The UK advertising watchdog has banned a London underground campaign for Floki Inu, a cryptocurrency named after a dog owned by Tesla chief Elon Musk, for allegedly taking advantage of naive consumers unaware of the potential dangers of investing in digital crypto assets.
The poster campaign featured an image of a cartoon dog wearing a Viking helmet and encouraged consumers who may have missed out on making money from other successful cryptocurrencies, such as Dogecoin, to join the investment craze.
“Missed Doge? Get Floki” ran the campaign’s strapline, which warned in small print that the value of an investment can “go down as well as up” and noted that cryptocurrencies aren’t regulated in the UK.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) investigated the ad campaign because it trivialised the risk of investment, exploited consumers’ fears they might be “missing out” on the cryptocurrency boom and took advantage of their lack of knowledge of the controversial financial product.
Floki, which launched in June last year, told the ad watchdog their logo – based on Musk’s adopted Shiba Inu dog Floki – was key to brand recognition, and was neither socially irresponsible nor contributing to trivialising investment in the “meme coin”.
<p lang=«de» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«de»>Floki Frunkpuppy pic.twitter.com/xAr8T0Jfdf“We considered that the use of a cartoon imagery gave the impression that purchasing cryptocurrency was a light-hearted and trivial matter,” the ASA ruled. “As such, it distracted consumers from the seriousness of an investment which was volatile and unregulated.”
The company also said the ad campaign primarily targeted the “informed consumer” to take note of a new cryptocurrency opportunity. The “average consumer” was
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