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Twitter will start banning cryptocurrency ads tomorrow

Twitter will start banning cryptocurrency ads tomorrow

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Photo by Michele Doying / The Verge

Twitter will begin blocking cryptocurrency-related ads tomorrow, the company confirmed in a statement to The Verge. The move follows other social media platforms like Reddit back in 2016, and more recently, Facebook and Google, which have already banned cryptocurrency ads.

“We are committed to ensuring the safety of the Twitter community. As such, we have added a new policy for Twitter Ads relating to cryptocurrency,” the company says. “Under this new policy, the advertisement of Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) and token sales will be prohibited globally.” Rumors initially circulated a week ago that Twitter would ban such ads. Earlier this month, the company began removing accounts that intentionally solicit cryptocurrency exchanges, impersonating famous figures like Elon Musk, John McAfee, and Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin.

Twitter’s new policies are designed to discourage opportunities for fraud and deception, as users navigate “Crypto Twitter.” Among the cryptocurrency community, Crypto Twitter is infamous as a shady part of Twitter that can sometimes be an echo chamber for bitcoin evangelists to hype up the currency or for others to lure people into their freshly launched ICOs. It’s also an important source of news and whisperings.  

Twitter will update its policy page today, start rolling out the new ban tomorrow, and reach everyone over the next 30 days. “The policy will be fully enforceable among all advertisers within a month,” Twitter tells The Verge. All ICOs and token sales will be banned, but cryptocurrency exchanges and wallets will be restricted to only public companies listed on major stock markets.

Though services like Twitter and Google are taking a big stance against paid promotions of cryptocurrencies, research suggests that social media platforms’ ad bans may not be hurting digital token sites much. A report from SimilarWeb, a web traffic tracker, showed that less than 1 percent of traffic on exchange sites actually comes from paid ads. Most cryptocurrency exchange sites instead derive their traffic from coinmarketcap.com, which tracks market capitalization numbers, not from paid ads.