Pinterest announced Thursday that it would ban weight loss ads.
The company says the move is a response to a rise in unhealthy eating habits and eating disorders since the pandemic started, as reported by the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA).
"NEDA is encouraged by this necessary step in prioritizing the mental health and well-being of Pinners, especially those impacted by diet culture, body shaming, and eating disorders," Elizabeth Thompson, NEDA's interim CEO, said in a statement posted by Pinterest.
Other social media companies, including Instagram and TikTok, have banned a subset of weight loss claims and products from ads — specifically ads targeted to young people. That was in response to the proliferation of digitally (and physically) altered Instagram bodies that promote unrealistic beauty standards, ads selling potentially harmful diet products (like detox teas), and the rise of social media-inspired plastic surgery. Pinterest, however, says its policy is the first to ban "all" weight loss ads.
The policy is quite broad. It prohibits "any weight loss language or imagery," as well as testimonials, product shilling, idealization or denigration of certain body types, and references to Body Mass Index. It expands on Pinterest's ban on ads that contain weight loss pills and procedures, before and after pictures, body shaming, and other more obvious forms of toxic diet culture.
There is, however, a pretty significant loophole. Weight loss companies are not actually banned from advertising on Pinterest. The company says "Ads promoting healthy lifestyles and habits or fitness services and products will still be allowed, as long as they don’t focus on weight loss."
This is actually in step with current trends in the diet industry. Of course, there are still plenty of explicit diet ads on the internet. But some legacy players have shifted to accommodate new ad guidelines and consumer tastes.
In 2018, Weight Watchers rebranded to "WW" (maybe customers would forget what those Ws originally stood for?). It says it's currently a wellness-focused company, and its new tagline is "Wellness that Works."
You can bet the $2.5 billion corporation didn't make that move entirely out of the goodness of its heart. Reports show that millennials are much more interested in healthy eating, body positivity, and wellness — not weight loss. The diet industry has adapted while still cashing in on diet products.
Under the new policy, companies like WW can still advertise on Pinterest, as long as they don't explicitly reference weight loss — which might be just fine with them.
文章
7752
浏览
953
获赞
131
We should all settle disputes like Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson did on Twitter
Here's a thought, maybe don't tell a pro wrestler that wrestling isn't real. Chances are, as a wrestTwitch's new moderation feature lets users share banned troll accounts with other channels
As Twitch has become more and more popular over the years, that has inevitably meant a rise in trollTesla might stop taking orders for some models amid huge demand
If you order a Tesla now, you'll probably have a long wait ahead of you. Soon, however, it might becAmazon Prime gets into food delivery, invests in Grubhub
Amazon now holds a stake in Just Eat's U.S. meal delivery business, Grubhub, officially entering theUber will buy a fleet of 24,000 self
Uber just made a deal that will boost its self-driving efforts in a big way as well as signal a shifYour secret Twitter account may no longer be secret after hack
If you have a secret Twitter account, we've got some bad news for you. On Friday, Twitter disclosedSpaceX sticks daytime rocket landing back on Earth after launch to space
There may come a time when SpaceX landing a rocket stage back on Earth after flying to space isn't nWhen will your iPad become obsolete?
Believe it or not, it's been 12 years since Steve Jobs introduced the iPad to the world. Since then,Tesla will build a factory in Shanghai to help bring costs down
Tesla is about to build a factory in Shanghai, China, after months of appealing to the government foSamsung confirms Galaxy Unpacked is back on Aug. 10
Samsung fans, mark your calendars and start saving money now.The folks behind the Galaxy line of phoTesla sued again for alleged racism and harassment
UPDATE: Jul. 3, 2022, 11:07 a.m. EDT This article was corrected for clarity and sensitivity purposesClimate scientist who got death threats says he fears more attacks under Trump
U.S. climate scientists say they worry the incoming Trump administration might do more than cut offRussia sent payments quite literally labeled 'to finance election campaign of 2016'
Bad news, America: The terrifying 2016 election meddling plot continues to thicken in such a way thaHow to use Live Text on a video in iOS 16
Live Text arrived with the introduction of iOS 15, revolutionizing the way iPhone users could copy,Best free online courses from MIT
TL;DR: Find a wide range of free online courses from MIT on edX. A huge bank of free online courses