SCIENCE / HEALTH - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Food manufacturers target children on internet after regulator's TV advertising clampdown |
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by Helen Pidd The Guardian Entered into the database on Wednesday, August 01st, 2007 @ 21:56:17 MST |
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At the beginning of July, the sweet brand Skittles paid a six-figure sum to
set up a profile on the social networking site Bebo which has already been viewed
more than 50,000 times and attracted more than 3,500 "friends". In
an interview with the Guardian, a Bebo spokesman described these "friends"
as "brand ambassadors". Bebo users have to declare they are at least
13, but it is known that much younger children do use the site. Such practices have raised concerns among MPs, who said yesterday the government's
clampdown on advertising "junk food" on children's television had
failed because it allowed brands to simply divert their budgets online. Advertising to children on the internet is a largely unregulated area. Ofcom's
remit does not stretch that far, and although the Advertising Standards Authority's
code of conduct was recently extended to include online marketing to children,
it has left open a loophole that many brands exploit. That is that anything
classed as "editorial" is exempt from the ASA code. Here, editorial includes anything on a brand's own website, which is why the
McDonald's site can feature a Kids Zone section, inviting children to play a
Space Invaders-style game where they have to shoot down McDonald's logos. McDonald's chief marketing officer for northern Europe, Jill McDonald, admitted
to the Guardian that the company did not need to advertise to children to make
a profit, but said it was using its marketing as a force for good. As well as using social networking sites, some brands are also using internet
chat programs such as Windows Live Messenger (formerly MSN messenger) to target
potential customers, who are urged to download branded "buddies" to
their friends list. These virtual buddies then give the users the lowdown on
the brand's latest activity. Nigel Evans, a Conservative MP and member of the select committee for culture,
media and sport, which monitors new media and the advertising industry, said:
"If the tobacco industry deployed those sort of tactics then no doubt there
would be a change in legislation - government would clamp down on companies
like a ton of bricks." Philip Davies, a Conservative MP also on the select committee, said the Guardian's
findings showed the impotence of the Ofcom regulations. "It was entirely
predictable that this would happen. This was the folly of introducing a ban
on so-called junk food advertising. It was a piece of gesture politics,"
he said. Since April 1 this year, adverts for brands classed as being high in fat, salt
or sugar have been banned in or around programmes made for children, or which
are likely to appeal to children aged four to nine. This will be extended to
programmes aimed at four- to 15-year-olds from January next year. Social-networking
sites are used by more than 70% of young internet users and 41% of UK adult
users, Ofcom said. |