Introduction
Social media advertising has become one of the most important ways businesses reach Filipino consumers. Sellers advertise on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, messaging apps, livestream platforms, marketplaces, influencer pages, community groups, and short-form video platforms. Advertising may be done through paid ads, boosted posts, reels, livestream selling, affiliate links, sponsored reviews, influencer endorsements, discount campaigns, chat selling, private messages, and user-generated content.
In the Philippines, social media advertising is not a legal free-for-all. Even if an advertisement is posted casually from a personal account or a small online shop, it may still be covered by consumer protection, advertising, trade, data privacy, intellectual property, taxation, food and drug, health product, financial product, telecommunications, competition, and cybercrime laws.
The basic rule is simple: online advertisements must be truthful, fair, not misleading, and not abusive of consumers. A seller cannot escape responsibility by saying that the ad was “just a post,” “just content,” “just an influencer video,” “only a livestream,” or “only online.”
This article discusses the Philippine legal framework governing social media advertising and consumer protection, including deceptive advertising, influencer marketing, pricing, online selling, refunds, warranties, prohibited products, health claims, financial promotions, data privacy, spam, intellectual property, platform liability, consumer complaints, and practical compliance measures.
I. What Is Social Media Advertising?
Social media advertising refers to any marketing, promotion, endorsement, solicitation, or sales communication made through social media or digital platforms to influence consumers to buy, subscribe, inquire, click, register, download, invest, or transact.
It may include:
- Paid ads;
- boosted posts;
- sponsored posts;
- influencer endorsements;
- livestream selling;
- short-form video promotions;
- product reviews;
- affiliate marketing links;
- discount announcements;
- giveaways;
- raffles;
- brand collaborations;
- marketplace listings;
- chat-based selling;
- comment selling;
- private group promotions;
- direct messages;
- stories and reels;
- product demonstrations;
- testimonials;
- before-and-after posts;
- unboxing videos;
- brand ambassador content;
- referral links;
- online catalogues;
- business page posts.
If the post has a commercial purpose, it may be treated as advertising even if it looks casual or entertaining.
II. Main Legal Principle: Truthful and Non-Misleading Advertising
The central rule in consumer protection is that sellers, advertisers, manufacturers, distributors, service providers, and promoters should not mislead consumers.
An advertisement may be unlawful if it is:
- False;
- deceptive;
- misleading;
- incomplete in a material way;
- unfair;
- fraudulent;
- exaggerated beyond acceptable puffery;
- likely to confuse ordinary consumers;
- hiding important conditions;
- using fake endorsements;
- using fake reviews;
- misrepresenting price, quality, origin, safety, legality, warranty, or benefits.
A social media ad should give consumers a fair and accurate understanding of what is being sold.
III. Philippine Laws Relevant to Social Media Advertising
Several laws and regulatory frameworks may apply, depending on the product or service.
Relevant areas include:
- Consumer protection laws;
- advertising and sales promotion rules;
- price and product labeling laws;
- electronic commerce rules;
- data privacy law;
- cybercrime law;
- intellectual property law;
- food, drug, cosmetic, device, and health product regulation;
- financial product and lending regulation;
- securities and investment regulation;
- insurance regulation;
- telecommunications and spam-related rules;
- taxation and business registration rules;
- competition law;
- special laws on tobacco, alcohol, gambling, children, and regulated products.
A single social media campaign may trigger several legal duties at once.
IV. Who May Be Liable for Illegal Social Media Advertising?
Potentially liable persons or entities may include:
- Seller;
- business owner;
- manufacturer;
- distributor;
- importer;
- advertising agency;
- social media manager;
- influencer;
- affiliate marketer;
- livestream host;
- platform merchant;
- brand ambassador;
- content creator;
- page administrator;
- marketplace store operator;
- franchisee;
- financial promoter;
- company officers, in proper cases;
- data controller or processor;
- person who knowingly republishes deceptive claims.
Liability depends on participation, control, knowledge, product type, and applicable law.
A business cannot always avoid responsibility by blaming an influencer or agency. If the business approved, paid for, benefited from, or failed to supervise the advertisement, it may still be liable.
V. Consumer Protection in Online Transactions
Consumers buying through social media are still protected. Online buyers generally have rights relating to:
- Truthful product information;
- fair pricing;
- accurate descriptions;
- safe products;
- proper receipts or invoices;
- warranty rights;
- replacement, repair, refund, or other remedies where legally available;
- protection against scams;
- privacy of personal data;
- fair debt collection or payment practices;
- access to complaint mechanisms;
- protection against deceptive and unfair sales practices.
A seller cannot remove consumer rights merely by writing “no return, no exchange,” “payment first, no refund,” or “seller not liable after shipping.”
VI. Deceptive Sales Acts and Practices
A deceptive sales act occurs when a seller misleads a consumer about a product, service, price, quality, quantity, sponsorship, certification, warranty, or transaction condition.
Examples in social media advertising include:
- Saying a product is “authentic” when it is counterfeit;
- claiming an item is “brand new” when it is used or refurbished;
- advertising a product as “FDA approved” when it is not;
- using edited before-and-after photos;
- hiding that a product is pre-order and not on hand;
- saying “limited stock” when stock is not limited;
- using fake countdown timers;
- advertising a low price but requiring hidden fees;
- claiming “free shipping” but adding shipping cost elsewhere;
- using fake testimonials;
- creating fake customer comments;
- claiming a product cures disease without basis;
- using another brand’s photos for a different product;
- advertising a raffle without legal compliance;
- claiming a service is government-accredited when it is not.
A seller’s intent to deceive may matter in penalties, but an advertisement may still be treated as misleading if it is likely to deceive consumers.
VII. Unfair Sales Acts and Practices
An unfair sales act may involve oppressive, abusive, or unconscionable conduct, even if not technically false.
Examples include:
- High-pressure selling to vulnerable consumers;
- refusing to honor valid warranty claims;
- hiding material terms until after payment;
- exploiting elderly buyers or minors;
- changing prices after order confirmation without basis;
- refusing to deliver after payment;
- sending substitute products without consent;
- using fake scarcity to force immediate purchase;
- making cancellation impossible despite seller fault;
- imposing unreasonable penalties;
- using abusive collection messages;
- misleading consumers into subscriptions;
- making it difficult to opt out of recurring charges.
Online convenience does not justify unfair treatment.
VIII. Material Information That Should Not Be Hidden
Social media ads should disclose important information that may affect a consumer’s decision.
Material information may include:
- Actual price;
- taxes, delivery fees, and service charges;
- product size, quantity, weight, or variant;
- whether item is new, used, refurbished, surplus, or replica;
- delivery period;
- pre-order status;
- refund and warranty terms;
- subscription renewal terms;
- limitations of promos;
- eligibility requirements;
- risks or side effects;
- financing charges;
- expiration dates;
- seller identity;
- business address or contact details;
- regulatory approval or lack of it;
- paid partnership or sponsorship;
- affiliate commission;
- stock limitations;
- geographic restrictions;
- compatibility requirements.
A misleading omission can be as harmful as an outright false statement.
IX. “Puffery” vs. False Advertising
Not every exaggeration is illegal. Advertising often uses puffery, such as:
- “Best taste in town”;
- “super sulit”;
- “your new favorite snack”;
- “perfect for everyday use”;
- “premium feel.”
Puffery is usually subjective and not treated as a factual claim.
However, the following are factual claims that should be supportable:
- “Clinically proven”;
- “FDA approved”;
- “kills 99.9% of bacteria”;
- “100% original”;
- “made in Japan”;
- “dermatologist-tested”;
- “no side effects”;
- “guaranteed weight loss”;
- “lowest price in the Philippines”;
- “official distributor”;
- “lifetime warranty”;
- “DTI-approved promo”;
- “BSP-licensed investment platform.”
If a reasonable consumer would treat the statement as fact, the advertiser should be able to prove it.
X. Social Media Sellers and Business Registration
A person regularly selling goods or services online may need proper business registration.
Depending on the business structure and activity, this may include:
- DTI registration for sole proprietorship business name;
- SEC registration for corporation or partnership;
- barangay business clearance;
- mayor’s or business permit;
- BIR registration;
- invoices or receipts;
- books of accounts;
- tax filing;
- product-specific permits;
- platform merchant compliance.
Small sellers may think registration is unnecessary because they sell through social media only. However, regular online selling for profit can still be a business.
XI. Tax and Receipt Issues in Social Media Sales
Online sellers are generally expected to comply with tax rules.
Important obligations may include:
- Registering with the BIR;
- issuing invoices or receipts as required;
- filing tax returns;
- paying income tax and applicable business taxes;
- keeping books of accounts;
- withholding tax compliance, if applicable;
- preserving sales and expense records.
A customer may ask for a valid receipt or invoice. A seller should not refuse merely because the sale happened through Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, or chat.
XII. Product Descriptions
A product description should accurately state what the consumer will receive.
It should not misrepresent:
- brand;
- model;
- size;
- color;
- material;
- quantity;
- origin;
- manufacturing date;
- expiration date;
- condition;
- included accessories;
- compatibility;
- warranty;
- safety certification;
- authenticity;
- defects;
- limitations.
If photos are for illustration only, the seller should say so clearly. If actual color may vary, the seller should disclose that reasonable variation.
XIII. Use of Product Photos
Using product photos in social media ads raises both consumer protection and intellectual property issues.
Problems include:
- Using photos of original branded items while selling replicas;
- using supplier photos that do not match actual item quality;
- using photos stolen from another seller;
- using edited photos that exaggerate effects;
- using before-and-after images without proof;
- using images of celebrities without consent;
- using customer photos without permission;
- using stock images without license.
