'No size fits all': Pinterest bans all weight loss ads
Story highlights
Pinterest, which has long grappled with combating pro-eating disorder content on its site and has since 2015 blocked such searches and directed users to expert organisations, already has rules against ads promoting weight loss pills or containing before-and-after weight-loss imagery
Image-sharing platform Pinterest has announced a ban on all ads with weight loss language and imagery, including ads that idealise or denigrate certain body types.
Pinterest is committed to building a safe and inspiring space for all our users. That means looking at ways we can keep evolving our policies, starting today. Read more here: https://t.co/02tPUR2G21 pic.twitter.com/XDsFl02Ryo
— Pinterest (@Pinterest) July 1, 2021
The site, which allows users to "pin" or save pictures, GIFs or videos to curated pinboards, said it would also not allow ads with testimonials about weight loss or weight loss products, or ads referencing Body Mass Index (BMI) or similar indexes.
"This stance makes Pinterest the only major platform to prohibit all weight-loss ads. It's an expansion of our ad policies that have long prohibited body shaming and dangerous weight loss products or claims," the company said in a blog post on Thursday.
Ads promoting healthy lifestyles, habits or fitness services and products are still allowed on the platform if they do not "focus on weight loss." The company said it had developed the policy with guidance from the National Eating Disorders Association.
Pinterest's head of policy, Sarah Bromma, said in an interview that the rule change prioritized Pinterest users' "emotional and mental health and wellbeing, especially those directly impacted by eating disorders or diet culture or body shaming."
Pinterest, which has long grappled with combating pro-eating disorder content on its site and has since 2015 blocked such searches and directed users to expert organisations, already has rules against ads promoting weight loss pills or containing before-and-after weight-loss imagery.
The company also said this week that its global head of inclusion and diversity, Tyi McCray, was leaving the company after less than a year. The move was first reported by Protocol.
Pinterest, which went public in 2019, has faced controversies around diversity and inequality in the last year, including when two former policy team employees alleged racial discrimination in the workplace.
(With inputs from agencies)