Ministry issues Advisory against advertisements of betting

The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on October 3 issued two Advisories, one for private television channels and the other for digital news publishers and OTT platforms strongly advising them to refrain from showing advertisements of online betting sites and surrogate advertisements of such sites.

Key points

  • The Ministry had earlier issued an Advisory on 13 June, 2022 advising newspapers, private TV channels and digital news publishers to refrain from publishing advertisements of online betting platforms.
  • The Ministry has informed that online offshore betting platforms are now using news websites as a surrogate product to advertise the betting platforms on digital media.
  • In such cases, the Ministry has found that the logos of surrogate news websites bear striking resemblance to betting platforms.
  • Moreover, the Ministry has stated that neither the betting platforms nor the news websites are registered under any legal authority in India. Such websites are promoting betting and gambling under the garb of news as surrogate advertising.
  • The Advisories issued by the Ministry stated that since betting and gambling is illegal in most parts of the country, advertisements of these betting platforms as well as their surrogates are also illegal.
  • The Advisories relied upon the provisions of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, Cable TV Network Regulation Act 1995 and the IT Rules, 2021.
  • The Ministry has stated that such advertisements are not in conformity with various related laws and has strongly advised TV channels as well as digital news publishers from broadcasting such betting platforms or their surrogate news websites, reminding TV channels that violation may invite penal action.
  • The Ministry has also advised online advertisement intermediaries to not target such advertisements towards Indian audience.
  • The Ministry has mentioned that betting and gambling pose significant financial and socio-economic risk for the consumers, especially youth and children.
  • Accordingly, the promotion of offline or online betting/gambling through advertisements is not advised in larger public interest.

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