The safest approach is to use actual product photos or properly licensed images and to disclose when photos are illustrative.
XIV. Price Advertising
Prices in social media ads should be clear and accurate.
A seller should avoid:
- Posting “₱99 only” but charging mandatory add-ons;
- hiding delivery, service, packaging, or processing fees;
- advertising a sale price without original basis;
- saying “50% off” without a real reference price;
- changing the price after the consumer orders;
- using “PM for price” to avoid transparency where price disclosure is required by consumer rules or platform rules;
- using misleading installment prices;
- advertising a low monthly payment while hiding total cost.
The consumer should be able to understand what they must pay.
XV. “PM Is the Key” and Hidden Pricing
Many sellers use “PM me” instead of posting prices. While common, hidden pricing may raise consumer protection concerns when it prevents consumers from comparing prices or allows discriminatory or misleading pricing.
Transparent pricing is safer. At minimum, sellers should disclose key costs before asking for payment.
A seller should not use private messaging to lure consumers with one price and charge another.
XVI. Discounts and Sale Promotions
Discount advertising must be truthful.
Common issues include:
- Fake discounts;
- inflated original price;
- perpetual “sale” pricing;
- false “closing sale”;
- fake “clearance sale”;
- misleading “buy one take one”;
- hidden conditions;
- limited stock not disclosed;
- discount only available after additional purchase;
- promo period not stated.
A valid promo should clearly state:
- promo period;
- participating products;
- mechanics;
- discount amount;
- eligibility;
- exclusions;
- redemption process;
- stock limits;
- responsible seller;
- required permits, if applicable.
XVII. Raffles, Giveaways, and Contests
Social media raffles, giveaways, and contests may be regulated, especially when used as sales promotions.
A promotion may require government permit or compliance if it involves chance, prizes, purchase requirements, public participation, or commercial marketing.
Issues include:
- No permit where required;
- vague mechanics;
- changing rules mid-promo;
- not awarding prizes;
- fake winners;
- using the promo to collect personal data without proper disclosure;
- requiring excessive personal information;
- misleading consumers about odds;
- failing to state tax or shipping responsibilities.
A business running a social media giveaway should prepare written mechanics and check whether approval or permit is required.
XVIII. Influencer Marketing
Influencer marketing is advertising when a content creator promotes a brand, product, or service in exchange for money, free products, commissions, discounts, affiliate income, exposure, or other benefit.
Influencer content may include:
- sponsored posts;
- product reviews;
- unboxing videos;
- livestream selling;
- discount code promotions;
- affiliate links;
- brand ambassadorships;
- testimonials;
- “day in my life” product placements;
- giveaways;
- comparison videos;
- “honest review” posts.
Influencer advertising should be truthful and should disclose material connections.
XIX. Disclosure of Sponsored Content
If an influencer is paid or receives benefits to promote a product, that connection should be disclosed clearly.
Acceptable disclosures may include:
- “Paid partnership”;
- “Sponsored”;
- “Ad”;
- “Advertisement”;
- “In partnership with [brand]”;
- “Gifted by [brand]”;
- “Affiliate link”;
- “I earn commission from this link.”
Disclosures should be visible and understandable, not hidden among hashtags or buried at the end of a long caption.
Ambiguous tags like “thanks,” “collab,” or “partner” may not always be enough if ordinary consumers would not understand that the content is paid advertising.
XX. Influencer Liability
Influencers may be liable if they knowingly or negligently make false or misleading claims.
Examples:
- Claiming a slimming product caused weight loss without basis;
- saying a product is FDA-approved without checking;
- promoting an investment scam;
- using fake personal experience;
- claiming to have used a product they never used;
- hiding paid sponsorship;
- promising guaranteed income;
- promoting unregistered health products;
- endorsing counterfeit goods;
- failing to disclose affiliate commissions.
Influencers should verify claims before posting. “The brand told me to say it” is not always a complete defense.
XXI. Brand Liability for Influencer Claims
A brand may be liable for influencer content if:
- It paid for or sponsored the post;
- It gave the influencer talking points;
- It approved the content;
- It reposted or amplified the content;
- It knew of false claims and failed to correct them;
- It benefited from the misleading ad;
- It failed to supervise affiliate marketers.
Businesses should have written influencer agreements requiring truthful claims, proper disclosures, compliance with law, content approval rules, and takedown obligations.
XXII. Affiliate Marketing
Affiliate marketing occurs when a person earns commission for sales, clicks, sign-ups, or referrals.
Affiliate advertisers should disclose that they may earn commission. They should also avoid misleading claims about products.
Common risks include:
- Fake reviews;
- undisclosed commissions;
- exaggerated earnings claims;
- misleading product comparisons;
- copied advertising claims;
- promotion of unregistered products;
- deceptive scarcity claims;
- misleading “I found this secret deal” content.
Affiliate links are advertising if they are used to promote a product for commercial gain.
XXIII. Fake Reviews and Testimonials
Fake reviews may violate consumer protection laws.
Illegal or risky practices include:
- Posting fake customer reviews;
- paying people for positive reviews without disclosure;
- deleting all negative reviews to mislead consumers;
- using employees to pose as customers;
- using AI-generated testimonials as real customer experience;
- fabricating before-and-after stories;
- using testimonials from a different product;
- changing customer review wording materially;
- using photos of people who never used the product.
Testimonials should reflect real, honest, and typical experiences or disclose when results are exceptional.
XXIV. Before-and-After Claims
Before-and-after posts are common for cosmetics, skincare, supplements, fitness programs, dental services, hair growth products, and weight loss programs.
They may be misleading if:
- Photos are edited;
- lighting, angle, or filters exaggerate results;
- different persons are shown;
- results are not typical;
- time period is false;
- other treatments caused the result;
- health claims are not substantiated;
- disclaimers are hidden;
- the product is not approved for such claims.
Advertisers should keep evidence supporting the claimed results.
XXV. Health, Wellness, and Medical Claims
Health-related social media advertising is highly sensitive.
Products and services involving health may include:
- Medicines;
- supplements;
- cosmetics;
- skincare;
- medical devices;
- clinics;
- dental services;
- weight loss programs;
- aesthetic procedures;
- herbal products;
- food products with health claims;
- therapy services;
- diagnostic tests;
- fertility products;
- mental health services.
Claims should be truthful, supported, and compliant with health product rules. Unauthorized disease-cure claims are risky.
XXVI. Food Advertising
Food ads should not mislead consumers about:
- ingredients;
- nutrition;
- health benefits;
- organic status;
- sugar content;
- allergens;
- expiration date;
- preparation conditions;
- weight;
- halal status;
- source;
- safety;
- regulatory approval;
- whether it is homemade or commercially produced.
If a food product claims “sugar-free,” “low fat,” “high protein,” “organic,” “gluten-free,” or “immune boosting,” the seller should ensure the claim is legally and factually supportable.
XXVII. Supplement Advertising
Supplements are often advertised online with exaggerated claims.
Risky claims include:
- “Cures diabetes”;
- “removes cancer cells”;
- “guaranteed weight loss”;
- “melts fat without diet”;
- “reverses kidney disease”;
- “permanent cure”;
- “no side effects”;
- “doctor-approved” without basis;
- “FDA approved” if the correct regulatory status does not support that wording.
Supplements should not be advertised as substitutes for proper medical treatment.
XXVIII. Cosmetic and Skincare Advertising
Cosmetic ads should not make drug-like claims unless legally allowed.
Common risky claims:
- “Cures acne permanently”;
- “removes melasma in 3 days”;
- “whitens skin safely with no side effects”;
- “dermatologist-approved” without proof;
- “removes scars completely”;
- “FDA-approved treatment” when only product notification exists;
- before-and-after images using filters;
- undisclosed use of prescription ingredients.
Sellers should also be careful with skin-lightening, peeling, and injectable products because some may be regulated or unsafe.
XXIX. Medicines and Medical Devices
Advertising medicines and medical devices is more heavily regulated. Sellers should ensure that products are properly registered or authorized and that claims match approved indications.
Online selling of medicines may require special authorization and should comply with pharmacy, prescription, and health regulations.
Advertising prescription-only products directly to consumers can raise serious legal issues.
XXX. “FDA Approved” Claims
Sellers frequently misuse the phrase “FDA approved.”
A product may be:
- registered;
- notified;
- authorized;
- licensed;
- approved for a specific use;
- listed;
- subject to a certificate;
- not required to be registered in the way claimed.
Using “FDA approved” generically may mislead consumers if the approval status is different or if the product is approved only for limited claims.
A seller should state regulatory status accurately and keep supporting documents.
XXXI. Financial Product Advertising
Financial advertising on social media is regulated and risky.
Products and services may include:
- Loans;
- online lending apps;
- investment schemes;
- securities;
- crypto-related offers;
- insurance;
- pre-need products;
- mutual funds;
- trading platforms;
- forex promotions;
- crowdfunding;
- cooperatives;
- payment services;
- remittance services.
Financial ads should not promise guaranteed returns unless legally and factually justified. They should disclose risks, fees, terms, and licensing status.
XXXII. Investment Promotions
Social media investment ads are a common source of scams.
Warning signs include:
- guaranteed high returns;
- “double your money” promises;
- referral commissions;
- no clear business model;
- pressure to invest immediately;
- fake celebrity endorsements;
- fake screenshots of profits;
- unregistered securities;
- vague “trading” or “crypto mining” claims;
- no risk disclosure;
- claims that registration as a corporation equals authority to solicit investments.
