6ix — Ads Policy

Last updated: 2025-10-28

This policy governs advertising, sponsorships, affiliate links, endorsements, and branded content on 6ix. It works with our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, Cookies Policy, Community Guidelines, Safety & Minors, and Creator Earnings.

This document supports product transparency and compliance; it is not legal advice. Please adapt with your counsel for your operating regions.

1) What counts as advertising

  • Paid ads: display units, pre/mid/post-roll, promoted posts, sponsored challenges, overlays.
  • Branded content: creator content in exchange for value (money, gifts, trips, gear, discounts).
  • Affiliate placements: links or codes where the creator earns a commission or referral fee.
  • Endorsements & testimonials: statements that imply a commercial relationship or benefit.
  • Native commerce: product catalogs, shopping tags, live shopping, sponsored playlists.
  • Influencer marketplaces: brokered collaborations arranged on or off 6ix that appear on 6ix.

Even if 6ix does not sell or serve the ad, creator-sold integrations must follow this policy and applicable laws.

2) Creator promotions vs. 6ix-sold ads

6ix hosts two broad flows. 6ix-sold inventory is booked through our ad systems (when available) and is reviewed for policy compliance. Creator-sold promotions are integrations negotiated by a creator with a brand: these must still use required disclosures and stay within category rules, and they remain subject to the Community Guidelines — Creators and Creator Earnings.

  • 6ix may request contracts or substantiation for claims shown in creator content.
  • If a creator refuses to disclose material connections, we may remove the content and/or restrict monetization.

3) Disclosures & creator obligations

  • Use clear labels (e.g., Paid partnership, Sponsored, Includes paid promotion, Contains affiliate links).
  • Disclosures must be unambiguous, prominent, and persistent during the promotion (overlay + audio mention for video/live).
  • Claims must be truthful and substantiated; qualify benefits/risks in-frame or adjacent, not hidden.
  • Follow sector rules (health/finance) and local guidance (e.g., testimonials, endorsements, price claims).
  • Use the in-product branded-content toggle where available; add affiliate badges if you share codes/links.
  • Disclose free product or travel if it affects impartiality; do not present ads as independent reviews.
  • When using AI-generated media in ads, label it clearly if it may mislead audiences.

See also Creators, earnings & disclosures.

4) Placement types & surfaces

  • Feeds & stories: ads must be visually distinct from organic content with a persistent “Ad” or “Sponsored”.
  • Live: use pinned labels; disclose paid shout-outs, sponsorship readouts, and affiliate CTAs in real time.
  • VOD: pre/mid/post-roll must honor volume/accessibility rules and frequency caps.
  • Rooms/voice: sponsor tags and audio disclosures at start and at intervals for long sessions.
  • Creator storefronts: product details must match landing-page facts and return policies.

5) Targeting & minors protections

  • No personalized advertising to users under the applicable age of digital consent.
  • Age-sensitive categories (alcohol, gambling, dating, body modification, adult products) are prohibited for minors and restricted for others.
  • Sensitive attribute targeting (health, religion, sexual orientation, political views) is disallowed unless expressly permitted by law and our policies.
  • We honor valid Global Privacy Control signals and regional consent rules.
  • Advertisers must use accurate geo and age filters; mis-targeting leads to rejection or enforcement.

See Safety & Minors and Privacy Policy.

6) Prohibited & restricted categories

  • Prohibited: illegal products or services; weapons/explosives; hard drugs; hate/extremism; adult sexual content; surveillance spyware/stalkerware; deceptive “get rich quick” or multi-level recruitment; counterfeit goods; sale or brokerage of personal data; deepfakes that mislead or impersonate without disclosure.
  • Restricted (regional/age-gated/extra review): alcohol, gambling/lotteries, dating, CBD/cannabis, political/issue ads, health claims, financial services/credit, crypto assets, supplements/weight-loss, medical devices, cosmetic procedures.
  • All ads must comply with the Community Guidelines and local law.

7) Creative standards & accessibility

  • No misleading UI (fake system warnings, deceptive buttons) or dark patterns (forced continuity).
  • Landing pages must match claims, load quickly, and be safe (no malware, bait-and-switch, or redirect chains).
  • Audio must start at a reasonable level; flashing content must pass accessibility safety checks.
  • Before/after imagery must use comparable conditions; disclose if results vary.
  • Provide captions for video ads and readable contrast for text overlays.
  • Use licensed music, fonts, and images; brand usage must respect rights and guidelines.

8) Measurement, verification & third parties

  • Use only approved measurement pixels/SDKs; no piggybacking or undisclosed data collection.
  • Server-to-server integrations must be documented; send only permitted events with appropriate minimization.
  • Reporting must not reveal personal data contrary to our Privacy Policy.
  • Delete log data per retention requirements; respect audit requests for consent records where applicable.

9) Data use, privacy & consent

  • Advertising data usage must comply with Privacy Policy and Cookies Policy.
  • Customer list uploads must be lawful, notice-based, and properly secured; hash personal identifiers where required.
  • Do not combine 6ix data with third-party sources to build profiles beyond permitted purposes.
  • Honor user choices (consent/opt-out, GPC) across measurement and targeting.

10) Brand safety, suitability & enforcement

  • We may limit adjacency (e.g., exclude sensitive categories) and apply suitability tiers (e.g., General, Moderate, Mature).
  • Violations may lead to ad rejection, spend pauses, labeling changes, feature limits, or account actions.
  • Creators who repeatedly violate may lose monetization (see Creator Earnings).
  • We may publish high-level transparency about ad safety enforcement and appeals volumes.

