Five adverts for the Chinese shopping app Temu have been banned in the UK for their sexualised nature, with one found to have been irresponsible in how it depicted a young girl to sell bikinis.

The company has been warned against presenting under-18s in a sexual way in future or portraying adults as “stereotypical sexual objects” after several ads featured “disembodied images of the women wearing tight and revealing clothing”.

The fast-growing tech business was reprimanded by the UK’s advertising watchdog after one of its ads used a model who appeared to be aged between eight and 11 posed with her hand on her hip, which was found to be “quite adult for a girl of her age”.

The picture appeared alongside ads for household products including a facial roller, balloon ties and a jockstrap which, as they lacked labels, “appeared to be items sexual in nature”, according to the Advertising Standards Authority.

The ads were shown alongside those for household objects that “could have been interpreted as sexual in nature”, according to the ASA. The facial roller and balloon ties were “phallic” and the foot massager “could also have been understood in the same way”

A jockstrap was “augmented in the crotch, emphasising the outline of genitalia” while some cycling underwear had pink padding at the back and “appeared as underwear with the bottom cut out”. A further ad, shown in a puzzle app, featured images of leopard-print underwear with the back removed and a woman wearing a short black skirt and tights.

The ASA found that the ads were “likely to cause widespread offence” as they appeared in media where adult-themed or sexual products were “unlikely to be anticipated”.

All this and potentially sinister practices on the app.

  • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OP
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    91 year ago

    The picture appeared alongside ads for household products including a facial roller, balloon ties and a jockstrap which, as they lacked labels, “appeared to be items sexual in nature”, according to the Advertising Standards Authority.

    The ads were shown alongside those for household objects that “could have been interpreted as sexual in nature”, according to the ASA. The facial roller and balloon ties were “phallic” and the foot massager “could also have been understood in the same way”

    It’s a relief to hear this, I’d genuinely started to worry if it was me over-interpreting the ad images, like the Rorschach test joke: “you think I’m sexually frustrated? You’re the one sending me the mucky pictures!”

    Another article on The Guardian suggests they are doing this to go viral (I have shared a screenshot of an ad on WhatsApp asking if other people saw the same things) or catch your eye:

    Piner says Temu’s attempt to increase its reach means listing unusual items. “They are trying to stand out and go viral,” he says. “Some of their products are very much about catching the eye. If you’re scrolling down a page and there’s one of them in the advert, you stop. Even if you are not going to buy it, you might click through to find out more and then you’re in their ecosystem, you’re in their shop and they can sell you something else.”

    The fact that they’d deliberately use sexualised images of women and children to as part of this strategy is pretty grim. 😕

  • @Borkingheck
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    61 year ago

    Temu looks like spam and ive just always assumed its going to be drop ship quality.

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OP
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      21 year ago

      They use some very spammy techniques to force you to use their app.

      The quality is no better or worse than the Alibaba or eBay Chinese shops - you get what you pay for (although as they are making a massive loss to boost their customer base, you are probably getting a decent deal).

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      You mean you don’t think a 150 piece toolset for £1.63 delivered would be very good quality?

      It’s mostly just a scam to get you to download their app.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    31 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Five adverts for the Chinese shopping app Temu have been banned in the UK for their sexualised nature, with one found to have been irresponsible in how it depicted a young girl to sell bikinis.

    It also criticised Temu for three ads, two on a chess website and one on a translation site, that featured women wearing tight-fitting clothing “that accentuated their body shape” but did not show their faces in full.

    A further ad, shown in a puzzle app, featured images of leopard-print underwear with the back removed and a woman wearing a short black skirt and tights.

    The chess site said it had contacted its advertising management partner to prevent Temu ads being shown on its platform again as the images did not align with its values.

    Temu said all of the product photos complained about had been provided by third-party sellers, who had to stick to its marketplace policies that prohibited pornographic, obscene or harassing images.

    Temu said the images of adult models without a face were not intended to sexually objectify the women but to give “a clear representation of how the clothing was worn” – a similar approach to that on other e-commerce platforms.


    The original article contains 760 words, the summary contains 199 words. Saved 74%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!