A company’s registration as a business is not automatically authority to sell securities or solicit investments.
XXXIII. Lending and Loan Advertising
Online lending advertisements should clearly disclose:
- loan amount;
- interest rate;
- fees;
- penalties;
- payment schedule;
- total cost of credit;
- eligibility;
- collection practices;
- privacy practices;
- licensing or registration details where required.
Misleading “0% interest” claims may be unlawful if other charges make the loan costly. Harassing advertisements or abusive collection threats may also create liability.
XXXIV. Insurance Advertising
Insurance promotions should not mislead consumers about:
- coverage;
- exclusions;
- premiums;
- waiting periods;
- claims process;
- licensing of agent;
- guaranteed benefits;
- investment components;
- surrender values;
- risks;
- policy owner obligations.
Influencers promoting insurance should avoid acting as unlicensed agents if licensing is required for the activity.
XXXV. Crypto and Digital Asset Promotions
Crypto-related promotions may involve securities, commodities, payment systems, fraud, or unregulated risk depending on structure.
Risky claims include:
- guaranteed profit;
- no-risk trading;
- fake exchange licenses;
- fake testimonials;
- undisclosed referral fees;
- celebrity impersonation;
- “AI trading bot guaranteed income”;
- pressure to deposit quickly.
Advertisers should clearly disclose risks and avoid implying government approval where none exists.
XXXVI. Employment, Franchise, and Business Opportunity Ads
Social media ads for jobs, franchising, distributorships, reselling, and business opportunities are subject to consumer and labor-related scrutiny.
Risky ads include:
- “Earn ₱10,000 daily guaranteed”;
- fake job offers requiring upfront fees;
- disguised networking schemes;
- unregistered franchises;
- misleading reseller packages;
- fake overseas employment;
- investment packages presented as franchise;
- unclear refund policies;
- “no work needed” income claims.
Advertisements should clearly disclose costs, requirements, risks, and realistic income expectations.
XXXVII. Real Estate Advertising
Real estate ads on social media must be accurate.
Misleading claims include:
- “Ready for occupancy” when not ready;
- “near MRT” when far away;
- “no down payment” with hidden charges;
- fake reservation urgency;
- using artist’s perspective as actual photo;
- no disclosure of developer, license, or project status;
- misleading monthly amortization;
- failure to disclose financing conditions;
- advertising lots or units without proper authority.
Real estate sellers and brokers may be subject to professional and housing regulations.
XXXVIII. Motor Vehicle Advertising
Vehicle ads should disclose important conditions:
- cash price;
- financing terms;
- down payment;
- monthly amortization;
- total cost;
- chattel mortgage fees;
- insurance;
- registration fees;
- mileage;
- accident history, if known;
- whether vehicle is repossessed, surplus, imported, or encumbered;
- warranty;
- availability.
A low monthly payment ad may be misleading if it hides large down payments or balloon payments.
XXXIX. Travel Advertising
Travel ads should accurately disclose:
- inclusions;
- exclusions;
- taxes and fees;
- visa requirements;
- refund rules;
- rebooking conditions;
- hotel category;
- airline restrictions;
- baggage allowance;
- travel dates;
- blackout dates;
- agency identity and accreditation where applicable;
- risk of cancellation.
Social media travel scams are common. Consumers should verify the seller before paying.
XL. Education and Review Center Advertising
Schools, tutors, online courses, and review centers should avoid misleading claims such as:
- guaranteed board exam passing;
- fake accreditation;
- fake testimonials;
- inflated passing rates;
- undisclosed additional fees;
- fake scholarships;
- unclear cancellation policy;
- misleading certificates;
- unauthorized use of school or government logos.
Claims about pass rates should be supported by records.
XLI. Advertising to Children
Advertising directed at children requires special care.
Children may not understand persuasive intent, hidden sponsorships, in-app purchases, or risks.
Concerns include:
- junk food marketing;
- toys and collectibles;
- gambling-like mechanics;
- online games;
- loot boxes;
- influencer child content;
- unsafe challenges;
- beauty products for minors;
- financial products;
- data collection from minors.
Advertisers should not exploit children’s vulnerability or encourage unsafe conduct.
XLII. Minors as Influencers or Models
If minors are used in social media advertising, legal concerns may include:
- parental consent;
- child labor rules;
- exploitation;
- privacy;
- schooling;
- earnings management;
- safety;
- sexualization;
- data protection;
- platform rules.
Brands should avoid content that places children at risk or uses them deceptively.
XLIII. Data Privacy in Social Media Advertising
Social media advertising often involves personal data.
Personal data may include:
- name;
- phone number;
- address;
- email;
- photos;
- location;
- purchase history;
- browsing behavior;
- device identifiers;
- interests;
- age;
- gender;
- messages;
- payment information;
- ID documents;
- customer reviews;
- screenshots of conversations.
Businesses that collect or use personal data must follow data privacy principles such as transparency, legitimate purpose, proportionality, security, and respect for data subject rights.
XLIV. Collecting Customer Data Through Ads
Businesses often collect customer data through:
- lead forms;
- comment mining;
- direct messages;
- order forms;
- Google forms;
- landing pages;
- giveaways;
- raffles;
- loyalty programs;
- chatbot flows;
- newsletter signups;
- retargeting pixels;
- customer lists.
The business should tell consumers what data is collected, why it is collected, how it will be used, who will receive it, how long it will be kept, and how consumers may exercise their rights.
XLV. Privacy Notices
A privacy notice should be clear and accessible. It may be placed in:
- website checkout pages;
- lead forms;
- online order forms;
- social media page information;
- chatbot menu;
- raffle mechanics;
- campaign landing pages;
- customer onboarding forms.
A simple seller should at least avoid collecting unnecessary personal data and should secure the data collected.
XLVI. Consent in Digital Marketing
Consent may be needed for certain marketing uses, especially direct marketing, sensitive personal information, profiling, or sharing data with third parties.
Consent should be:
- informed;
- voluntary;
- specific;
- recorded where necessary;
- capable of being withdrawn.
Pre-checked boxes, hidden consent, or “by messaging us you consent to everything” may be legally weak.
XLVII. Retargeting and Tracking
Social media ads often use tracking pixels, cookies, custom audiences, lookalike audiences, and retargeting tools.
These may involve personal data processing. Businesses using such tools should consider:
- privacy notice;
- consent where required;
- platform terms;
- data sharing arrangements;
- security;
- customer opt-out;
- minimization of data;
- limits on sensitive targeting.
Targeting consumers based on sensitive data may be especially risky.
XLVIII. Direct Marketing Messages and Spam
Sending unsolicited promotional messages may raise legal and regulatory issues, especially if done through SMS, email, messaging apps, or automated systems.
Businesses should avoid:
- sending spam messages;
- buying contact lists without consent;
- adding people to group chats without permission;
- repeatedly messaging consumers after opt-out;
- sending misleading links;
- using masked sender names deceptively;
- impersonating banks or government agencies;
- sending phishing-like promotions.
A consumer should be able to opt out of direct marketing.
XLIX. Posting Customer Information Online
Sellers sometimes post customer names, addresses, IDs, proof of payment, complaints, or unpaid balances on social media.
This is risky.
Examples of improper conduct:
- Posting a buyer’s address on Facebook;
- shaming a customer for unpaid balance;
- posting ID photos as “proof”;
- sharing private chat screenshots;
- posting delivery labels without redaction;
- exposing phone numbers;
- publicly accusing a buyer of fraud without proper basis.
Even if the seller is frustrated, public disclosure of personal data may violate privacy rights and may create defamation or harassment issues.
L. Handling Complaints Publicly
When consumers complain on social media, businesses should respond professionally.
Good practice:
- Acknowledge the complaint;
- move sensitive details to private channel;
- avoid insults;
- do not post the customer’s personal data;
- preserve records;
- offer lawful remedy if appropriate;
- avoid admitting liability prematurely;
- avoid deleting legitimate complaints solely to mislead others.
A hostile public response may turn a small complaint into a legal and reputational problem.
LI. Intellectual Property in Social Media Advertising
Advertisements must respect intellectual property rights.
Potential issues include:
- Unauthorized use of trademarks;
- counterfeit goods;
- copyright infringement;
- use of music without license;
- use of photos or videos without permission;
- use of celebrity image without consent;
- copying another seller’s product descriptions;
- using brand logos falsely;
- false affiliation;
- selling replicas;
- parallel import issues;
- fake franchise claims.
Social media makes copying easy, but it does not make copying lawful.
LII. Trademark Issues
A seller should not use another brand’s trademark in a way that confuses consumers.
Risky practices include:
- Using a famous logo on unbranded goods;
- advertising “Nike-inspired” products with Nike logo;
- selling “Class A” replicas;
- using brand hashtags to sell counterfeit goods;
- claiming “authorized reseller” without authority;
- using competitor names in misleading ads;
- creating a page that looks like an official brand page.
A seller of genuine secondhand goods may describe the brand truthfully, but should not imply official affiliation if none exists.
LIII. Copyright Issues
Copyright may protect:
- photos;
- videos;
- music;
- graphics;
- captions;
- product descriptions;
- website text;
- logos;
- artwork;
- jingles;
- training materials;
- course content.
A business should not simply download and reuse someone else’s content. Permission, license, or lawful use should be secured.
Using trending music in commercial ads may violate copyright or platform licensing terms if the music is not cleared for commercial use.
