The draft law creates clarity on advertising labels
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In the future, influencers will really only have to mark the posts as advertising for which they have received something in return. The cabinet has now agreed on this.
The federal cabinet has agreed on a draft law that should give influencers more legal certainty in the future. The draft should clearly regulate when influencers have to mark their posts as advertising and when not. In the future, the labeling obligation will only apply if influencers have actually been paid for the contribution in question or have received other consideration for it. In the past, German courts had repeatedly ruled differently on this issue.
In 2018, for example, the Berlin Regional Court ruled that blogger Vreni Frost also had to declare Instagram posts as advertising for which she was not paid. A year later, however, the Munich Regional Court ruled that the influencer Cathy Hummels did not have to label such posts as advertising, since her Instagram profile served a “commercial purpose for any obvious purpose”.
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Justice Minister Lambrecht: The draft law suits influencers and consumers
Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht expects the change in the law to provide more clarity for influencers and consumers. “In the future it is clear: only if there is something in return, you have to mark a post as advertising,” said the SPD politician. In Lambrecht’s view, consumers also benefit from this: “They can better assess how a recommendation came about – and whether they want to trust it.”
The hitherto unclear legal situation in the German influencer industry has occasionally led to all posts in which products or brands are recognizable are often labeled as advertising. Such “over-labeling” could decrease when the new regulation comes into force.
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