The Guardian Australia

Facebook says it rejected 2.2m ads seeking to obstruct voting in US election

- Agence France-Presse

A total of 2.2m ads on Facebook and Instagram have been rejected and 120,000 posts withdrawn for attempting to “obstruct voting” in the upcoming US presidenti­al election, Facebook’s vice president Nick Clegg has said.

In addition, warnings were posted on 150m examples of false informatio­n posted online, the former British deputy prime minister told French weekly Journal du Dimanche on Sunday.

Facebook has been increasing its efforts to avoid a repeat of events leading up to the 2016 US presidenti­al election, won by Donald Trump, when its network was used for attempts at voter manipulati­on, carried out from Russia.

There were similar problems ahead of Britain’s 2016 referendum on leaving the European Union.

“Thirty-five thousand employees take care of the security of our platforms and contribute for elections,” said Clegg, who is vice president of global affairs and communicat­ions at Facebook.

“We have establishe­d partnershi­ps with 70 specialise­d media, including five in France, on the verificati­on of informatio­n”, he added. AFP is one of those partners.

Clegg added that the company also uses artificial intelligen­ce that has “made it possible to delete billions of posts and fake accounts, even before they are reported by users”.

Facebook also stores all advertisem­ents and informatio­n on their funding and provenance for seven years “to ensure transparen­cy,” he said.

In 2016, while he was still deputy prime minister, Clegg complained to the Journal du Dimanche that Facebook had not identified or suppressed a single foreign network interferin­g in the US election.

On Wednesday, Trump rebuked Facebook and Twitter for blocking links to a New York Post article purporting to expose corrupt dealings by election rival Joe Biden and his son Hunter in Ukraine.

A day earlier Facebook announced a ban on ads that discourage people from getting vaccinated, in light of the coronaviru­s pandemic which the social media giant said has “highlighte­d the importance of preventive health behaviours”.

 ?? Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA ?? Facebook vice president Nick Clegg said had the company had withdrawn 120,000 posts relating to the US election.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA Facebook vice president Nick Clegg said had the company had withdrawn 120,000 posts relating to the US election.

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