LIV. Right of Publicity, Privacy, and Image Use
Using a person’s image, name, voice, likeness, or testimonial for advertising without consent may create liability.
This applies to:
- celebrities;
- influencers;
- customers;
- employees;
- children;
- doctors;
- professionals;
- ordinary individuals.
A business should obtain consent before using customer photos, screenshots, before-and-after images, or testimonials in ads.
LV. Comparative Advertising
Comparative advertising compares one product with another. It may be allowed if truthful, fair, and not misleading.
Risky comparative ads include:
- false claims about competitors;
- doctored tests;
- fake price comparisons;
- unfairly selecting weaker competitor products;
- using competitor trademarks in a confusing way;
- claiming superiority without evidence;
- disparaging competitors rather than comparing facts.
A business should keep evidence supporting comparison claims.
LVI. Defamation and Cyberlibel Risks in Advertising
Advertisements can become defamatory if they make false statements harming another person or business.
Examples:
- “Our competitor sells fake products” without proof;
- “This clinic kills patients” as a marketing attack;
- “Other brands are toxic” without basis;
- fake exposés used to promote own product;
- influencer takedown videos sponsored by a competitor.
Negative advertising must be factually supported and legally reviewed.
LVII. Endorsements by Professionals
Ads using doctors, dentists, pharmacists, lawyers, financial advisers, engineers, teachers, or other professionals may be subject to professional ethics and regulatory rules.
Potential issues:
- false professional endorsement;
- misleading expert authority;
- use of professional title without license;
- claims beyond professional competence;
- testimonials prohibited by professional rules;
- conflict of interest;
- failure to disclose sponsorship;
- unauthorized practice of profession.
Professional endorsements should be carefully reviewed.
LVIII. Use of Government Logos or “Approved” Claims
A seller should not use government seals, agency logos, or official-looking documents in a way that misleads consumers.
Risky claims include:
- “government-approved” without basis;
- fake permits;
- edited certificates;
- using DTI, BIR, FDA, SEC, BSP, or LGU logos as if endorsement;
- showing business registration as proof of product approval;
- using certificates for a different product;
- expired permits.
Registration with a government agency often means only that the business exists or the product is listed; it does not always mean the government endorses the product’s quality or performance.
LIX. Product Safety
Social media sellers must not sell unsafe products.
Safety concerns include:
- defective electronics;
- unsafe chargers;
- expired food;
- unregistered medicines;
- contaminated cosmetics;
- toys with choking hazards;
- unsafe baby products;
- counterfeit automotive parts;
- flammable goods;
- mislabeled chemicals;
- unapproved medical devices;
- products lacking safety warnings.
If a seller learns that a product is unsafe, the seller may need to stop selling, warn consumers, coordinate recall, or report to authorities depending on the product and risk.
LX. Product Labels
Product labels should be accurate and legally compliant.
Important label information may include:
- product name;
- manufacturer or importer;
- ingredients;
- net content;
- country of origin;
- warnings;
- expiration date;
- batch number;
- usage instructions;
- regulatory number, if applicable;
- allergen information;
- storage instructions;
- age restrictions;
- language requirements.
Social media ads should not contradict product labels.
LXI. Selling Imported Products Online
Importers and resellers should ensure imported products comply with Philippine laws.
Issues include:
- customs compliance;
- product registration;
- labeling;
- safety standards;
- warranty;
- parallel import questions;
- counterfeit risk;
- consumer remedies;
- tax compliance.
A seller should not claim “imported” as a substitute for legal compliance.
LXII. Counterfeit and “Class A” Goods
Selling counterfeit goods online may violate intellectual property, consumer protection, and criminal laws.
Terms like:
- “Class A”;
- “mirror copy”;
- “OEM quality”;
- “replica”;
- “inspired”;
- “same as original”;
do not necessarily make the sale lawful.
If consumers are led to believe a product is genuine, the ad is deceptive. Even if consumers know it is fake, selling counterfeit branded goods may still be illegal.
LXIII. Pre-Orders
Pre-order advertising should be clear.
Disclose:
- item is not yet on hand;
- expected arrival date;
- risk of delay;
- cancellation rules;
- refund rules;
- down payment terms;
- supplier dependency;
- whether price may change;
- import or customs risks;
- limited availability.
A seller should not advertise pre-order goods as “available now” if they are not available.
LXIV. Dropshipping
Dropshipping is a business model where the seller accepts orders and another supplier ships directly to the buyer.
Consumer protection still applies. The seller should not evade responsibility by saying, “I am only a dropshipper.”
The seller should disclose:
- delivery time;
- supplier location if material;
- return process;
- product specifications;
- warranty handling;
- shipping fees;
- customs duties, if any;
- seller contact details.
The customer transacts with the seller, not just the hidden supplier.
LXV. Livestream Selling
Livestream selling is advertising and selling in real time.
Legal issues include:
- inaccurate claims during live presentation;
- pressure selling;
- unclear prices;
- failure to disclose defects;
- fake scarcity;
- fake bidders or fake miners;
- unclear payment deadlines;
- no receipts;
- no refund policy;
- counterfeit goods;
- regulated products;
- replayed videos presented as live;
- influencer sponsorship not disclosed.
Sellers should keep records of livestream offers, confirmed orders, prices, and buyer agreements.
LXVI. “Mine” Selling and Comment-Based Orders
In comment selling, consumers type “mine,” “sold,” or similar terms to reserve an item.
Sellers should clearly state:
- whether comment creates a binding order;
- payment deadline;
- cancellation rule;
- shipping fee;
- item condition;
- defects;
- return policy;
- order confirmation process.
Ambiguity leads to disputes.
LXVII. Subscription and Auto-Renewal Ads
If a product or service renews automatically, the ad should disclose:
- recurring charge;
- billing interval;
- trial period end date;
- cancellation process;
- minimum commitment;
- penalties;
- price after promo;
- payment method storage.
“Free trial” ads may be misleading if consumers are charged without clear notice.
LXVIII. Dark Patterns
Dark patterns are manipulative design choices that push consumers into choices they did not intend.
Examples:
- Hidden unsubscribe buttons;
- confusing cancellation process;
- fake countdown timers;
- preselected add-ons;
- disguised ads;
- misleading buttons;
- forced consent;
- hidden fees at checkout;
- shaming language for refusing offer;
- making refund request difficult.
Dark patterns may be treated as unfair or deceptive practices.
LXIX. Marketplace Platforms
Online marketplaces may have their own rules on prohibited items, seller conduct, refunds, reviews, and advertising. These platform rules do not replace Philippine law.
A seller may be suspended by the platform and also face government complaint.
Consumers should use platform dispute systems where available, but they may also report to government agencies when legal rights are violated.
LXX. Platform Liability
Whether a platform is liable depends on its role.
A platform that merely hosts third-party ads may have different responsibility from a platform that:
- sells directly;
- controls the transaction;
- processes payment;
- warehouses goods;
- promotes the product;
- guarantees authenticity;
- handles returns;
- knowingly allows illegal products;
- ignores repeated complaints.
Platform liability is fact-specific and may depend on consumer, e-commerce, data privacy, and special laws.
LXXI. Consumer Right to Refund, Repair, Replacement, or Other Remedy
Philippine consumer protection recognizes remedies for defective, misrepresented, or non-conforming goods and services.
Depending on the facts, consumers may seek:
- repair;
- replacement;
- refund;
- price reduction;
- cancellation;
- damages;
- warranty service;
- delivery of missing items;
- correction of service;
- administrative complaint.
A seller cannot always impose a blanket “no refund” rule if the product is defective or not as advertised.
LXXII. “No Return, No Exchange” Policies
“No return, no exchange” signs or posts are often misunderstood.
A seller may set reasonable rules for change-of-mind returns, but cannot use “no return, no exchange” to deny legal remedies for:
- defective products;
- wrong item delivered;
- fake goods;
- missing parts;
- misrepresented quality;
- unsafe goods;
- breach of warranty;
- seller fault.
A clearer policy is: “No return or exchange for change of mind, but defective or incorrectly delivered items will be handled according to law.”
LXXIII. Warranty Advertising
Warranty claims should be clear.
Disclose:
- warranty period;
- who provides warranty;
- coverage;
- exclusions;
- service process;
- required documents;
- shipping cost for warranty;
- whether warranty is local or international;
- whether product is covered by manufacturer warranty;
- whether product is gray market or surplus.
A seller should not advertise “warranty” and then refuse all claims.
LXXIV. Delivery and Shipping Claims
Social media ads should accurately state delivery terms.
Disclose:
- courier;
- shipping fee;
- estimated delivery time;
- risk of delay;
- area coverage;
- cash on delivery availability;
- packaging fee;
- insurance;
- responsibility for lost parcel;
- return shipping rules.
If the seller promises delivery by a date, the seller should take reasonable steps to meet it.
LXXV. Cash on Delivery
Cash on delivery does not eliminate consumer rights. It also does not eliminate seller rights if the buyer refuses without valid reason.
Ads should state:
- COD availability;
- inspection rules;
- cancellation rules;
- failed delivery consequences;
- shipping fees;
- courier limitations.
Sellers should avoid sending unordered goods and demanding payment.
LXXVI. Proof of Delivery and Parcel Scams
Sellers and buyers should preserve:
- order confirmation;
- tracking number;
- proof of payment;
- courier proof of delivery;
- photos of package;
- unboxing video, where practical;
- chat records.
Fake parcel scams may involve consumers receiving items they did not order. Businesses should not use deceptive shipping practices.
LXXVII. Advertising Regulated or Prohibited Products
Some products cannot be freely advertised or sold online.
