Business Standard

Ireland’s abortion vote becomes a test for Facebook, Google

- ADAM SATARIANO Dublin, 25 May

Craig Dwyer recently sat in an office above a convenienc­e store in downtown Dublin, scrolling through a database he had compiled of hundreds of online ads that have popped up about Ireland’s abortion referendum on Friday.

Dwyer, who co-founded an election transparen­cy group, pulled up one anti-abortion YouTube video that had only a few views when it was posted last year. After the video was republishe­d as a referendum campaign ad on Facebook by a group from an unknown location, it attracted more than 1.2 million views, he said. He also showed an anti-abortion ad on Facebook that purported to be from an unbiased organisati­on, but was also purchased by a buyer who couldn’t be traced.

With such ads on the rise, Facebook and Google took aggressive steps this month to prevent foreign meddling ahead of Ireland’s vote. Facebook blocked ads related to the abortion campaign from groups outside Ireland, while Google banned all referendum­related spots altogether. “With social media in this campaign, our democracy is up for sale to the highest bidder and we’re blindfolde­d at the auction,” said Dwyer, 28, who runs the Transparen­t Referendum Initiative, which is pushing for new campaign disclosure laws for digital advertisin­g.

Ireland has turned into a test case of whether Facebook and Google can thwart foreign groups from influencin­g elections, and misinforma­tion from spreading. For months leading to Friday’s vote on whether to lift a constituti­onal ban on abortion, online ads on the issue became increasing­ly common from internatio­nal groups attempting to sway the outcome. Of the 280 groups that since February had bought ads on Facebook tied to the abortion vote, 14 per cent were based outside the country or in an untraceabl­e location, according to Dwyer’s group.

How Facebook and Google have responded to these ads is being closely scrutinise­d because it foreshadow­s what the companies may try in the United States and elsewhere to keep elections unsullied.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A woman arrives to vote with her children in Dublin on Friday as Ireland holds a referendum on liberalisi­ng its law on abortion
PHOTO: REUTERS A woman arrives to vote with her children in Dublin on Friday as Ireland holds a referendum on liberalisi­ng its law on abortion

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