11) Self-serve ads (future)

If we launch self-serve ads, advertisers must complete verification, accept these rules, and pass creative/landing-page review. We may adjust budgets, pacing, and placements to protect user experience and comply with law.

12) Vertical rules (health, finance, alcohol, gambling, crypto, environmental)

Health & medical

  • Require competent substantiation; clinical claims must cite acceptable evidence where required.
  • No promotion of prescription drugs without legal authorization; no unsafe or miracle cures.
  • Weight-loss claims must avoid unsafe promises or unrealistic timelines.

Financial services

  • Include clear risk disclosures; no guaranteed returns or get-rich schemes.
  • Licensing may be required (lenders, credit repair, securities); predatory products are disallowed.

Alcohol

  • Strict age-gating and geographic restrictions; no targeting minors; responsible drinking messages where required.
  • No implied health benefits; no drinking games or dangerous consumption challenges.

Gambling & lotteries

  • Where legal, require license proof, strict age/geo controls, and responsible-play links.
  • No claims that gambling is a path to financial stability.

Crypto assets

  • Subject to regional rules; require risk disclosures and, where applicable, licensing/registrations.
  • No guaranteed returns; no ICO/airdrop schemes aimed at minors or unsophisticated investors.

Environmental claims

  • Substantiate sustainability/eco claims; avoid vague “green” language without specifics.
  • Provide lifecycle context if claiming carbon neutrality or offsets.

13) Political & issue advertising

Political and issue ads may be restricted or unavailable. Where permitted, verification, spend transparency, disclaimers, and targeting limits will apply. Misleading civic information or suppression tactics are prohibited.

14) Jurisdictional compliance overview

  • Advertisers and creators must follow local laws and regulatory guidance in targeted regions.
  • Common frameworks include truth-in-advertising standards, youth advertising codes, data-protection laws, and sector-specific rules.
  • Where local law conflicts with this policy, the stricter requirement applies.

15) Reviews, rejections & appeals

  • We may reject or pause ads that break rules, mismatch landing pages, or risk user safety.
  • Appeals may be available; include updated creative, targeting details, and evidence of compliance.
  • Repeated or severe violations can lead to account-level restrictions or termination.

16) Changes to this policy

We may update this policy to reflect product or legal changes. If changes are material, we’ll provide notice (e.g., in-app or email). Continued use after the effective date means you accept the update.

17) Contact

Ads & brand safety: ads@6ixapp.com
Legal: legal@6ixapp.com
Privacy: privacy@6ixapp.com

Appendix A — Disclosure examples (good/bad)

Good

  • Sponsored — I partnered with Brand X. Use code 6IX10. Details in the caption.” (label pinned + audio mention)
  • Contains affiliate links — I may earn a commission if you buy through my link.”
  • Paid partnership — Brand Y sent me this device for free; opinions are my own.”

Bad

  • “Thanks Brand Z!” with no disclosure while showing gifted product + purchase link.
  • Label hidden behind a fold or disappearing after three seconds while promotion continues.
  • “Guaranteed results” claims for health/finance without evidence or risk statements.

Appendix B — Creative specs & best practices

  • Keep text legible (contrast & safe margins); include captions for sound-off viewing.
  • Respect max flashing thresholds; avoid excessive cuts for accessibility.
  • Use high-quality assets; avoid upscale artifacts and distorted logos.
  • Make CTAs descriptive (e.g., “Learn more about features”) not deceptive (“Click to claim prize”).

Appendix C — Enforcement ladder

  1. Warning & guidance (minor issue; fix and resubmit).
  2. Temporary rejection or limited delivery.
  3. Feature or budget restrictions; removal of non-compliant creatives.
  4. Account suspension or termination for severe/repeat violations.

See Guidelines — Enforcement.

Appendix D — Extended Operational Notes

Note 1: Always verify age and geo targeting before launch; mis-targeting minors is a hard fail.

Note 2: Use standardized disclosure overlays across all placements for consistency.

Note 3: Pin the 'Sponsored' label in live chat during paid readouts.

Note 4: Disallow countdown timers that pressure immediate purchases unless they reflect real inventory or time-limited promotions.

Note 5: Require evergreen landing pages for long-running campaigns; avoid dead links.

Note 6: Cap ad frequency to prevent user fatigue and maintain session quality.

Note 7: Block interstitials that cover controls or obstruct exit.

Note 8: If a creative references a price, ensure the landing page shows that price or explains differences clearly.

Note 9: For affiliate codes, present the brand relationship plainly (who benefits and how).

Note 10: Do not imply platform endorsement; only approved 'Runs on 6ix' badges may appear.

Note 11: Provide fallback creatives for low-bandwidth users (smaller files, static backups).

Note 12: Respect device reduce-motion preferences in animated ads.

Note 13: Prohibit 'spinner' or fake loading UI to bait clicks.

Note 14: No 'free trial' claims that convert silently to paid without prominent disclosure.

Note 15: Use short, accessible alt text on image ads where supported.

Note 16: Medical disclaimers must be visible at first impression, not buried.

Note 17: Financial APRs must be accurate and include representative examples where required.

Note 18: Crypto risk statements should be shown on creative and landing page.

Note 19: Alcohol ads must include 'No underage drinking' or equivalent local notice.

Note 20: Lottery ads must show odds or link to odds in the first fold where required.

Note 21: Influencers should avoid statements of absolute efficacy ('cures', 'guaranteed').

Note 22: Do not retarget users based on sensitive interest segments.

Note 23: Honor consent withdrawal quickly across all connected tools.

Note 24: No hidden device fingerprinting for ad measurement.

Note 25: Third-party pixels must be domain-scoped and declared.

Note 26: Turn off ad personalization for accounts flagged as minors.

Note 27: Provide brand safety exclusion lists on request (when supported).