Examples may include:
- prescription medicines;
- certain medical devices;
- tobacco and vape products;
- alcohol, subject to restrictions;
- firearms and weapons;
- fireworks and explosives;
- pesticides and chemicals;
- gambling services;
- adult services or obscene material;
- counterfeit goods;
- unregistered investment products;
- illegal drugs;
- wildlife and protected species;
- products violating import or safety laws.
Even if a platform allows a post temporarily, the product may still be illegal.
LXXVIII. Tobacco, Vape, and Alcohol Advertising
Advertisements for age-restricted products must follow special rules.
Concerns include:
- advertising to minors;
- health warnings;
- platform restrictions;
- prohibited claims;
- influencer promotion;
- location restrictions;
- online age verification;
- local ordinances;
- product registration or tax rules.
Businesses should be careful when promoting these products on youth-heavy platforms.
LXXIX. Gambling and Betting Ads
Gambling-related ads are highly regulated. Promotions involving betting, casino games, online gambling, raffles, or games of chance may require licensing or may be prohibited depending on the activity.
Ads should not imply legality merely because a page exists or because payments are accepted.
Consumers should verify regulatory authorization before participating.
LXXX. Environmental and Sustainability Claims
Green advertising is increasingly common.
Claims such as:
- eco-friendly;
- biodegradable;
- sustainable;
- carbon neutral;
- plastic-free;
- organic;
- cruelty-free;
- recycled;
- zero waste;
should be truthful and supported.
Vague green claims may mislead consumers if they exaggerate environmental benefits.
LXXXI. Halal, Organic, Vegan, and Ethical Claims
Special product claims should be supported by certification or evidence where required.
Risky claims include:
- “halal certified” without certification;
- “organic” without compliance;
- “vegan” despite animal-derived ingredients;
- “cruelty-free” without basis;
- “locally made” when imported;
- “fair trade” without verification.
Consumers may rely strongly on these claims for religious, health, ethical, or personal reasons.
LXXXII. Scarcity and Urgency Claims
Online ads often use urgency:
- “Last 2 slots”;
- “Only today”;
- “Closing in 10 minutes”;
- “Limited stocks”;
- “Price increases tomorrow.”
These claims should be truthful. Fake urgency can be deceptive.
If a sale is extended repeatedly, the advertiser should avoid implying that consumers must buy immediately when that is not true.
LXXXIII. Testimonials About Earnings
Ads for business opportunities, networking, courses, trading, franchising, or affiliate programs often show income screenshots.
These may mislead if:
- results are exceptional;
- costs are hidden;
- losses are not disclosed;
- screenshots are fake;
- income depends on recruitment;
- no typical earnings disclosure;
- risks are hidden.
Advertisers should avoid promising guaranteed income unless it is truly guaranteed and legally supportable.
LXXXIV. Use of AI in Advertising
Artificial intelligence may be used to create images, testimonials, chatbots, influencers, product demos, and scripts.
Legal risks include:
- fake testimonials;
- misleading deepfake endorsements;
- AI-generated product results;
- false celebrity endorsements;
- manipulated before-and-after images;
- undisclosed chatbot limitations;
- copyright issues;
- data privacy issues;
- discriminatory targeting.
If AI-generated content could mislead consumers, disclose or avoid it.
LXXXV. Chatbots and Automated Sales
Chatbots used in social media selling should not mislead consumers.
They should provide accurate information about:
- price;
- availability;
- refund policy;
- delivery;
- seller identity;
- data use;
- subscription terms.
If a chatbot collects personal data, privacy rules apply. If a chatbot gives financial, medical, or legal information, additional risks arise.
LXXXVI. Consumer Complaints
Consumers may complain when they experience:
- fake product;
- non-delivery;
- defective item;
- refusal of refund;
- misleading ad;
- fake discount;
- unsafe product;
- unregistered health product;
- unauthorized charges;
- data privacy violation;
- scam;
- abusive collection;
- fake investment;
- counterfeit goods.
The proper forum depends on the product or issue.
LXXXVII. Where Consumers May Report
Possible complaint channels include:
- The seller or platform dispute system;
- Department of Trade and Industry for many consumer goods and trade complaints;
- Food and Drug Administration for regulated health products;
- Securities and Exchange Commission for investment solicitation and corporate/securities issues;
- Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas for regulated banks and financial institutions;
- Insurance Commission for insurance products;
- National Privacy Commission for data privacy concerns;
- National Telecommunications Commission for telecom-related issues;
- local government offices for local permit or business issues;
- police or NBI for scams, fraud, identity theft, or cybercrime;
- prosecutor’s office for criminal complaints;
- regular courts or small claims courts for civil recovery;
- intellectual property authorities for counterfeits and IP violations.
A consumer may need to use more than one channel, especially when both refund and criminal fraud are involved.
LXXXVIII. Evidence for Consumer Complaints
Consumers should preserve:
- screenshot of ad;
- seller page link;
- product listing;
- price shown;
- chat conversation;
- order confirmation;
- proof of payment;
- receipt or invoice;
- delivery tracking;
- photos or videos of product received;
- unboxing video, if available;
- warranty card;
- seller’s refund refusal;
- platform complaint ticket;
- bank or e-wallet transaction reference;
- seller’s identity details;
- product labels;
- regulatory claims;
- names of influencers who promoted it.
Screenshots should show date, time, username, and URL where possible.
LXXXIX. Remedies for Consumers
Depending on the case, consumers may seek:
- refund;
- replacement;
- repair;
- delivery of correct item;
- cancellation of transaction;
- removal of misleading ad;
- administrative penalty against seller;
- product recall;
- damages;
- criminal prosecution;
- takedown of fake account;
- account suspension;
- chargeback or payment reversal;
- data deletion or correction;
- enforcement of warranty;
- small claims recovery.
The best remedy depends on the amount, evidence, seller identity, and urgency.
XC. Small Claims for Online Purchases
If a consumer’s claim is for money within the small claims threshold, the consumer may consider small claims court after satisfying any required preconditions.
Small claims may be useful for:
- refund of payment;
- unpaid delivery;
- defective product refund;
- debt from online transaction;
- simple money claims.
However, if the issue involves injunction, complex fraud, criminal liability, or regulatory enforcement, other remedies may be needed.
XCI. Criminal Liability for Online Scams
If a seller never intended to deliver, used fake identity, repeatedly scammed buyers, or obtained money through deception, criminal laws may apply.
Possible issues include:
- estafa;
- cybercrime-related fraud;
- identity theft;
- falsification;
- illegal use of access devices;
- investment scam violations;
- other special law offenses.
Consumers should report promptly and preserve payment trail.
XCII. Seller Defenses
A seller accused of misleading advertising may raise defenses such as:
- product description was accurate;
- consumer misunderstood despite clear disclosure;
- defect was caused by buyer misuse;
- item was sold as used or defective with disclosure;
- delay was caused by courier and disclosed risk;
- refund was offered;
- ad was corrected promptly;
- influencer acted outside approved script;
- claim was supported by evidence;
- seller was a platform intermediary only;
- complaint is fraudulent or abusive.
Defenses depend on documentation. Sellers should keep records.
XCIII. Responsibilities of Online Sellers
Online sellers should:
- Register business where required;
- use truthful ads;
- disclose prices and material terms;
- issue receipts or invoices;
- keep records;
- honor warranties;
- protect customer data;
- avoid fake reviews;
- use actual product photos;
- disclose sponsorships;
- verify influencer claims;
- avoid selling prohibited goods;
- comply with product-specific regulations;
- respond to complaints promptly;
- preserve transaction records.
Compliance builds trust and reduces disputes.
XCIV. Responsibilities of Consumers
Consumers should also act prudently.
Before buying, consumers should:
- verify seller identity;
- check reviews critically;
- avoid deals that are too good to be true;
- ask for complete price and terms;
- verify product registration for regulated products;
- avoid sending IDs unnecessarily;
- pay through safer channels where possible;
- preserve screenshots;
- read refund policy;
- beware fake endorsements;
- verify business permits for high-value transactions;
- avoid investment offers promising guaranteed returns.
Consumer protection law helps, but prevention matters.
XCV. Advertising Agencies and Social Media Managers
Agencies and social media managers should not blindly post client claims.
They should:
- ask for substantiation of factual claims;
- avoid misleading edits;
- check regulatory restrictions;
- use licensed content;
- ensure disclosures for sponsored content;
- keep client approvals;
- avoid fake reviews;
- archive ads;
- correct false claims promptly;
- include compliance obligations in contracts.
An agency may be exposed if it knowingly creates deceptive ads.
XCVI. Contracts With Influencers and Affiliates
A brand should have written agreements covering:
- required disclosures;
- approved claims;
- prohibited claims;
- content review;
- compliance with laws;
- use of intellectual property;
- confidentiality;
- data privacy;
- takedown obligations;
- indemnity;
- reporting metrics;
- exclusivity;
- treatment of free products;
- commission terms;
- recordkeeping.
Verbal influencer arrangements create compliance risks.
XCVII. Recordkeeping for Advertisers
Advertisers should keep:
- copies of ads;
- dates of publication;
- targeting criteria;
- influencer contracts;
- approvals;
- substantiation documents;
- permits;
- product certificates;
- promo mechanics;
- customer complaints;
- correction notices;
- takedown requests;
- sales records;
- refund records.
If a complaint is filed, records may determine whether the seller acted lawfully.
XCVIII. Substantiation of Claims
Before making factual claims, advertisers should have evidence.
