“I’m surprised by these findings given that age-gate technology is
available on these social media platforms and easily implemented,”
said lead author Adam E. Barry, of Texas A&M University in College
Station, Texas.
The alcohol industry trade association Distilled Spirits Council of
the United States (DISCUS) issued a self-regulation guidance note
asserting that digital marketing communications are intended for
adults of legal purchase age and should be placed only in media
where at least 71.6 percent of the audience is reasonably expected
to be of legal age, and brand advertiser pages should require age
affirmation by the user before full interaction begins.
Based on the results of the new study on Twitter and Instagram, the
industry is not adhering to this self-regulation guidance, Barry
said.
“While it is not illegal to expose underage young persons to alcohol
advertising/promotions, I believe it is unethical to intentionally
expose underage persons to alcohol advertising given alcohol
advertising influences the likelihood of whether or not a young
person will initiate alcohol use, as well as how much existing
drinkers consume,” he told Reuters Health by email.
The researchers set up 10 Twitter and 10 Instagram profiles for
fictitious users ages 13, 15, 17, 19 or 21. Using these, the
researchers tried to interact with alcohol advertising content by
attempting to retweet, comment or share alcohol industry posts or
follow the official Instagram and Twitter profiles for 22 alcohol
brands for one month.
All the profiles could access, view and interact with alcohol
industry content, the researchers reported in the journal Alcohol
and Alcoholism.
On Twitter, profiles made for kids under age 21 could not follow or
receive promotional material from alcohol brands. But two profiles
for users age 21 or over received almost 2,000 alcohol related
tweets, collectively, over one month.
There was no age-gate for Instagram, and all underage profiles could
follow alcohol brand accounts and received on average 362
advertisements during the study. Promotional updates were most
frequent on Thursdays and Fridays. Alcohol brand Instagram accounts
responded directly to underage user comments.
During the month-long study, all of the underage profiles were
followed by alcohol advertisers, representatives or enthusiasts
outside of the 22 alcohol brands included in the original group.
“All social media should at minimum implement age-gate technology as
it is easy to use and directly aligns with the industry’s stated
desire to prevent underage youth from being exposed to alcohol
advertising,” Barry said.
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He noted that even though Twitter prevented youth from following
alcohol brands, there was unfettered access to viewing, interacting
with, and sharing posted content on Twitter.
The researchers only accessed their test profiles on smartphones, so
user experiences on other devices may have been different, they
note.
Alcohol advertising via traditional mediums does influence youth
drinking behaviors, and research on the effect of digital marketing
is just starting out, Barry said.
“What our findings show is that youth who follow alcohol brands on
Instagram are being bombarded, daily, with alcohol
advertising/promotions directly to their phones,” he said.
But social networking sites are used primarily by adults, with 88
percent of Instagram users and 91 percent of Twitter users age 21 or
older, which makes these platforms appropriate channels for spirits
marketers, according to Lisa Hawkins, vice president of Public
Affairs for the Distilled Spirits Council.
“The Distilled Spirits Council Code and its voluntary guidelines are
above and beyond any laws or regulations pertaining to alcohol
advertising,” Hawkins told Reuters Health by email. “Under the
Guidelines, spirits companies direct their advertising to adults 21
years of age or older.”
DISCUS had encouraged Instagram to implement effective age-gating
technologies like Twitter to allow for direct interactions with
users of legal purchase age, Hawkins said.
“Despite claims that advertising causes youth to drink alcohol,
government data show that underage drinking has continuously
declined over the past three decades, and is at historic lows,” she
noted.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1QjpLYc Alcohol and Alcoholism, online
November 22, 2015.
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