Note 28: Use standardized content suitability tiers when booking placements.

Note 29: Disallow ad audio that starts above recommended LUFS thresholds.

Note 30: Ensure flashing content meets photosensitivity guidance.

Note 31: Avoid 'before/after' that rely on filters or digital alteration.

Note 32: Disclose if images are illustrations or simulations.

Note 33: For travel ads, taxes/fees should be clearly stated.

Note 34: Price-per-month claims must include term length and total cost.

Note 35: No spyware, keyloggers, or location trackers in downloads.

Note 36: Enforce strict malware scanning for app-install campaigns.

Note 37: Block installers that bundle unrelated adware.

Note 38: Affiliate landing pages must include contact and returns info.

Note 39: Disallow 'negative option billing' unless clearly presented and easily cancelable.

Note 40: No ads directing to pages that immediately gate content behind forced signups without notice.

Note 41: For educational ads, avoid implying guaranteed admissions or degrees.

Note 42: No degree-mill or unaccredited-institution promotions.

Note 43: For job ads, disclose if the role is commission-only or requires fees.

Note 44: Ban exploitative multi-level recruitment or chain referral schemes.

Note 45: Gambling ads must include responsible-play resources and age filters.

Note 46: Dating ads: restrict imagery; no minor-like depictions; require age gating.

Note 47: Cosmetic procedure ads must avoid unrealistic outcomes and disclose risks.

Note 48: Weight-loss ads cannot promise loss beyond safe weekly ranges.

Note 49: No steroid or SARMs promotions.

Note 50: No promotion of illegal streaming or piracy services.

Note 51: Block 'unlock phone' or 'IMEI change' services violating law.

Note 52: No ad that instructs bypassing DRM or access controls.

Note 53: Environmental claims require verifiable data and timeframes.

Note 54: Green badges need explicit criteria; avoid vague eco icons.

Note 55: Do not imply 6ix endorsement of environmental offsets.

Note 56: Political ads (if allowed) must include sponsor identity and local compliance proofs.

Note 57: Issue ads must avoid misinformation about civic processes.

Note 58: No fundraising that conceals beneficiary or payout entity.

Note 59: Charity ads require registration proof in targeted regions.

Note 60: Religious or belief-based solicitations must avoid targeted pressure tactics.

Note 61: Prohibit ads shaming users over personal characteristics.

Note 62: No predatory tactics (e.g., 'your device is infected' scareware).

Note 63: No imitation of system notifications outside platform UI guidelines.

Note 64: Keep file sizes within limits; provide adaptive bitrates for video.

Note 65: Use safe zones to avoid cropping on different aspect ratios.

Note 66: Ensure brand logos are clear at small sizes on mobile.

Note 67: Provide UTM tagging guidelines; avoid leaking PII in URLs.

Note 68: Remove 3rd-party query params that enable cross-site tracking without consent.

Note 69: Follow retention limits for ad logs; purge on schedule.

Note 70: Implement change logs for creative edits during live campaigns.

Note 71: Require new review if claims or landing pages change materially.

Note 72: Support 'ad feedback' controls so users can hide irrelevant creatives.

Note 73: Throttle repetitive creatives in the same session.

Note 74: Avoid strobing transitions; prefer smooth fades respecting reduce-motion.

Note 75: Check that translations are accurate; avoid auto-translate for medical/legal claims.

Note 76: Use locale-correct currency/units in price claims.

Note 77: No 'surprise fees' at checkout; taxes/fees should not double after click.

Note 78: Install-flow ads must reflect actual permission prompts.

Note 79: For contests, show eligibility, dates, odds (or skill criteria), and T&Cs.

Note 80: Prohibit 'like/share to win' where unlawful; provide official rules.

Note 81: No babysitting/minor care ads without required checks where mandated.

Note 82: For housing ads, avoid discriminatory targeting or messaging.

Note 83: Auto-generated AI avatars in ads should be labeled where material.

Note 84: Disallow synthetic voice clones of real people without consent.

Note 85: If ad uses UGC, obtain releases; no scraping without permission.

Note 86: No sale of academic papers or cheating services in education category.

Note 87: Block 'diploma for sale' or 'doctor note' schemes.

Note 88: Prohibit invasive medical tests sold direct without oversight where regulated.

Note 89: For supplements, include ingredient list and warnings where required.

Note 90: No nicotine or vaping product ads.

Note 91: No weapons parts, ammo, or accessories ads.

Note 92: Restrict knives/martial items by region and context; likely disallow.

Note 93: Avoid ads that encourage unsafe driving or traffic violations.

Note 94: No 'ghost' rental listings; verify advertiser legitimacy.

Note 95: No misleading 'pre-approval' for credit without criteria disclosure.

Note 96: Balance ad load with organic content; preserve creator visibility.

Note 97: Prioritize user safety when conflicts arise between revenue and rules.

Note 98: Provide advertiser education docs for common rejections.

Note 99: Offer pre-checklists to reduce review cycles.

Note 100: Maintain a creative SHA/version registry for audit trails.

Note 101: Respect user blocks: do not serve ads from blocked creators to that user.

Note 102: Do not weaponize ads for harassment; block targeting individuals.

Note 103: Enforce cool-offs after repeated policy flags.

Note 104: Publish anonymized enforcement metrics periodically.

Note 105: Offer API scopes that cannot pull personal data without consent.

Note 106: Require mTLS or signed requests for server-to-server conversions.

Note 107: Rotate keys and secrets for third-party integrations regularly.

Note 108: Ban query-string tokens that can be replayed to impersonate users.

Note 109: Provide sandbox accounts for testing without production tracking.