Examples:
- Laboratory tests;
- product registration documents;
- supplier certifications;
- clinical studies;
- official permits;
- warranty documents;
- price comparison records;
- customer survey data;
- actual sales records;
- before-and-after documentation;
- professional certifications.
Evidence should exist before the ad is published, not only after a complaint.
XCIX. Correcting Misleading Ads
If an ad is found misleading, the business should act quickly.
Steps may include:
- remove or edit the ad;
- notify influencers to stop posting;
- correct captions and claims;
- issue clarification;
- inform affected customers;
- offer refunds or remedies where appropriate;
- preserve records;
- retrain marketing staff;
- review compliance process.
Prompt correction may reduce harm and penalties.
C. Takedown Requests
A person or agency may request removal of social media content if it is:
- fraudulent;
- infringing;
- defamatory;
- privacy-violating;
- counterfeit-related;
- non-compliant with platform rules;
- promoting illegal products;
- impersonating a business;
- using non-consensual images;
- misleading consumers.
Takedown through platforms may be faster than formal litigation, but legal complaints may still be necessary.
CI. Advertising and Competition Law
Advertising may also affect competition.
Problematic conduct may include:
- false disparagement of competitors;
- misleading comparative advertising;
- collusion in pricing campaigns;
- abuse of dominant market position through deceptive practices;
- exclusive arrangements that mislead consumers;
- bait-and-switch advertising;
- false claims about market leadership.
Competition issues usually arise in larger markets, but small businesses can still face unfair competition claims.
CII. Bait-and-Switch Advertising
Bait-and-switch occurs when a seller advertises an attractive product or price to lure consumers, then pressures them to buy a different, usually more expensive, product.
Examples:
- Ad shows a cheap phone, but seller says unavailable and pushes another unit;
- advertised promo item is never actually available;
- seller uses fake low price to generate leads;
- buyer pays for one model but receives inferior model;
- “free” item requires undisclosed purchase.
This may be deceptive.
CIII. Negative Option Marketing
Negative option marketing charges consumers unless they opt out.
Examples:
- free trial automatically becomes paid subscription;
- add-on is preselected;
- consumer is enrolled in membership after one purchase;
- recurring billing hidden in terms;
- cancellation difficult.
Clear consent and disclosure are necessary.
CIV. Bundling and Add-Ons
If a seller bundles products or adds charges, the ad should disclose:
- what is included;
- whether add-ons are optional;
- total price;
- individual prices if relevant;
- warranty for each item;
- refund treatment for bundles;
- compatibility.
Consumers should not be surprised by mandatory add-ons after clicking the ad.
CV. Installment and “Buy Now, Pay Later” Advertising
Installment ads should disclose total cost, not just monthly payments.
Important terms:
- down payment;
- monthly amount;
- number of months;
- interest;
- processing fees;
- late fees;
- total amount payable;
- consequences of default;
- repossession or collection terms;
- eligibility.
“₱999/month only” may be misleading if total cost and conditions are hidden.
CVI. Advertising Credit Cards, Loans, and Payment Plans
Credit-related ads may be regulated by financial laws and consumer protection rules.
They should avoid:
- guaranteed approval without basis;
- hidden fees;
- misleading “0%” claims;
- failure to disclose annual fees;
- false credit limit promises;
- improper collection threats;
- fake bank affiliation.
Financial advertisers should be especially careful.
CVII. Advertising Professional Services
Professional services advertised on social media may be subject to ethics rules.
Examples:
- legal services;
- medical services;
- dental services;
- accounting services;
- engineering services;
- architecture services;
- real estate brokerage;
- financial advisory services.
Professionals should avoid guarantees, misleading specialization claims, unauthorized testimonials, and false credentials.
CVIII. Political and Issue Advertising
Although different from consumer advertising, political and issue ads on social media may be subject to election, campaign finance, platform, and disclosure rules.
Businesses should be cautious when mixing political endorsements with commercial promotions, especially during election periods.
CIX. Social Media Advertising and Cybercrime
Cybercrime issues may arise when ads involve:
- phishing links;
- fake login pages;
- identity theft;
- spoofed pages;
- fraudulent payment collection;
- hacking;
- malware distribution;
- online scams;
- cyberlibel;
- unauthorized access;
- computer-related fraud.
A deceptive ad may be both a consumer protection issue and a criminal cybercrime issue.
CX. Fake Pages and Impersonation
Businesses and consumers may be harmed by fake pages pretending to be legitimate brands.
Fake pages may:
- collect payments;
- steal credentials;
- sell counterfeit goods;
- conduct fake promos;
- impersonate customer service;
- send phishing links;
- damage reputation.
Businesses should monitor impersonation and report fake pages to platforms and authorities where needed.
CXI. Use of Customer Chats as Advertising
Some sellers post screenshots of customer messages to prove satisfaction or demand.
This can create privacy and consent issues. Before posting chats:
- get consent;
- remove names and contact details;
- do not expose addresses or payment information;
- avoid misleading edits;
- do not post sensitive complaints;
- avoid humiliating customers.
Even positive testimonials should be used with permission.
CXII. Employee and Agent Posts
Employees, agents, dealers, and resellers may post ads on behalf of a business.
The business should provide clear guidelines on:
- approved claims;
- price rules;
- discount authority;
- refund policy;
- use of logos;
- sponsored disclosures;
- data handling;
- prohibited products;
- complaint handling.
A rogue agent’s misleading post may still harm the brand.
CXIII. Resellers and Distributors
Resellers should not overclaim product benefits or misrepresent authorization.
They should disclose:
- whether they are authorized resellers;
- warranty source;
- product authenticity;
- return policy;
- stock status;
- price and fees.
Brands should monitor reseller advertising to prevent illegal claims.
CXIV. Franchisors and Franchisees
Franchise advertising should accurately represent:
- franchise cost;
- inclusions;
- projected income;
- support;
- territory;
- contract term;
- royalties;
- renewal;
- risks;
- business registration;
- refund policy.
Franchise income projections should be realistic and supported.
CXV. Social Media Advertising for Events
Event ads should disclose:
- date;
- time;
- venue;
- ticket price;
- refund rules;
- age restrictions;
- lineup changes;
- seat limitations;
- organizer identity;
- permit requirements;
- cancellation terms.
Misleading event ads may lead to refund claims and regulatory complaints.
CXVI. Charity, Donation, and Fundraising Ads
Social media fundraising must be truthful.
Disclose:
- organizer identity;
- beneficiary;
- purpose;
- how funds will be used;
- whether organizer keeps fees;
- proof of turnover;
- permits if required;
- updates to donors.
Fake charity ads may create criminal liability.
CXVII. Crisis and Disaster-Related Advertising
During disasters, pandemics, shortages, or emergencies, misleading ads may be treated more seriously.
Risky conduct includes:
- price gouging;
- fake medical cures;
- fake relief fundraising;
- fake government aid links;
- hoarding and misleading availability;
- selling unsafe protective equipment;
- false scarcity claims.
Consumer protection and public safety concerns are heightened in emergencies.
CXVIII. Record of Consumer Consent
For high-risk transactions, sellers should keep proof that the consumer agreed to important terms.
Examples:
- subscription renewal;
- installment plan;
- pre-order risks;
- non-refundable reservation fee;
- customized product terms;
- service booking cancellation rules;
- data processing consent;
- warranty limitations.
A checkbox, signed form, or clear chat confirmation may help.
CXIX. Advertising Customized or Personalized Products
For custom items, ads should disclose:
- production time;
- design approval process;
- cancellation rules;
- revision limits;
- deposit terms;
- color/material variation;
- no-change rule after production starts;
- delivery timing.
Even for customized goods, defects or seller errors may still give consumers remedies.
CXX. Advertising Digital Products
Digital products include:
- ebooks;
- templates;
- courses;
- software;
- presets;
- online memberships;
- digital art;
- downloadable files;
- game credits;
- subscriptions.
Ads should disclose:
- format;
- access period;
- compatibility;
- refund rules;
- license restrictions;
- whether resale is allowed;
- support availability;
- subscription charges.
Pirated digital goods may violate copyright law.
CXXI. Advertising Online Courses and Coaching
Online course ads should avoid misleading claims.
Disclose:
- course content;
- duration;
- instructor qualifications;
- certificate value;
- refund policy;
- access period;
- requirements;
- whether results are guaranteed;
- additional costs;
- realistic outcomes.
“Guaranteed job,” “guaranteed income,” or “international certificate” claims should be supported.
CXXII. Advertising Beauty and Aesthetic Services
Beauty clinics, spas, salons, and aesthetic providers should be careful with:
- before-and-after photos;
- medical claims;
- practitioner qualifications;
- device approval;
- side effects;
- contraindications;
- promo terms;
- package expiration;
- refund rules;
- use of injectables;
- surgical vs. non-surgical claims.
Consumers should not be misled about safety or practitioner competence.
CXXIII. Advertising Fitness and Weight Loss
Fitness ads should avoid:
- guaranteed weight loss;
- fake transformations;
- unsafe diet claims;
- undisclosed editing;
- unrealistic timelines;
- unlicensed medical advice;
- supplement cure claims;
- body shaming;
- failure to disclose that results vary.
If testimonials are used, disclose typicality or limitations.
CXXIV. Advertising Agricultural Products
Ads for seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, animal feeds, veterinary products, and farm inputs may be regulated.
Claims about yield, safety, organic status, disease prevention, or chemical composition should be accurate and supported.
Unregistered pesticides or veterinary drugs may create serious liability.
CXXV. Advertising Pet Products and Veterinary Claims
Pet product ads should not make unsupported medical claims.
