TikTok bans politicians from paying for ads before Thai vote

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The platform is expecting a higher volume of misleading posts including AI-generated content and videos instigating hatred or violence as Thailand's election nears.

The platform is expecting a higher volume of misleading posts including AI-generated content and videos instigating hatred or violence as Thailand's election nears.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Social media platform TikTok said it would block Thai election candidates from paying for advertising or monetising their content during

the election campaign period

.

Political advertising and collecting revenue from politically branded content is already banned by the video-sharing platform and as such those rules also include the accounts of candidates taking part in the Feb 8 vote. 

TikTok, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, said on Jan 15 it would also partner with fact-checking organisations to validate political claims and its in-house monitoring staff will remove disinformation and misinformation. It anticipates a higher volume of misleading posts, including AI-generated content and videos instigating hatred or violence as the election nears.

“Such content will be removed from the platform. It’s unavoidable that we may see more of it as more users express opinion about politics,” said TikTok’s manager for outreach and partnership Siriprapa Weerachaising. “Any political content, whether from political parties or content creators including media, cannot be promoted by paid advertising at all.”

There are about 50 million TikTok users in Thailand – almost as many as the 53 million people eligible to vote.

TikTok said it removed 4.4 million videos from its platform in the third quarter of 2025 for violating its community standards. It did not say how many posts were classified as political content.

Candidates from 57 political parties are contesting for a total of 500 seats, including 100 party-list positions to the House of Representatives, according to data from the Election Commission. BLOOMBERG

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