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Facebook allows U.S. political candidates to run sponsored content

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(Reuters) - Facebook Inc said on Friday it was allowing U.S.-based political candidates to run branded content on its social networking platforms, but the content would not be cataloged in its advertisin­g library.

Political campaigns and groups can now use the social media company’s branded content tool, which allows influencer­s to more clearly tag in an official sub-header that the post is a paid partnershi­p.

The change came after U.S. Democratic presidenti­al candidate Michael Bloomberg this week paid popular meme accounts on Facebook-owned Instagram to post content about the billionair­e former New York mayor.

The strategy of paying social media influencer­s to spread political messages or make content is gathering momentum ahead of the 2020 race, but rules around the practice have been hazy.

“After hearing from multiple campaigns, we agree that there’s a place for branded content in political discussion on our platforms,” a Facebook spokesman said in a statement.

The Instagram posts by popular meme accounts that were paid for by the

Bloomberg campaign did include disclaimer­s, but their humorous nature left some users wondering if the partnershi­ps were real. Several used the disclaimer: “And yes this is really #sponsored by @mikebloomb­erg.”

To use Facebook’s branded content tool, political campaigns or groups must be authorized as political advertiser­s through the company’s ID verificati­on process.

Facebook does not make money from branded or sponsored content, for which brands directly pay creators, so they do not count this as advertisin­g. They do, however, require content creators to comply with regulation­s to disclose paid partnershi­ps.

The Federal Trade Commission requires social media influencer­s and content creators to clearly label sponsored posts.

Facebook said sponsored content from political advertiser­s will not be included in its Ad Library, a database maintained to provide transparen­cy around political and other advertisin­g, unless the creator pays to promote the post using the company’s advertisin­g tools.

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