Toronto Star

Twitter set to roll out new election ad measures

Social media company says it will attach a special tag on Canadian election ads

- SABRINA NANJI DEMOCRACY REPORTER

Canadians thumbing through Twitter will soon see a special tag on election ads, as well as who placed the post and how they were targeted.

That’s part of the ad transparen­cy package the company announced this week — days after U.S. lawmakers moved to regulate shady political advertisin­g on social media, and a week before Twitter, Facebook and Google are scheduled to testify to Congress about enabling possible Russian interferen­ce in last year’s presidenti­al election.

A spokespers­on confirmed the new measures will be rolled out in Canada “in the coming weeks” but declined to share further details for this story.

Twitter said it will disclose all political ads running on the platform, as well as revealing who is behind them and how much they spent, along with informatio­n on how users are targeted based on age, gender and location. Election-related ads will be tagged as such, and the company will implement “stricter requiremen­ts on who can serve these ads and limit targeting options,” Bruce Falck, general manager of revenue product and engineerin­g, wrote in a blog post.

Facebook took a similar step last month to shed more light on advertisin­g.

Twitter, Facebook and Google have previously revealed that Russianlin­ked groups purchased ads and used bots or fake accounts to spread discord over hot-button political issues such as immigratio­n in the 2016 U.S. election.

Meanwhile, Canada’s electronic spy agency has warned the 2019 federal vote could be vulnerable to cyberattac­ks and malicious actors that sow misinforma­tion online.

There have also been calls, including from the Senate and chief electoral officer, to tighten the Elections Act to address the potential for foreign interferen­ce, and particular­ly when it comes to social media.

Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould — fresh off Facebook Canada’s panel discussion promoting its own “election integrity” plan — lauded Twitter’s move to self-regulate. “I encourage all online platforms to think critically about the steps they can take to ensure a fair and level playing field in our democracy,” she said.

 ?? LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Twitter said it will disclose all political ads, who is behind them and how much was spent.
LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Twitter said it will disclose all political ads, who is behind them and how much was spent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada