Thailand has introduced new requirements for online social media platforms to verify the identity of paying advertisers before publishing their advertisements. On May 5, 2026, the Electronic Transactions Commission published the Notification on Measures for Prevention of Technology Crime for Online Social Media (No. 2) in the Government Gazette. The notification, which aims to prevent technology crimes such as fraud and scams, takes effect 180 days after publication (i.e., on November 1, 2026).
Mandatory Advertiser Identity Verification
Online social media service providers must verify the identity of every advertiser before publishing an advertisement. Verification remains valid for up to one year from the most recent verification date.
The notification requires social media providers to use either of the following methods when verifying advertisers:
Advertiser Data Collection and Retention
Service providers must collect and retain certain data—including name, identification number, and contact details—from the start of the advertising service and for a minimum of 90 days after the end of the advertising service relationship. The same requirements apply where there is a third-party payer, such as an ad agency.
Implications for Affected Businesses
The notification raises two key areas of concern for affected businesses:
Online platforms should assess whether they fall within the scope of “online social media service provider” and identify which categories of their advertisers are subject to the identity verification requirements. Affected platforms should evaluate their current advertiser verification capabilities, identify compliance gaps, and begin designing technical solutions and operational processes to meet the November 2026 effective date.