01What a Virtual Influencer Is — Defining the Term

A virtual influencer (= a communicator that does not exist in reality, built with CG or generative AI) is a "persona" whose photos, videos, and text are all artificially produced. No living human is performing the role; the appearance, the voice, and the words of the posts are all designed by the creator. Lil Miquela, which appeared around 2016, is the representative example — she has signed contracts with real brands and introduced products just like an ordinary influencer.

Technically, three layers combine. Understanding them separately makes the later regulatory discussion easier to organize.

The crucial layer is the last one. A virtual influencer may look like "AI talking on its own," but in reality there is always a party responsible for the communication (the creator, the advertiser) standing behind it. This fact is the starting point when considering whether such a figure may be used in pharmaceutical advertising.

02Why They Are Spreading, and Real-World Examples

Why are fictional communicators used in advertising? The reason is clear: the creator can bring the uncertainty that clings to a living influencer entirely under control.

Reason 01

Control of scandal risk

buying "predictability"

A real person can damage a brand through private scandals or careless remarks. Because the creator can control a fictional communicator's words, that kind of sudden risk can be designed out.

Reason 02

A consistent worldview

keeping the "feel"

Appearance, tone, and values can be fixed, so the brand's atmosphere (the domain covered in the previous Vibe Marketing installment) can be sustained over the long term without breaking.

Reason 03

Lower production cost

"mass-producing fast"

No shooting schedules, no travel. Images, video, and text can be mass-produced with generative AI, making high posting frequency and multilingual rollout easy.

Reason 04

Simpler rights

"lighter contracts"

Negotiations over portrait rights and exclusivity are not as heavy as with real talent. But as discussed later, this "lightness" is the flip side of a lack of transparency.

In consumer goods, use has spread mainly around beverages, cosmetics, and apparel. Some companies own their own virtual characters and communicate through official accounts. In pharmaceuticals and healthcare, by contrast, having such communicators recommend products is almost never seen in Japan. This is not self-restraint but an institutional wall. From the next chapter, we verify that wall against the regulatory text.

03Whether It Is Permitted in Medical / Pharmaceutical Advertising — The Conclusion First

Let's state the conclusion up front. Having a fictional communicator recommend a prescription drug to the general public is not permissible under Japan's framework. The reason is not singular; several regulations overlap and point to the same conclusion.

Organized, it forms a three-tier structure.

For OTC drugs (= over-the-counter medicines that can be bought at a pharmacy) or health-related consumer goods, advertising to the general public is itself possible. Even then, using a fictional communicator raises a new transparency problem: "whose experience is this?" We examine this point in detail in Chapters 05 and 06.

04Advertising Applicability Under the Pharmaceutical Act — Articles 66, 68, and 68-2

Here we pin down the text of the Pharmaceutical Act precisely. Because getting the article numbers wrong throws off the whole discussion, we confirm them carefully.

To judge advertising applicability, the "three requirements" set out by the authorities are used. (1) the intent to induce customers is clear, (2) the product name of a specific drug, etc., is made clear, and (3) it is in a state recognizable by the general public — when all three are satisfied, it is judged to be "advertising." A virtual influencer's post, if it names a product, prompts a purchase, and is viewable by anyone through a public account, easily satisfies the three requirements. In other words, the excuse that "it is just an AI-made character's monologue, so it is not advertising" does not hold.

Responsibility does not vanish just because the communicator is fictional: The Pharmaceutical Act's advertising rules focus not on "who made the representation" but on "what representation was made." Whether a creator has generative AI speak, or whether there is a performing human or not, if there is exaggerated representation or mention of an unapproved product, the party that carried out the advertising (the advertiser, the creator) bears the responsibility under Articles 66 and 68. A fictional persona is not a shield against liability.

05The Stealth Marketing Rule — The 2023 Premiums and Representations Act Notification

On October 1, 2023, a new notification under the Premiums and Representations Act (Act against Unjustifiable Premiums and Misleading Representations) took effect — the so-called stealth marketing rule. Formally, it designates "a representation for which it is difficult for the general consumer to determine that it is a business operator's representation" as an unfair representation under Article 5, item 3 of the Act.

The core of this rule comes down to one point: it prohibits concealing that something is a business operator's advertising and making it appear to be a third party's voluntary impression. In relation to virtual influencers, this carries a double meaning.

Point at issueTreatment under the stealth-marketing rule
Disclosure that it is advertisingIf the representation involves a business operator, "Ad," "PR," etc., must be disclosed. No exception for fictional communicators.
Whether the communicator is realA "testimonial" from a non-existent person is easily mistaken by consumers for a third party's impression, tending toward a representation that is hard to determine.
Expressions of impression / felt useA fictional persona has not actually used the product. Having it speak of felt use can become a groundless experiential representation.
Where responsibility liesThe rule is addressed to the business operator that made the representation. Even if the communicator is AI-generated, the operator's responsibility does not change.

Organized, using a fictional communicator is not itself immediately illegal. What is prohibited is "concealing that it is a business operator's advertising." Therefore, if both the fictional nature and the advertising nature are disclosed, there is room for it to stand in the consumer-goods domain. The question is how thoroughly that disclosure can be carried out in a pharmaceutical context — which moves us to the next chapter's issue.

06The Craft of Transparency Disclosure — What to Write, Where, and How

When using a fictional communicator, securing transparency is not a matter of "adding one line of note." The following elements must be delivered in a form the consumer can actually perceive.

Here a heavy pharma-specific constraint is added. Sales-information-provision activities for prescription drugs are, under the "Guideline on Sales Information Provision Activities for Prescription Drugs" (= the "HanteiG," notification of the Director-General of the Pharmaceutical Safety and Environmental Health Bureau, MHLW, 2018), required to observe the distinction between information provision and advertising, disclosure of supporting materials, and clear identification of the responsible person's name and affiliation. The premise is that the recipient can verify who delivered the information. A fictional communicator structurally struggles to satisfy this "being verifiable." Here lies the fundamental incompatibility between prescription drugs and a generated narrator.

07Collision With a Credence Good — Why It Is Especially Strict for Pharmaceuticals

Since Vol. 1, this series has treated pharmaceuticals as a "credence good" — a good whose quality the buyer can hardly verify on their own either before or after purchase, and for which they must depend on trust in the communicator. This property collides head-on with the fictional communicator.

The collision happens on two layers.

International principles support this direction as well. The World Health Organization's "Ethical Criteria for Medicinal Drug Promotion" (1988) holds that drug promotion should be accurate, fair, and verifiable, and cautions against misleading representations and excessive appeals to emotion. Before asking whether the communicator is real, it is a principle that requires the substance of the promotion to be verifiable and honest. A fictional narrator struggles to meet this verifiability requirement.

"A usable technology" and "a domain in which it may be used" are different: The virtual influencer is an effective tool in consumer-goods branding. But for prescription drugs, regulation and the credence-good property form a double wall, so it is almost unusable for product appeal aimed at general consumers. The maturity of a technology and the breadth of the domain in which it may be deployed must be judged on separate axes.

08Design Guidance — For Judgments in the Pharmaceutical Field

So, when marketing and medical staff at pharmaceutical companies hesitate in practice, how should they draw the line? We organize it by domain.

Zone 01

Prescription drug × general public

do not use

A domain where the appropriate-advertising standards do not, in principle, permit advertising to the general public. Before the question of whether the communicator is fictional, the advertising itself does not stand. Do not step in here.

Zone 02

Prescription drug × healthcare professionals

cautiously, within the information-provision frame

Under the HanteiG, the information source, evidence, and responsible person must be made clear. A fictional communicator harms verifiability, so as a rule it cannot be recommended.

Zone 03

OTC / consumer goods

limited, with thorough disclosure

Advertising is possible, but double disclosure — of the fictional nature and the advertising nature — and avoidance of feigned experience are mandatory. Do not assert efficacy.

Zone 04

Disease awareness / non-product information

room to exist if neutrality holds

For disease awareness that names no specific product, there is some room for a fictional navigator role. But the design must not skew consultation-seeking toward a particular drug.

Three common axes of judgment apply. First, confirm at the outset whether the post satisfies the three requirements for advertising applicability. Second, if it does, examine the constraints of the Pharmaceutical Act (exaggeration under Article 66, unapproved products under Article 68) and the appropriate-advertising standards side by side. Third, even when it falls into the consumer-goods domain, ask yourself from the stealth-marketing angle whether anything is being "concealed." When in doubt, return first to the three requirements for advertising applicability — this is the safe first move in the field.

09Connections to Other Chapters on This Site

This installment's issues connect to other chapters, inside and outside the series, as follows. Reading them together adds depth to how the boundary is drawn.

In Closing

The virtual influencer is a technology that gives a "persona" to a narrator who does not exist. In consumer-goods branding, it has grown into a leading player in advertising, armed with control over scandal risk and a consistent worldview. But when one tries to bring it into the prescription-drug domain, three walls rise at once: the appropriate-advertising standards' in-principle ban on advertising to the general public, the Pharmaceutical Act's prohibition of exaggerated and unapproved representations under Articles 66 and 68, and the 2023 stealth-marketing rule. Deeper still lies the property that pharmaceuticals are a credence good — the weight of the recipient being able to verify who spoke, and on what evidence. A fictional narrator structurally struggles to meet this verifiability. So even though it is usable as a technology, broad domains remain in which it cannot be used for pharmaceutical product appeal. When judgment falters, begin the examination not from whether the communicator is real or fictional, but from whether the post qualifies as "advertising." The boundary can be drawn from there. Next time, we go into the implementation of putting AI into customer relationship management — and its pitfalls.

Key Points — Three to Take Away
  1. Having a virtual influencer recommend a prescription drug to general consumers is not possible under Japan's framework. The reason is not singular: the appropriate-advertising standards' in-principle ban on advertising to the general public, the Pharmaceutical Act (exaggeration under Article 66, unapproved products under Article 68), and the stealth-marketing rule in force since 2023 overlap and point to the same conclusion.
  2. The Pharmaceutical Act's advertising rules focus not on "who made the representation" but on "what representation was made." If the three requirements for advertising applicability (inducement intent, disclosure of the product name, a state recognizable by the general public) are met, the business operator that carried out the advertising bears responsibility even if the communicator derives from generative AI. A fictional persona is not a shield against liability.
  3. For consumer goods, there is room to stand with double disclosure of the fictional nature and the advertising nature. But pharmaceuticals are a credence good, and verifiability of the information source is the linchpin. A fictional narrator, whose speaker and evidence the recipient cannot verify, struggles to meet this requirement. When in doubt, returning to the three requirements for advertising applicability is the safe first move.
Sources & References
  1. Consumer Affairs Agency. "Representations for which it is difficult for the general consumer to determine that they are a business operator's representation" (Cabinet Office Notification No. 19 of 2023) and Operational Standards. Effective 2023. Primary source of the stealth-marketing rule.
  2. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Act on Securing Quality, Efficacy and Safety of Products Including Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices (Pharmaceutical Act), Articles 66, 68, and 68-2. Statutory basis for the prohibition of exaggerated and unapproved advertising and the duty of effort to provide information.
  3. Director, Compliance and Narcotics Division, Pharmaceutical Safety and Environmental Health Bureau, MHLW. Commentary and Points of Note on the Standards for Appropriate Advertising of Pharmaceuticals (Yaku-Sei-Kan-Ma-Hatsu No. 0929-5). September 29, 2017. Operational interpretation of the appropriate-advertising standards (the standards themselves are the same-date Yaku-Sei-Hatsu No. 0929-4, Director-General notification).
  4. Director-General, Pharmaceutical Safety and Environmental Health Bureau, MHLW. Guideline on Sales Information Provision Activities for Prescription Drugs. 2018. Framework for the distinction between information provision and advertising, and for disclosure of supporting materials and the responsible person.
  5. World Health Organization. Ethical Criteria for Medicinal Drug Promotion. WHO, 1988. International principles on the accuracy, fairness, and verifiability of medicinal drug promotion.