Examples:
- “cures parvo”;
- “removes all ticks instantly”;
- “safe for all breeds”;
- “vet-approved” without basis;
- unregistered veterinary medicines.
Veterinary products may be regulated differently from ordinary pet accessories.
CXXVI. Advertising Household Chemicals
Ads for disinfectants, cleaning products, insecticides, and chemicals should disclose safety information and avoid exaggerated claims.
Potential issues:
- “non-toxic” when harmful if ingested;
- “kills all viruses” without proof;
- lack of hazard warnings;
- unsafe mixing instructions;
- repacked chemicals without labels;
- child safety risks.
Product safety and labeling are important.
CXXVII. Repacked Products
Small sellers often repack products such as food, cosmetics, cleaning agents, perfume, alcohol, spices, and supplements.
Repacking may trigger labeling, product safety, regulatory, and tax issues.
Ads should disclose:
- repacked nature;
- quantity;
- ingredients;
- expiration date;
- source where appropriate;
- safety instructions;
- limitations.
Repacking regulated products without authority can be risky.
CXXVIII. Advertising Secondhand Goods
Secondhand sellers should disclose condition accurately.
Important details:
- used or pre-owned;
- defects;
- missing accessories;
- repaired history;
- warranty status;
- authenticity;
- battery health for electronics;
- size and measurements;
- signs of wear;
- reason for sale if stated truthfully.
Photos should show actual item condition.
CXXIX. Advertising Surplus and Refurbished Goods
Surplus or refurbished items should not be advertised as brand new.
Disclose:
- refurbished status;
- surplus origin;
- warranty;
- replacement parts;
- testing performed;
- cosmetic condition;
- compatibility;
- return policy.
Consumers should know what they are buying.
CXXX. Advertising Digital Devices and Electronics
Electronic product ads should disclose:
- model;
- specifications;
- storage;
- warranty;
- charger type;
- network lock;
- compatibility;
- battery condition;
- authenticity;
- included accessories;
- repair history;
- safety certifications if relevant.
Fake specs or misleading model names may be deceptive.
CXXXI. Advertising Real Customer Results
If real customer results are used, the seller should:
- obtain consent;
- avoid editing results deceptively;
- disclose if results are not typical;
- avoid medical claims without approval;
- remove personal data;
- keep proof of authenticity.
Customer privacy and truthfulness both matter.
CXXXII. Advertising With “As Seen On” Claims
Claims such as “as seen on TV,” “featured in,” or “used by celebrities” should be true.
Misleading uses include:
- fake media logos;
- paid advertorial presented as independent news;
- old feature from unrelated product;
- celebrity photo without endorsement;
- screenshot of media mention taken out of context.
CXXXIII. Advertising With Awards and Certifications
Awards and certifications should be real, current, and relevant.
Disclose if:
- award was paid;
- certification expired;
- certification applies to company, not product;
- certificate covers only manufacturing facility;
- award is from a private marketing group, not government;
- claim is limited.
Do not use seals that imply government approval without basis.
CXXXIV. Advertising With “Official Store” Claims
A seller should not claim to be an official store unless authorized.
“Official,” “authorized,” “exclusive distributor,” “direct supplier,” and “factory outlet” are factual claims requiring proof.
If a seller merely buys and resells genuine goods, it should avoid implying a direct brand relationship.
CXXXV. Advertising With “Lifetime Warranty”
A lifetime warranty claim should define:
- whose lifetime;
- product lifetime;
- buyer lifetime;
- coverage;
- exclusions;
- process;
- transferability;
- proof required.
Without details, “lifetime warranty” may mislead consumers.
CXXXVI. Advertising With “Free”
The word “free” should be used carefully.
A product is not truly free if the consumer must pay hidden charges or if the cost is built into a mandatory purchase without disclosure.
Ads should disclose:
- required purchase;
- shipping fee;
- service charge;
- redemption deadline;
- stock limit;
- eligibility;
- taxes or fees.
CXXXVII. Advertising With “Guaranteed”
“Guaranteed” claims should be clear.
Examples:
- money-back guarantee;
- satisfaction guarantee;
- delivery guarantee;
- authenticity guarantee;
- results guarantee.
The ad should disclose how the guarantee is claimed and any limits.
A guarantee that cannot realistically be used may be misleading.
CXXXVIII. Advertising With “Official Receipt Available”
A seller should not treat issuance of a legally required receipt or invoice as a special privilege or optional add-on.
If required by law, the seller must issue proper invoice or receipt. Charging extra for a receipt can raise compliance issues.
CXXXIX. Consumer Data in Giveaways
Giveaways often collect personal data. The organizer should not collect more than necessary.
Avoid requiring:
- government ID unless truly needed;
- home address before winner selection;
- sensitive personal information;
- unnecessary birthdate;
- passwords or OTPs;
- public tagging that exposes minors.
State how data will be used and when it will be deleted.
CXL. Social Media Advertising and Payment Fraud
Sellers should protect consumers from payment fraud.
Good practice:
- Use official payment channels;
- warn consumers against fake accounts;
- publish verified account details carefully;
- confirm payment before shipping;
- issue receipts;
- avoid changing payment accounts without notice;
- monitor fake pages;
- report impersonators.
Consumers should verify payment details before transferring money.
CXLI. Handling Chargebacks and Disputes
If a consumer disputes payment, the seller should provide:
- order confirmation;
- proof of delivery;
- product description;
- chat agreement;
- receipt or invoice;
- refund policy;
- evidence of fulfillment.
Clear advertising and records help defend against false claims.
CXLII. Advertising and Accessibility
Businesses should avoid discriminatory or exclusionary advertising.
Ads should not unlawfully discriminate based on protected characteristics or exploit vulnerable consumers.
Where possible, businesses should provide accessible information for persons with disabilities, such as clear text, captions, readable terms, and accessible customer support.
CXLIII. Language in Social Media Ads
Ads may be in English, Filipino, Taglish, Cebuano, Ilocano, Hiligaynon, or other local languages. The key is clarity.
If material terms are hidden in technical English while the promotional claim is in Filipino, consumers may be misled. Important terms should be understandable to the target audience.
CXLIV. Advertising Time-Limited Offers
Time-limited offers should disclose:
- start date;
- end date;
- time zone if relevant;
- stock limit;
- redemption process;
- whether extension is possible;
- what happens to pending orders.
If the sale is extended, avoid misleading consumers who bought due to urgency.
CXLV. Advertising Membership Programs
Membership programs should disclose:
- joining fee;
- renewal fee;
- benefits;
- limits;
- cancellation;
- expiry;
- transferability;
- data use;
- automatic billing.
Consumers should not discover membership obligations only after signing up.
CXLVI. Advertising Loyalty Points and Rewards
Rewards ads should disclose:
- how points are earned;
- redemption value;
- expiry;
- exclusions;
- minimum purchase;
- whether points can be converted to cash;
- account closure rules;
- changes to program.
Unclear loyalty mechanics can mislead consumers.
CXLVII. Advertising Installment Appliances and Gadgets
Ads for appliances, gadgets, and furniture on installment should clearly state:
- cash price;
- installment price;
- down payment;
- monthly amount;
- number of months;
- interest;
- penalties;
- total payable;
- repossession terms;
- warranty;
- delivery and installation fees.
A monthly-only price may mislead low-income consumers.
CXLVIII. Advertising Rent-to-Own
Rent-to-own ads should disclose:
- total price;
- rental term;
- ownership transfer conditions;
- missed payment consequences;
- repair responsibility;
- cancellation terms;
- whether payments are refundable;
- delivery fees;
- penalties.
Consumers should understand when ownership actually transfers.
CXLIX. Advertising Services
Service providers should disclose:
- scope of service;
- price;
- inclusions;
- exclusions;
- timeline;
- cancellation policy;
- qualifications;
- materials provided;
- additional fees;
- warranty or service guarantee;
- customer responsibilities.
Examples include cleaning services, repairs, tutorials, event services, photography, catering, and construction services.
CL. Home Repair and Contractor Ads
Contractors advertising online should avoid:
- fake licenses;
- unrealistic completion promises;
- unclear estimates;
- hidden material costs;
- using stolen project photos;
- fake testimonials;
- misleading “free estimate” terms;
- no written contract for major work.
Consumers should verify contractor identity and require written scope.
CLI. Advertising Legal Services
Legal service advertising should follow professional responsibility rules. Lawyers should avoid misleading claims, guarantees of success, improper solicitation, false specialization, or disclosure of client information.
Non-lawyers should not advertise legal services in a way that constitutes unauthorized practice of law.
CLII. Advertising Medical Services
Medical ads should be truthful, ethical, and not exploit fear or insecurity.
Risky claims include:
- guaranteed cure;
- no-risk surgery;
- fake specialist credentials;
- undisclosed complications;
- patient photos without consent;
- misleading prices;
- miracle treatment claims.
Medical professionals must observe professional and health regulations.
CLIII. Advertising Mental Health Services
Mental health service ads should avoid:
- guaranteed results;
- unlicensed therapy claims;
- fake credentials;
- exploitative crisis marketing;
- confidentiality misrepresentations;
- undisclosed fees;
- inappropriate testimonials.
Sensitive personal data is involved.
CLIV. Advertising Dating, Matchmaking, and Adult-Oriented Services
These ads may raise issues involving privacy, decency, consent, trafficking, scams, and platform rules.
Businesses should avoid:
- fake profiles;
- misleading membership fees;
- non-consensual use of photos;
- exploitation;
- hidden recurring charges;
- illegal sexual services;
- trafficking-related conduct.
