Undisclosed ads on TikTok evade EU ban on profiling minors

A study reveals that teenagers on TikTok are exposed to highly targeted undisclosed advertisements, bypassing the European Union's prohibition on profiling minors for ads. Researchers found that while formal ads comply with the law, hidden promotional content dominates and is aggressively personalized. This loophole in the Digital Services Act allows platforms to deliver commercial material disguised as regular posts.

The European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA) prohibits profiling minors for advertising purposes, but it applies mainly to formal ads purchased through a platform's system. A recent study highlights a significant gap: undisclosed promotional content, such as influencer marketing without required labels, continues to target teens effectively.

Sára Soľárová at the Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies in Slovakia and her team created automated accounts simulating 16- to 17-year-old teenagers and 20- to 21-year-old adults. These bots were given interests like beauty, fitness, or gaming and interacted with TikTok's For You feed for one hour daily over 10 days, viewing 7,095 videos in total.

Among these, 19 percent featured advertisements, with 56 percent being undisclosed. Formal ads for minor accounts were limited or absent and showed no personalization. In contrast, undisclosed ads were tailored to the bots' interests—for example, 92.1 percent matched a beauty interest for a simulated 16-year-old girl.

The study measured hidden profiling as five to eight times stronger than allowed for adult formal ads, based on interest-matching rates. Undisclosed ads comprised 84 percent of those seen by minors, compared to 49 percent for adults.

"The only way for us as a society to understand social media is to study it behaviourally, and this is the way we do it," Soľárová said. She added, "Formally, TikTok complies with the law because it does not profile the formal ads to minors... But the disclosed ads represent a small proportion of the total commercial content on the app."

TikTok declined to comment. Catalina Goanta at Utrecht University noted, "These undisclosed ads are a new form of targeted advertising... platforms are able to seamlessly deliver more commercial content." She emphasized that regulators have viewed influencer marketing too narrowly and that undisclosed ads harm consumers. Soľárová agreed, stating, "We have to expand the definition of what advertising is."

The findings are detailed in a preprint on arXiv (DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2603.05653).

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Realistic illustration depicting EU regulators finding TikTok in breach of Digital Services Act over addictive features like infinite scroll, with fines looming.
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EU finds TikTok in breach over addictive design features

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The European Commission has issued preliminary findings declaring TikTok's addictive design elements a violation of the Digital Services Act, potentially leading to fines up to 6% of its global turnover. The regulator highlighted features like infinite scroll and personalized recommendations that could harm users' wellbeing, especially minors. TikTok plans to challenge the accusations vigorously.

TikTok began on Tuesday (17) making all accounts of users under 16 private, to comply with the ECA Digital. The change requires parental authorization for alterations and complements existing restrictions. The law takes effect today, but its decree was postponed.

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Governments around the world are pushing to restrict children's access to social media, doubting platforms' ability to enforce age limits. TikTok has responded by announcing a new age-detection technology across Europe to prevent users under 13 from joining. This approach aims to balance protection with less drastic measures than outright bans.

필리핀 대학과 외국 대학들의 연구에 따르면, 2022년 총선에서 최소 1,500개의 소셜미디어 인플루언서 계정이 은밀한 선거 운동에 참여했다. 이 연구는 Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, YouTube 같은 플랫폼이 정치 후보를 은밀히 지지하는 데 사용된 점을 강조하며, 이러한 노력에 최대 2,700만 달러가 지출된 것으로 추정한다.

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Reddit has filed a legal challenge against Australia's new law banning social media access for those under 16, arguing it imposes intrusive verification and limits free expression. The San Francisco-based company announced the High Court action on Thursday, shortly after implementing age verification measures to comply with the legislation that took effect on Tuesday. The ban targets platforms like TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and Reddit, with fines up to $33 million for non-compliance.

Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) has approved a party motion calling for a minimum age of 14 to use social networks, along with stricter age-verification measures for teenagers and potential fines for platforms that fail to comply.

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In the debate over an age limit for social media, SPD and Jusos oppose usage bans for minors and instead call for stronger regulation of platform operators. They emphasize the need for transparency, sanctions, and media education. Meanwhile, the CDU is debating similar measures.

 

 

 

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