Business Standard

Facebook tweaks political ad policy to avoid poll tilt

- NEHA ALAWADHI

Ahead of India’s general elections, Facebook on Thursday further updated its policy for political advertisin­g in the country and said it would add disclaimer­s about who paid for or published an ad. The firm would also make more data available about these ads on Facebook and Instagram.

The changes, which will come into effect on February 21, were detailed in a blogpost by its India and South Asia Public Policy Director Shivnath Thukral and Product Manager Sarah Schiff Beginning Thursday, people will begin to see political ads with ‘published by’ or ‘paid for by’ disclaimer­s.

Along with this, Facebook will add a searchable Ad Library, which will be accessible to people to learn more about ads related to politics, including impression­s (the number of times an ad is seen and loaded on a webpage), spend, and demographi­cs of who saw the ad. “In the coming weeks, people will start seeing the country locations of the people managing pages that run political ads to better understand the origin,” Thukral and Schiff said.

In December, Facebook had said anyone who wants to run an ad in India related to politics will need to first confirm their identity and location, and give more details about who placed

the advertisem­ent.

On Thursday, it said authorised advertiser­s can name themselves, a (Facebook) page they run or another organisati­on as the entity behind the ad. If they name another organisati­on to place an ad, Facebook will require them to provide some other form of authentica­tion — like a phone number, email and website or a media certificat­ion and monitoring committee certificat­e from India’s Election Commission.

The Menlo Park-headquarte­red social networking giant is under fire in its home country, the US, for allowing political ads from Russia that influenced voters and swung the election in President Donald Trump’s favour. “This month, we’ll start showing the primary country location of the people who manage pages running or paying for political ads in India. This informatio­n can be found in the page’s ‘Info and Ads’ section, along with all the ads the page is currently running, even if they’re not targeted to you,” Facebook said on Thursday.

Facebook is also facing flak from several countries, including the UK and the European Union for its data collection and usage practices.

It also urged users to report ads on which they feel their should be a disclaimer. Facebook had introduced the “paid for” feature last year in the US as well but a study claimed the efforts had not made much impact, and the attempt at self regulation had actually made the problem worse for political ads spreading misinforma­tion on the platform.

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