Note 110: Flag landing pages using forced browser notifications for spam.

Note 111: Disallow auto-download on click; require explicit store pages.

Note 112: Ensure consent dialogs are accessible (focus order, labels, contrast).

Note 113: Block interstitials that trap focus for keyboard/screen-reader users.

Note 114: Support ad preference controls and make them discoverable.

Note 115: Honor user opt-outs across devices where technically feasible.

Note 116: Avoid micro-targeting that could expose sensitive traits.

Note 117: Check that legal lines are readable on small screens.

Note 118: Provide 'report ad' entry points on each ad unit.

Note 119: Investigate high complaint-rate creatives promptly.

Note 120: Share common rejection reasons to improve future approvals.

Note 121: Restrict creators with repeated disclosure failures from branded content.

Note 122: Require re-review when a creator changes the sponsor mid-campaign.

Note 123: No masked redirectors to disguise final landing domain.

Note 124: Block executable attachments in ad click-through flows.

Note 125: Require PCI-compliant processors for payment pages.

Note 126: Ensure refunds/returns policies are visible within one click.

Note 127: Avoid 'drip pricing' practices; present totals early.

Note 128: No CAPTCHA gates that farm user tasks for unrelated services.

Note 129: Audit accessibility of ad templates quarterly.

Note 130: Ensure video ads include seekable progress where required.

Note 131: Block autoplay with sound in contexts that forbid it.

Note 132: Use standardized content labels (e.g., alcohol) where required.

Note 133: Detect and block stolen celebrity likeness used to pitch scams.

Note 134: Require proof for 'limited edition' or 'last units' scarcity claims.

Note 135: Prohibit emergency or disaster profiteering ads.

Note 136: Downrank ads adjacent to unfolding tragedies; or block entirely.

Note 137: No ads that shame users for their body, identity, or beliefs.

Note 138: Ensure kids’ content never gets adult ad adjacency.

Note 139: Use contextual targeting to avoid sensitive content adjacency.

Note 140: Provide regional ad-law cheat sheets internally; enforce the strictest rule.

Note 141: Run periodic bias checks on delivery algorithms.

Note 142: Document decisions around suitability tiers per campaign.

Note 143: Require creatives in all languages actually targeted; no fallback mistranslations.

Note 144: Block prank 'tech support' scams or bogus helplines.

Note 145: For software, show pricing tiers and renewal logic clearly.

Note 146: For subscriptions, provide clear cancel instructions pre-purchase.

Note 147: Disallow ads implying health professional endorsement without proof.

Note 148: No 'clinical trial' recruitment without approvals and ethics review where required.

Note 149: Keep political ad logs (if permitted) with sponsor identity and spend ranges.

Note 150: Offer rate limiting on political impressions to reduce saturation.

Note 151: Respect conflict-of-interest rules for creator endorsements tied to their own products.

Note 152: No 'friends said this' social proof unless verifiable and consented.

Note 153: Disable lookalikes using sensitive seeds; use broad/contextual instead.

Note 154: Ensure promo codes work as advertised; avoid invalid or region-locked codes.

Note 155: Prohibit 'hidden fees' revealed only after personal data is entered.

Note 156: Detect cloaking (clean page for review, different for users); block.

Note 157: Enforce penalties for repeat cloakers including domain bans.

Note 158: Require consistent brand identity across creatives to prevent phishing.

Note 159: For charities, link to registration records where feasible.

Note 160: Provide standardized risk icons (crypto/finance/health) for quick scanning.

Note 161: Disallow creator audio reads that mimic platform system messages.

Note 162: Ensure third-party scripts can be toggled off with consent withdrawal.

Note 163: No adult 'sugar dating' or exploitative relationship ads.

Note 164: Block 'essay mills' and test-cheating services.

Note 165: Prohibit look-alike logos designed to confuse users.

Note 166: Apply extra review for ads using national flags in sensitive contexts.

Note 167: Flag exaggerated urgency ('offer ends in 30 seconds') without proof.

Note 168: Require warranty terms where 'lifetime' is claimed.

Note 169: No firmware mods that violate device or network terms.

Note 170: Disclose if prices exclude shipping, duties, or activation fees.

Note 171: Ban 'unlock region' streaming boxes that evade licensing.

Note 172: Require privacy policies on all advertiser landing pages.

Note 173: Support bid shading and pacing that favors user experience.

Note 174: Maintain emergency kill-switch to pause categories during crises.

Note 175: Always verify age and geo targeting before launch; mis-targeting minors is a hard fail.

Note 176: Use standardized disclosure overlays across all placements for consistency.

Note 177: Pin the 'Sponsored' label in live chat during paid readouts.

Note 178: Disallow countdown timers that pressure immediate purchases unless they reflect real inventory or time-limited promotions.

Note 179: Require evergreen landing pages for long-running campaigns; avoid dead links.

Note 180: Cap ad frequency to prevent user fatigue and maintain session quality.

Note 181: Block interstitials that cover controls or obstruct exit.

Note 182: If a creative references a price, ensure the landing page shows that price or explains differences clearly.

Note 183: For affiliate codes, present the brand relationship plainly (who benefits and how).

Note 184: Do not imply platform endorsement; only approved 'Runs on 6ix' badges may appear.

Note 185: Provide fallback creatives for low-bandwidth users (smaller files, static backups).

Note 186: Respect device reduce-motion preferences in animated ads.

Note 187: Prohibit 'spinner' or fake loading UI to bait clicks.

Note 188: No 'free trial' claims that convert silently to paid without prominent disclosure.

Note 189: Use short, accessible alt text on image ads where supported.

Note 190: Medical disclaimers must be visible at first impression, not buried.

