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Influencers in firing line as France tackles scams

 

By Aurore Laborie

Paris

 

France has hit back at a wave of online scams involving influencers, who have persuaded their followers to part with savings for miracle cancer cures or other fake products.

 

A new law threatens online content creators with steep fines and two-year jail terms for promoting dangerous services or misleading commercial practices.

 

But it is not just the state that has intervened. Audrey, a mother of two children, was so shocked by the power of influencers, some of whom had made their names on reality TV shows, she set up her own Instagram account to call them out.

 

"I told myself this is totally wrong. You can't do that to a community of people who probably worship you and make them take risks by making them buy from unreliable websites."

 

She raised the alarm when she saw a former reality TV star promoting dietary supplements that claimed to kill cancer cells.

 

Her social media page, Your Stars in Reality, aims to expose misleading and illegal practices and provides tools to help prevent people falling for scams.

 

Some victims of influencers' scams have been so deeply affected they have attempted to take their own lives, according to an association set up to help the victims of influencers.

 

"People got divorced, lost their housing, their job, fell into depression," a spokesperson for the AVI Collective told the BBC.

 

 

Influencer Louise Aubéry says it's a shame that many people now associate influencers with fraud
 

Many of the scams offer false trading advice that has cost victims more than €50,000 (£43,000), says French MP Arthur Delaporte, who cites AVI figures that suggest people have lost an average of €1,500.

 

"This bill is dedicated to the victims of scams, to the citizens' watchdogs who have worked to alert the public authorities," he told the upper house of France's parliament as it prepared to ban the practice.

 

"It's a public health issue," Audrey told the BBC.

 

"When you're ill, you want to believe that something exists that can save you from heavy treatment - or death. When people stop their cancer treatment thinking that a food supplement can cure them, it could be too late."

 

But calling out influencers isn't easy.

 

Last year, a YouTuber using the name Crypto Gouv scammed nearly 300 people and embezzled more than €4m, lawmaker Aurélien Taché told the National Assembly when the bill was being examined.

 

Crypto Gouv gave false instructions on investing in cryptocurrency and asked followers to entrust him with their funds.

 

Another popular scam targeted the French personal training and education scheme known as CPF - a system that grants funds of up to €500 to people of working age looking to access professional training.

 

Influencers were paid to advertise fake courses, contributing to some €43m of suspected CPF fraud in 2021, according to the economy ministry.

 

Products have been sold that never arrived, holidays have never materialised, and shampoos have been advertised containing banned substances that lead to hair loss.

 

In a study of 60 influencers and influencer agencies from January 2023, the French General Directorate of Competition, Consumer Affairs and Fraud Control (DGCCRF) showed that 60% did not respect the regulations on advertising and consumer rights.

 

"To me, it's a bit like a mafia," said Sam Zirah, an online content creator who founded the YouTube and Twitch show AJA, commenting on pop culture, social media and reality TV.

 

His show has been raising awareness on misleading product advertising for almost two years, often angering influencers, their agents and TV production companies, he told the BBC.

 

He has interviewed influencers for years and says he was sometimes warned to steer clear of some questions - or risk losing his celebrity access. 

 

 Read More Here:   BBC

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