Google will ban any cryptocurrency- or plenty of fish sex videosinitial coin offering (ICO)-related ads starting in June, the company announced in an update to its Advertising Policies document.
According to the document, ads related to "cryptocurrencies and related content (including but not limited to initial coin offerings, cryptocurrency exchanges, cryptocurrency wallets, and cryptocurrency trading advice)" will no longer be allowed on Google's AdWords platform.
SEE ALSO: 'Uber' co-founder Garrett Camp is creating a new cryptocurrencyFor context, Google has lumped in the announcement together with the ban of ads for binary options, forex and financial spread betting.
Google appeared to have started quietly restricting cryptocurrency-related ads as early as last week, with some advertisers seeing significant performance drops for ICO-related ads.
Google's decision follows a similar one from Facebook, which banned cryptocurrency ads on its site in January. The reasoning was that these ads are "frequently associated with misleading or deceptive promotional practices." And Twitter also said it will take steps to combat cryptocurrency-related spam.
On Wednesday, Google published its annual report on "bad ads" -- ads that violate the company's advertising policies. In it, the company says it has updated its policies to "tackle emerging threats," and classifies cryptocurrencies under "unregulated or speculative financial products."
The most popular cryptocurrencies largely remained unfazed by the news. Bitcoin currently trades at $9,162, a 1.09 percent drop in the last 24 hours, while Ethereum trades at $691, a 1.57 percent drop in the same period, according to CoinMarketCap.
Disclosure: The author of this text owns, or has recently owned, a number of cryptocurrencies, including BTC and ETH.
Topics Bitcoin Google Cryptocurrency
St. Mark’s Saved by Lorin SteinThe Poet's Poker by David ZaxCycling; SecondCongratulations to Julian Barnes by The Paris ReviewHere are the 13 best tweets of the weekHere are the 13 best tweets of the weekWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for May 1Here are the 13 best tweets of the weekBest Gifts for Moms who TravelAbstracts by Scott TreleavenStaff Picks: ‘The Doll,’ Minaudières by The Paris ReviewHow to stop grieving over lost time after a breakupStaff Picks: 'Rules of Civility,’ Scott’s Photographs by The Paris ReviewThe whitewashing of roller skating's online revivalUnread Books; Changing Character Names by Lorin SteinPart 1: The Amanuensis by Mark Van de WalleJohn Jeremiah Sullivan on ‘Soundcheck’ by The Paris ReviewReading in Bed with James Franco by The Paris Review'SNL' cancels Pete DavidsonL.A. Advice: Writers Dating, Fear of the Blank Page by Sadie Stein The FCC just fined a robocall company $300 million Zoom might use your calls and data to train AI How to celebrate your first Pride AI automation still poses accessibility issues, especially for audio transcription The Morning News Roundup for April 10, 2014 Sadie Stein on Smiling at Strangers in Public IGN launched an AI chatbot for its game guides Infinite Reality by Kaya Genc The Morning News Roundup for April 15, 2014 Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 7 Sorry, there are no COVID bombshells in Dr. Fauci's emails Joe Biden swats a cicada that dive 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 6 What We’re Loving: Strokes, Sex Appeal, Splenetic Surfers by The Paris Review Opening Day by Sadie Stein Lonely Hunter by Sadie Stein ‘Barbie’ tops $1 billion and a new record for female directors Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 8 What We’re Loving: Dead Poets, Dead Magazines, Dead Zoo Gang Different Ways of Lying: An Interview with Jesse Ball by Rebecca Bates
2.4062s , 10495.3828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【plenty of fish sex videos】,Fresh Information Network