Note 191: Financial APRs must be accurate and include representative examples where required.

Note 192: Crypto risk statements should be shown on creative and landing page.

Note 193: Alcohol ads must include 'No underage drinking' or equivalent local notice.

Note 194: Lottery ads must show odds or link to odds in the first fold where required.

Note 195: Influencers should avoid statements of absolute efficacy ('cures', 'guaranteed').

Note 196: Do not retarget users based on sensitive interest segments.

Note 197: Honor consent withdrawal quickly across all connected tools.

Note 198: No hidden device fingerprinting for ad measurement.

Note 199: Third-party pixels must be domain-scoped and declared.

Note 200: Turn off ad personalization for accounts flagged as minors.

Note 201: Provide brand safety exclusion lists on request (when supported).

Note 202: Use standardized content suitability tiers when booking placements.

Note 203: Disallow ad audio that starts above recommended LUFS thresholds.

Note 204: Ensure flashing content meets photosensitivity guidance.

Note 205: Avoid 'before/after' that rely on filters or digital alteration.

Note 206: Disclose if images are illustrations or simulations.

Note 207: For travel ads, taxes/fees should be clearly stated.

Note 208: Price-per-month claims must include term length and total cost.

Note 209: No spyware, keyloggers, or location trackers in downloads.

Note 210: Enforce strict malware scanning for app-install campaigns.

Note 211: Block installers that bundle unrelated adware.

Note 212: Affiliate landing pages must include contact and returns info.

Note 213: Disallow 'negative option billing' unless clearly presented and easily cancelable.

Note 214: No ads directing to pages that immediately gate content behind forced signups without notice.

Note 215: For educational ads, avoid implying guaranteed admissions or degrees.

Note 216: No degree-mill or unaccredited-institution promotions.

Note 217: For job ads, disclose if the role is commission-only or requires fees.

Note 218: Ban exploitative multi-level recruitment or chain referral schemes.

Note 219: Gambling ads must include responsible-play resources and age filters.

Note 220: Dating ads: restrict imagery; no minor-like depictions; require age gating.

Note 221: Cosmetic procedure ads must avoid unrealistic outcomes and disclose risks.

Note 222: Weight-loss ads cannot promise loss beyond safe weekly ranges.

Note 223: No steroid or SARMs promotions.

Note 224: No promotion of illegal streaming or piracy services.

Note 225: Block 'unlock phone' or 'IMEI change' services violating law.

Note 226: No ad that instructs bypassing DRM or access controls.

Note 227: Environmental claims require verifiable data and timeframes.

Note 228: Green badges need explicit criteria; avoid vague eco icons.

Note 229: Do not imply 6ix endorsement of environmental offsets.

Note 230: Political ads (if allowed) must include sponsor identity and local compliance proofs.

Note 231: Issue ads must avoid misinformation about civic processes.

Note 232: No fundraising that conceals beneficiary or payout entity.

Note 233: Charity ads require registration proof in targeted regions.

Note 234: Religious or belief-based solicitations must avoid targeted pressure tactics.

Note 235: Prohibit ads shaming users over personal characteristics.

Note 236: No predatory tactics (e.g., 'your device is infected' scareware).

Note 237: No imitation of system notifications outside platform UI guidelines.

Note 238: Keep file sizes within limits; provide adaptive bitrates for video.

Note 239: Use safe zones to avoid cropping on different aspect ratios.

Note 240: Ensure brand logos are clear at small sizes on mobile.

Note 241: Provide UTM tagging guidelines; avoid leaking PII in URLs.

Note 242: Remove 3rd-party query params that enable cross-site tracking without consent.

Note 243: Follow retention limits for ad logs; purge on schedule.

Note 244: Implement change logs for creative edits during live campaigns.

Note 245: Require new review if claims or landing pages change materially.

Note 246: Support 'ad feedback' controls so users can hide irrelevant creatives.

Note 247: Throttle repetitive creatives in the same session.

Note 248: Avoid strobing transitions; prefer smooth fades respecting reduce-motion.

Note 249: Check that translations are accurate; avoid auto-translate for medical/legal claims.

Note 250: Use locale-correct currency/units in price claims.

Note 251: No 'surprise fees' at checkout; taxes/fees should not double after click.

Note 252: Install-flow ads must reflect actual permission prompts.

Note 253: For contests, show eligibility, dates, odds (or skill criteria), and T&Cs.

Note 254: Prohibit 'like/share to win' where unlawful; provide official rules.

Note 255: No babysitting/minor care ads without required checks where mandated.

Note 256: For housing ads, avoid discriminatory targeting or messaging.

Note 257: Auto-generated AI avatars in ads should be labeled where material.

Note 258: Disallow synthetic voice clones of real people without consent.

Note 259: If ad uses UGC, obtain releases; no scraping without permission.

Note 260: No sale of academic papers or cheating services in education category.

Note 261: Block 'diploma for sale' or 'doctor note' schemes.

Note 262: Prohibit invasive medical tests sold direct without oversight where regulated.

Note 263: For supplements, include ingredient list and warnings where required.

Note 264: No nicotine or vaping product ads.

Note 265: No weapons parts, ammo, or accessories ads.

Note 266: Restrict knives/martial items by region and context; likely disallow.

Note 267: Avoid ads that encourage unsafe driving or traffic violations.

Note 268: No 'ghost' rental listings; verify advertiser legitimacy.

Note 269: No misleading 'pre-approval' for credit without criteria disclosure.

Note 270: Balance ad load with organic content; preserve creator visibility.

Note 271: Prioritize user safety when conflicts arise between revenue and rules.

Note 272: Provide advertiser education docs for common rejections.

Note 273: Offer pre-checklists to reduce review cycles.