CLV. Advertising With User-Generated Content
Brands often repost customers’ content. Before reposting:
- get permission;
- credit properly;
- do not alter meaning;
- avoid using minors without parental consent;
- do not expose personal data;
- ensure product claims in the content are not misleading.
A repost by a brand can convert a customer post into advertising.
CLVI. Social Listening and Consumer Privacy
Brands monitor comments, hashtags, and mentions. Monitoring public posts may be allowed in some cases, but collecting, profiling, or repurposing data for advertising may trigger privacy duties.
Businesses should avoid scraping personal data indiscriminately.
CLVII. Advertising Through Private Groups
Private group advertising is still advertising.
Sellers in private groups should not assume that legal rules do not apply. Misleading claims, fake products, unauthorized data use, and non-issuance of receipts can still create liability.
Group admins may also face platform or legal issues if they knowingly allow scams or prohibited products.
CLVIII. Advertising Through Messaging Apps
Selling through Messenger, Viber, Telegram, WhatsApp, or SMS is still subject to consumer protection rules.
Sellers should preserve order details and provide:
- product description;
- price;
- payment terms;
- delivery terms;
- refund policy;
- seller identity.
Private chat does not excuse deception.
CLIX. Advertising Through Live Chat Agents
Agents should be trained not to make unauthorized promises.
Common agent mistakes:
- promising delivery date without basis;
- saying refund is guaranteed when not approved;
- giving fake product claims;
- misquoting price;
- hiding fees;
- making medical or financial claims;
- using pressure tactics.
Businesses may be bound by agent representations.
CLX. Advertising and Evidence Preservation
Because social media content can be edited or deleted, parties should preserve evidence.
Businesses should archive ads. Consumers should screenshot ads before paying.
Useful evidence includes:
- screenshot with URL;
- date and time;
- account name;
- product listing;
- caption;
- comments;
- live selling recording;
- chat transcript;
- payment proof;
- delivery proof.
Evidence preservation is crucial in complaints.
CLXI. Compliance Program for Small Online Sellers
Even small sellers can follow simple compliance steps:
- Register the business if regularly selling.
- Use truthful product descriptions.
- Post actual photos where possible.
- State full price and fees.
- Disclose pre-order status.
- Keep proof of product authenticity.
- Issue receipts or invoices as required.
- Keep sales records.
- Protect customer data.
- Honor valid refund or warranty claims.
- Avoid fake reviews.
- Avoid prohibited products.
- Respond professionally to complaints.
- Save copies of ads and transactions.
- Do not use fixers or fake documents.
CLXII. Compliance Program for Brands
Larger brands should have:
- advertising review process;
- legal approval for high-risk claims;
- influencer guidelines;
- substantiation file;
- promo permit review;
- privacy notice;
- customer complaint process;
- product safety review;
- intellectual property clearance;
- crisis response plan;
- training for social media team;
- archive of all ads;
- monitoring of resellers and affiliates.
Prevention is cheaper than regulatory action.
CLXIII. Red Flags for Consumers
Consumers should be cautious when they see:
- no seller identity;
- newly created page;
- too-good-to-be-true price;
- pressure to pay immediately;
- payment to unrelated personal account;
- no receipts;
- fake reviews;
- stolen photos;
- no return policy;
- claims of guaranteed cure or income;
- no business address;
- refusal to do video or actual photo verification;
- “limited slots” pressure;
- fake celebrity endorsement;
- investment returns with no risk;
- request for OTP or password.
When in doubt, verify before paying.
CLXIV. Red Flags for Businesses
Businesses should review campaigns that contain:
- guaranteed health results;
- guaranteed income;
- “FDA approved” claims;
- “BSP/SEC approved” claims;
- celebrity images;
- competitor attacks;
- before-and-after images;
- minors;
- raffles or contests;
- fake scarcity;
- hidden subscription terms;
- use of customer data;
- AI-generated endorsements;
- affiliate claims;
- regulated products.
These are high-risk areas.
CLXV. Practical Checklist Before Posting a Social Media Ad
Before posting, ask:
- Is the product legal to sell?
- Is the seller properly registered?
- Are the claims true?
- Can claims be proven?
- Is the price complete?
- Are fees disclosed?
- Are promo terms clear?
- Is sponsorship disclosed?
- Are photos accurate and licensed?
- Are customer testimonials real and consented?
- Does the ad collect personal data?
- Is a privacy notice needed?
- Does the product require regulatory approval?
- Are refund and warranty terms lawful?
- Could an ordinary consumer be misled?
If the answer raises doubt, revise before posting.
CLXVI. Practical Checklist for Influencers
Before endorsing a product, influencers should ask:
- Am I being paid or compensated?
- Did I disclose the sponsorship clearly?
- Have I actually used the product if I say I did?
- Are the claims true?
- Did the brand provide proof?
- Is the product legal and registered if required?
- Am I making health, financial, or professional claims?
- Are results typical?
- Am I using licensed music or content?
- Could followers be misled?
Influencers should not risk legal liability for a short-term campaign.
CLXVII. Practical Checklist for Consumers Before Buying
Before buying from a social media ad:
- Check seller page age and history.
- Search for complaints.
- Ask for complete price.
- Ask if item is on hand.
- Ask for actual photos.
- Verify authenticity claims.
- Check refund and warranty terms.
- Avoid sending OTPs or passwords.
- Use safer payment methods.
- Save screenshots before paying.
- Verify regulatory claims for health or financial products.
- Be skeptical of guaranteed results or guaranteed income.
CLXVIII. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Are social media ads regulated in the Philippines?
Yes. Social media ads may be covered by consumer protection, advertising, data privacy, intellectual property, tax, product safety, financial, health product, and cybercrime laws.
2. Can a seller say “no refund” online?
A seller may set reasonable policies for change-of-mind returns, but cannot use “no refund” to deny legal remedies for defective, fake, wrong, or misrepresented products.
3. Are influencers required to disclose paid promotions?
Influencers should clearly disclose paid sponsorships, affiliate links, free products, commissions, and other material connections.
4. Can an influencer be liable for false claims?
Yes, especially if the influencer made or repeated false claims, hid sponsorship, fabricated experience, or promoted illegal or misleading products.
5. Is “PM for price” illegal?
Not always, but hidden pricing can raise consumer protection issues if it misleads consumers, hides material terms, or prevents fair price disclosure where required.
6. Can online sellers refuse to issue receipts?
If the seller is required to issue invoices or receipts, selling online does not excuse refusal.
7. Are fake reviews illegal?
Fake reviews may be treated as deceptive advertising or unfair trade practice.
8. Can a seller use customer photos as testimonials?
Only with proper consent, and the seller must avoid misleading edits or disclosure of personal data.
9. Can a business advertise health products online?
Yes, if the product and claims comply with health product regulations. Disease-cure or “guaranteed result” claims are risky.
10. Can a business advertise investments on Facebook or TikTok?
Only if the investment offer complies with securities, financial, and consumer protection rules. Business registration alone is not authority to solicit investments.
11. What agency handles consumer complaints?
It depends on the product or issue. DTI handles many consumer trade complaints, while FDA, SEC, BSP, Insurance Commission, NPC, NTC, police, prosecutors, or courts may handle specialized matters.
12. What evidence should consumers keep?
Keep screenshots of ads, seller page links, chat messages, proof of payment, receipts, delivery tracking, product photos, warranty terms, and complaint records.
13. Are giveaways and raffles regulated?
They may be, especially if used as sales promotions involving prizes, chance, purchase requirements, or public participation.
14. Can a seller advertise replicas as “Class A”?
Selling counterfeit goods may still be illegal even if described as “Class A,” “replica,” or “mirror copy.”
15. Is a boosted post treated differently from an ordinary post?
A boosted post may strengthen the conclusion that the content is commercial advertising, but even unpaid posts can be advertising if they promote a product or service.
CLXIX. Key Legal Principles
The following principles are central to social media advertising and consumer protection in the Philippines:
- Online advertising must be truthful and not misleading.
- Consumer protection applies even to social media transactions.
- Material terms must be disclosed clearly.
- Fake reviews and fake testimonials may be deceptive.
- Paid influencer endorsements should be disclosed.
- Brands may be responsible for influencer and affiliate claims.
- Health, financial, investment, and regulated product ads require special care.
- “No refund” policies cannot defeat legal consumer remedies.
- Online sellers may need business and tax registration.
- Receipts or invoices may be required even for online sales.
- Customer personal data must be protected.
- Advertising content must respect intellectual property rights.
- Promo mechanics, discounts, and raffles must be truthful and compliant.
- Counterfeit and unsafe products cannot be legitimized by social media posts.
- Consumers should preserve evidence and report to the proper agency.
Conclusion
Social media advertising in the Philippines is governed by the same basic legal values that apply to traditional advertising: honesty, fairness, transparency, consumer safety, and accountability. The online format does not exempt sellers, influencers, brands, agencies, or platforms from legal responsibility.
A lawful social media ad should accurately describe the product or service, disclose material terms, state prices and promo conditions clearly, avoid fake reviews and unsupported claims, respect privacy and intellectual property rights, and comply with special rules for regulated goods such as health products, financial products, tobacco, alcohol, and investments.
For businesses, compliance means more than avoiding penalties. It builds trust. For consumers, awareness means better protection against scams, misleading claims, unsafe products, and unfair practices. In a marketplace where a single post can reach thousands of people in minutes, responsible advertising is not optional; it is a legal and ethical requirement.