrencies
are genuine versus frauds,” said Zennon Kapron, director of the
financial consultancy Kapronasia.
“Although certainly
ICO advertising must have been a significant source of revenue for
Twitter, the repercussions of fraudulent activities just weren’t worth
the risk.”
Bitcoin has lost more than half its value
from a December peak of almost $20,000 as fears of a regulatory
clampdown spooked investors. News of the Facebook and Google bans also
knocked the price.
Ethereum .MVETH and Ripple’s XRP
.MVXRP, the second- and third-biggest digital currencies by market
capitalization, have tumbled this year too.
While
critics call cryptocurrencies a Ponzi scheme that will end in tears for
most investors, supporters say the coins are backed by powerful new
technology that can replace traditional fiat currencies and upend the
existing banking system.
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