Note 274: Maintain a creative SHA/version registry for audit trails.

Note 275: Respect user blocks: do not serve ads from blocked creators to that user.

Note 276: Do not weaponize ads for harassment; block targeting individuals.

Note 277: Enforce cool-offs after repeated policy flags.

Note 278: Publish anonymized enforcement metrics periodically.

Note 279: Offer API scopes that cannot pull personal data without consent.

Note 280: Require mTLS or signed requests for server-to-server conversions.

Note 281: Rotate keys and secrets for third-party integrations regularly.

Note 282: Ban query-string tokens that can be replayed to impersonate users.

Note 283: Provide sandbox accounts for testing without production tracking.

Note 284: Flag landing pages using forced browser notifications for spam.

Note 285: Disallow auto-download on click; require explicit store pages.

Note 286: Ensure consent dialogs are accessible (focus order, labels, contrast).

Note 287: Block interstitials that trap focus for keyboard/screen-reader users.

Note 288: Support ad preference controls and make them discoverable.

Note 289: Honor user opt-outs across devices where technically feasible.

Note 290: Avoid micro-targeting that could expose sensitive traits.

Note 291: Check that legal lines are readable on small screens.

Note 292: Provide 'report ad' entry points on each ad unit.

Note 293: Investigate high complaint-rate creatives promptly.

Note 294: Share common rejection reasons to improve future approvals.

Note 295: Restrict creators with repeated disclosure failures from branded content.

Note 296: Require re-review when a creator changes the sponsor mid-campaign.

Note 297: No masked redirectors to disguise final landing domain.

Note 298: Block executable attachments in ad click-through flows.

Note 299: Require PCI-compliant processors for payment pages.

Note 300: Ensure refunds/returns policies are visible within one click.

Note 301: Avoid 'drip pricing' practices; present totals early.

Note 302: No CAPTCHA gates that farm user tasks for unrelated services.

Note 303: Audit accessibility of ad templates quarterly.

Note 304: Ensure video ads include seekable progress where required.

Note 305: Block autoplay with sound in contexts that forbid it.

Note 306: Use standardized content labels (e.g., alcohol) where required.

Note 307: Detect and block stolen celebrity likeness used to pitch scams.

Note 308: Require proof for 'limited edition' or 'last units' scarcity claims.

Note 309: Prohibit emergency or disaster profiteering ads.

Note 310: Downrank ads adjacent to unfolding tragedies; or block entirely.

Note 311: No ads that shame users for their body, identity, or beliefs.

Note 312: Ensure kids’ content never gets adult ad adjacency.

Note 313: Use contextual targeting to avoid sensitive content adjacency.

Note 314: Provide regional ad-law cheat sheets internally; enforce the strictest rule.

Note 315: Run periodic bias checks on delivery algorithms.

Note 316: Document decisions around suitability tiers per campaign.

Note 317: Require creatives in all languages actually targeted; no fallback mistranslations.

Note 318: Block prank 'tech support' scams or bogus helplines.

Note 319: For software, show pricing tiers and renewal logic clearly.

Note 320: For subscriptions, provide clear cancel instructions pre-purchase.

Note 321: Disallow ads implying health professional endorsement without proof.

Note 322: No 'clinical trial' recruitment without approvals and ethics review where required.

Note 323: Keep political ad logs (if permitted) with sponsor identity and spend ranges.

Note 324: Offer rate limiting on political impressions to reduce saturation.

Note 325: Respect conflict-of-interest rules for creator endorsements tied to their own products.

Note 326: No 'friends said this' social proof unless verifiable and consented.

Note 327: Disable lookalikes using sensitive seeds; use broad/contextual instead.

Note 328: Ensure promo codes work as advertised; avoid invalid or region-locked codes.

Note 329: Prohibit 'hidden fees' revealed only after personal data is entered.

Note 330: Detect cloaking (clean page for review, different for users); block.

Note 331: Enforce penalties for repeat cloakers including domain bans.

Note 332: Require consistent brand identity across creatives to prevent phishing.

Note 333: For charities, link to registration records where feasible.

Note 334: Provide standardized risk icons (crypto/finance/health) for quick scanning.

Note 335: Disallow creator audio reads that mimic platform system messages.

Note 336: Ensure third-party scripts can be toggled off with consent withdrawal.

Note 337: No adult 'sugar dating' or exploitative relationship ads.

Note 338: Block 'essay mills' and test-cheating services.

Note 339: Prohibit look-alike logos designed to confuse users.

Note 340: Apply extra review for ads using national flags in sensitive contexts.

Note 341: Flag exaggerated urgency ('offer ends in 30 seconds') without proof.

Note 342: Require warranty terms where 'lifetime' is claimed.

Note 343: No firmware mods that violate device or network terms.

Note 344: Disclose if prices exclude shipping, duties, or activation fees.

Note 345: Ban 'unlock region' streaming boxes that evade licensing.

Note 346: Require privacy policies on all advertiser landing pages.

Note 347: Support bid shading and pacing that favors user experience.

Note 348: Maintain emergency kill-switch to pause categories during crises.

Note 349: Always verify age and geo targeting before launch; mis-targeting minors is a hard fail.

Note 350: Use standardized disclosure overlays across all placements for consistency.

Note 351: Pin the 'Sponsored' label in live chat during paid readouts.

Note 352: Disallow countdown timers that pressure immediate purchases unless they reflect real inventory or time-limited promotions.

Note 353: Require evergreen landing pages for long-running campaigns; avoid dead links.

Note 354: Cap ad frequency to prevent user fatigue and maintain session quality.

Note 355: Block interstitials that cover controls or obstruct exit.

