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Australian Consumer Watchdog Sues Meta Over Crypto Scam Ads

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has announced it will be suing Meta over the company’s failure to block crypto scam advertisements involving Australian public figures that are in breach of Australian consumer law.

person holding silver iphone 6 https://unsplash.com/photos/iurEAyYyU_c
ACCC takes action against Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram. Source: ABC

False Endorsements of Crypto Investments

Dick Smith, David Koch and Andrew Forrest are some of the prominent Australian personalities unwittingly involved in a series of crypto scam ads circulating on Facebook. The ads claim that the featured celebrities have hugely benefited from cryptocurrency investments, then direct users to scam websites on the strength of these false endorsements.

The consumer watchdog believes that Meta is not doing enough to prevent the circulation of these ads on both Facebook and Instagram. The personalities in the ads have not given any permission for their names and faces to be used in the money-making schemes, and users who have engaged with this material have reportedly been the victims of intense pressure tactics, including phone calls asking for funds.

Rod Sims, the ACCC’s chair, outlined his disappointment with Meta’s lack of action and solutions in a March 18 media release:

https://www.accc.gov.au/media/image-library

Meta should have been doing more to detect and then remove false or misleading ads on Facebook, to prevent consumers from falling victim to ruthless scammers.

ACCC chair Rod Sims

Sims stated that in one circumstance an individual consumer lost A$650,000 to one of these scams. The ACCC will be seeking injunctions, penalties, declarations, costs, and other orders from Meta to ensure the practice does not continue.

Australia Cracks Down on Crypto Scams

News of the ACCC’s legal action against Meta follows an investigation into how Australians lost over A$70 million in 2021 through investment scams alone.

Scamwatch reported in July last year that investment scams involving cryptocurrency and other digital assets were on the rise. Other prominent fraud-related practices have included romance scams, personal identity theft and illegal crypto mining.

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Australia Gaming NFTs

Australia’s Immutable X Raises $200 Million, IMX Token Soars

Australia’s gaming start-up, Immutable, has announced that its most recent funding round has pushed the company’s value to US$2.5 billion. According to an Immutable Twitter thread, the $200 million round was led by investors from Singaporean company Temasek.

Immutable Supercharges Its Mission

Sydney-based blockchain firm Immutable, the start-up behind the scaling solution for Ethereum NFT games – Immutable X – has just joined the ranks of the crypto unicorns (ie, crypto start-ups worth at least a billion dollars). This comes after its latest round of funding, led by Temasek investors alongside metaverse investment firm Animoca Brands and Chinese Temacent. The increase in funding was not the only benefit Immutable received. As a result of the firm’s promotion to unicorn status, Immutable’s token (IMX) has also soared.

Immutable’s previous funding round in 2021 saw it garner US$410 million. Currently, the Immutable X price prediction is neutral; however, the company only seems to be moving from strength to strength. Immutable hopes that the fresh funds will supercharge its goal of pushing NFTs mainstream through high-quality blockchain games.

IMX Pursues Gaming Industry

Immutable X established several high-profile partnerships and deals in late 2021 and early 2022. A partnership was solidified in October with ESL Gaming, a leading Esports company, which provided the ESL Pro Tour NFTs with gasless trading on its platform.

More recently, Immutable X entered a contract with retail game giant GameStop to develop its new NFT marketplace, with the addition of a US$100 million innovation fund to support the NFT space and its creators.