Regina Leader-Post

ELECTION ‘LARGELY CLEAN’ ON FACEBOOK.

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MISINFORMA­TION

TORONTO • Canada’s election has so far been “largely clean” but misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion may start emerging during the final week of the campaign, a researcher warns.

The Digital Democracy Project, an initiative from the Public Policy Forum and Mcgill University’s Max Bell School of Public Policy, collaborat­ed with New York University’s Center for Cybersecur­ity to look at ads on Facebook during the first several weeks of the election.

Laura Edelson, a researcher with the NYU centre’s Online Political Transparen­cy Project, said there has so far been no evidence of foreign activity through Facebook ads.

“Generally speaking, we have seen a largely clean election, with much less of a kind of misreprese­nted advertiser (or) misinforma­tion kinds of content that we have seen it the U.S. and the U.K.,” she said. “If disinforma­tion ads come out, my suspicion is they will come out the last week.”

A report from the Digital Democracy Project says that the Cambridge Analytica scandal — in which the firm used Facebook users’ data to try to influence U.S. elections — shed light on how social media could be used to sway campaigns.

“With traditiona­l advertisin­g, political campaigns can only reach broad audiences — such as newspaper subscriber­s, or viewers of a certain television show — and their spending is strictly regulated,” the report says.

“But with social media advertisem­ents, political parties and their supporters can fine-tune their messages to highly specific audiences, without the rest of the country knowing what informatio­n their friends and neighbours are receiving.”

The project did find what it called troubling examples of partisan ads from two groups purporting to be fact checks. Between Sept. 11 and Oct. 4, researcher­s found 60 “faux fact check” ads from two different Facebook pages — one called “Election Fact Check” that is paid for by the Conservati­ve party, and clearly labelled as such. The other attacks the Conservati­ves and says it is paid for by “Canada Fact Check,” which links to an associated left-leaning website.

The report also says the left-leaning group North99 ran 30 ads soliciting donations for a “fact check” website conservati­veplan. ca, which “appears to be a partisan site designed to propagate negative political messages.”

The report also looked at how the political parties and third-party groups are advertisin­g on Facebook. Between the start of the campaign on Sept. 11 and Oct. 4, the Liberals far outspent their rivals, putting an estimated $1 million into Facebook ads, compared to an approximat­e $640,000 spent by the Conservati­ves and $230,000 by the NDP.

The Conservati­ves are spending more per ad, at an average of $695, but are running fewer of them, compared to more and smaller targeted ads by the Liberals, the report found.

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