Note 356: If a creative references a price, ensure the landing page shows that price or explains differences clearly.

Note 357: For affiliate codes, present the brand relationship plainly (who benefits and how).

Note 358: Do not imply platform endorsement; only approved 'Runs on 6ix' badges may appear.

Note 359: Provide fallback creatives for low-bandwidth users (smaller files, static backups).

Note 360: Respect device reduce-motion preferences in animated ads.

Note 361: Prohibit 'spinner' or fake loading UI to bait clicks.

Note 362: No 'free trial' claims that convert silently to paid without prominent disclosure.

Note 363: Use short, accessible alt text on image ads where supported.

Note 364: Medical disclaimers must be visible at first impression, not buried.

Note 365: Financial APRs must be accurate and include representative examples where required.

Note 366: Crypto risk statements should be shown on creative and landing page.

Note 367: Alcohol ads must include 'No underage drinking' or equivalent local notice.

Note 368: Lottery ads must show odds or link to odds in the first fold where required.

Note 369: Influencers should avoid statements of absolute efficacy ('cures', 'guaranteed').

Note 370: Do not retarget users based on sensitive interest segments.

Note 371: Honor consent withdrawal quickly across all connected tools.

Note 372: No hidden device fingerprinting for ad measurement.

Note 373: Third-party pixels must be domain-scoped and declared.

Note 374: Turn off ad personalization for accounts flagged as minors.

Note 375: Provide brand safety exclusion lists on request (when supported).

Note 376: Use standardized content suitability tiers when booking placements.

Note 377: Disallow ad audio that starts above recommended LUFS thresholds.

Note 378: Ensure flashing content meets photosensitivity guidance.

Note 379: Avoid 'before/after' that rely on filters or digital alteration.

Note 380: Disclose if images are illustrations or simulations.

Note 381: For travel ads, taxes/fees should be clearly stated.

Note 382: Price-per-month claims must include term length and total cost.

Note 383: No spyware, keyloggers, or location trackers in downloads.

Note 384: Enforce strict malware scanning for app-install campaigns.

Note 385: Block installers that bundle unrelated adware.

Note 386: Affiliate landing pages must include contact and returns info.

Note 387: Disallow 'negative option billing' unless clearly presented and easily cancelable.

Note 388: No ads directing to pages that immediately gate content behind forced signups without notice.

Note 389: For educational ads, avoid implying guaranteed admissions or degrees.

Note 390: No degree-mill or unaccredited-institution promotions.

Note 391: For job ads, disclose if the role is commission-only or requires fees.

Note 392: Ban exploitative multi-level recruitment or chain referral schemes.

Note 393: Gambling ads must include responsible-play resources and age filters.

Note 394: Dating ads: restrict imagery; no minor-like depictions; require age gating.

Note 395: Cosmetic procedure ads must avoid unrealistic outcomes and disclose risks.

Note 396: Weight-loss ads cannot promise loss beyond safe weekly ranges.

Note 397: No steroid or SARMs promotions.

Note 398: No promotion of illegal streaming or piracy services.

Note 399: Block 'unlock phone' or 'IMEI change' services violating law.

Note 400: No ad that instructs bypassing DRM or access controls.

Note 401: Environmental claims require verifiable data and timeframes.

Note 402: Green badges need explicit criteria; avoid vague eco icons.

Note 403: Do not imply 6ix endorsement of environmental offsets.

Note 404: Political ads (if allowed) must include sponsor identity and local compliance proofs.

Note 405: Issue ads must avoid misinformation about civic processes.

Note 406: No fundraising that conceals beneficiary or payout entity.

Note 407: Charity ads require registration proof in targeted regions.

Note 408: Religious or belief-based solicitations must avoid targeted pressure tactics.

Note 409: Prohibit ads shaming users over personal characteristics.

Note 410: No predatory tactics (e.g., 'your device is infected' scareware).

Note 411: No imitation of system notifications outside platform UI guidelines.

Note 412: Keep file sizes within limits; provide adaptive bitrates for video.

Note 413: Use safe zones to avoid cropping on different aspect ratios.

Note 414: Ensure brand logos are clear at small sizes on mobile.

Note 415: Provide UTM tagging guidelines; avoid leaking PII in URLs.

Note 416: Remove 3rd-party query params that enable cross-site tracking without consent.

Note 417: Follow retention limits for ad logs; purge on schedule.

Note 418: Implement change logs for creative edits during live campaigns.

Note 419: Require new review if claims or landing pages change materially.

Note 420: Support 'ad feedback' controls so users can hide irrelevant creatives.

Note 421: Throttle repetitive creatives in the same session.

Note 422: Avoid strobing transitions; prefer smooth fades respecting reduce-motion.

Note 423: Check that translations are accurate; avoid auto-translate for medical/legal claims.

Note 424: Use locale-correct currency/units in price claims.

Note 425: No 'surprise fees' at checkout; taxes/fees should not double after click.

Note 426: Install-flow ads must reflect actual permission prompts.

Note 427: For contests, show eligibility, dates, odds (or skill criteria), and T&Cs.

Note 428: Prohibit 'like/share to win' where unlawful; provide official rules.

Note 429: No babysitting/minor care ads without required checks where mandated.

Note 430: For housing ads, avoid discriminatory targeting or messaging.

Note 431: Auto-generated AI avatars in ads should be labeled where material.

Note 432: Disallow synthetic voice clones of real people without consent.

Note 433: If ad uses UGC, obtain releases; no scraping without permission.

Note 434: No sale of academic papers or cheating services in education category.

Note 435: Block 'diploma for sale' or 'doctor note' schemes.

Note 436: Prohibit invasive medical tests sold direct without oversight where regulated.

Note 437: For supplements, include ingredient list and warnings where required.

Note 438: No nicotine or vaping product ads.

Note 439: No weapons parts, ammo, or accessories ads.

Note 440: Restrict knives/martial items by region and context; likely disallow.

Note 441: Avoid ads that encourage unsafe driving or traffic violations.

Note 442: No 'ghost' rental listings; verify advertiser legitimacy.

Note 443: No misleading 'pre-approval' for credit without criteria disclosure.

Note 444: Balance ad load with organic content; preserve creator visibility.

Note 445: Prioritize user safety when conflicts arise between revenue and rules.

Note 446: Provide advertiser education docs for common rejections.

Note 447: Offer pre-checklists to reduce review cycles.

Note 448: Maintain a creative SHA/version registry for audit trails.

Note 449: Respect user blocks: do not serve ads from blocked creators to that user.

Note 450: Do not weaponize ads for harassment; block targeting individuals.

Note 451: Enforce cool-offs after repeated policy flags.

Note 452: Publish anonymized enforcement metrics periodically.

Note 453: Offer API scopes that cannot pull personal data without consent.

Note 454: Require mTLS or signed requests for server-to-server conversions.

Note 455: Rotate keys and secrets for third-party integrations regularly.

Note 456: Ban query-string tokens that can be replayed to impersonate users.

Note 457: Provide sandbox accounts for testing without production tracking.

Note 458: Flag landing pages using forced browser notifications for spam.

Note 459: Disallow auto-download on click; require explicit store pages.

Note 460: Ensure consent dialogs are accessible (focus order, labels, contrast).

Note 461: Block interstitials that trap focus for keyboard/screen-reader users.

Note 462: Support ad preference controls and make them discoverable.

Note 463: Honor user opt-outs across devices where technically feasible.

Note 464: Avoid micro-targeting that could expose sensitive traits.

Note 465: Check that legal lines are readable on small screens.

Note 466: Provide 'report ad' entry points on each ad unit.

Note 467: Investigate high complaint-rate creatives promptly.

Note 468: Share common rejection reasons to improve future approvals.

Note 469: Restrict creators with repeated disclosure failures from branded content.

Note 470: Require re-review when a creator changes the sponsor mid-campaign.

Note 471: No masked redirectors to disguise final landing domain.

Note 472: Block executable attachments in ad click-through flows.

Note 473: Require PCI-compliant processors for payment pages.

Note 474: Ensure refunds/returns policies are visible within one click.

Note 475: Avoid 'drip pricing' practices; present totals early.

Note 476: No CAPTCHA gates that farm user tasks for unrelated services.

Note 477: Audit accessibility of ad templates quarterly.

Note 478: Ensure video ads include seekable progress where required.

Note 479: Block autoplay with sound in contexts that forbid it.

Note 480: Use standardized content labels (e.g., alcohol) where required.

Note 481: Detect and block stolen celebrity likeness used to pitch scams.

Note 482: Require proof for 'limited edition' or 'last units' scarcity claims.

Note 483: Prohibit emergency or disaster profiteering ads.

Note 484: Downrank ads adjacent to unfolding tragedies; or block entirely.

Note 485: No ads that shame users for their body, identity, or beliefs.

Note 486: Ensure kids’ content never gets adult ad adjacency.

Note 487: Use contextual targeting to avoid sensitive content adjacency.

Note 488: Provide regional ad-law cheat sheets internally; enforce the strictest rule.

Note 489: Run periodic bias checks on delivery algorithms.

Note 490: Document decisions around suitability tiers per campaign.

Note 491: Require creatives in all languages actually targeted; no fallback mistranslations.

Note 492: Block prank 'tech support' scams or bogus helplines.

Note 493: For software, show pricing tiers and renewal logic clearly.

Note 494: For subscriptions, provide clear cancel instructions pre-purchase.

Note 495: Disallow ads implying health professional endorsement without proof.

Note 496: No 'clinical trial' recruitment without approvals and ethics review where required.

Note 497: Keep political ad logs (if permitted) with sponsor identity and spend ranges.

Note 498: Offer rate limiting on political impressions to reduce saturation.

Note 499: Respect conflict-of-interest rules for creator endorsements tied to their own products.

Note 500: No 'friends said this' social proof unless verifiable and consented.

Note 501: Disable lookalikes using sensitive seeds; use broad/contextual instead.

Note 502: Ensure promo codes work as advertised; avoid invalid or region-locked codes.

Note 503: Prohibit 'hidden fees' revealed only after personal data is entered.

Note 504: Detect cloaking (clean page for review, different for users); block.

Note 505: Enforce penalties for repeat cloakers including domain bans.

Note 506: Require consistent brand identity across creatives to prevent phishing.

Note 507: For charities, link to registration records where feasible.

Note 508: Provide standardized risk icons (crypto/finance/health) for quick scanning.

Note 509: Disallow creator audio reads that mimic platform system messages.

Note 510: Ensure third-party scripts can be toggled off with consent withdrawal.

Note 511: No adult 'sugar dating' or exploitative relationship ads.

Note 512: Block 'essay mills' and test-cheating services.

Note 513: Prohibit look-alike logos designed to confuse users.

Note 514: Apply extra review for ads using national flags in sensitive contexts.

Note 515: Flag exaggerated urgency ('offer ends in 30 seconds') without proof.

Note 516: Require warranty terms where 'lifetime' is claimed.

Note 517: No firmware mods that violate device or network terms.

Note 518: Disclose if prices exclude shipping, duties, or activation fees.

Note 519: Ban 'unlock region' streaming boxes that evade licensing.

Note 520: Require privacy policies on all advertiser landing pages.