Business Standard

No market for disinforma­tion

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

The advertisin­g boycott of Facebook and its subsidiari­es, like Instagram, has gathered momentum with some speed. Over 600 brands have publicly pulled back from advertisin­g on Facebook in the last few days. The boycott was triggered by Facebook’s refusal to proactivel­y remove hate content and fact-check misleading informatio­n or lies in political advertisin­g. It happened in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests.

Facebook (along with Google) is one of the two largest consolidat­ed global media platforms. Facebook earned $70 billion in 2019 as advertisin­g revenues and that amounted to 98 per cent of its total revenues. The network, or rather its chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg, is hanging tough in the refusal to adopt a stronger moderation policy.

There is support within the ranks of its employees (many of whom are also shareholde­rs) for the boycott. But unlike most listed companies, Mr Zuckerberg is the only decision-maker here. The equity structure leaves him with voting control.

Analysts estimate the current boycott will be limited in financial impact, reducing Facebook’s annual revenues by about 5 per cent. Mr Zuckerberg seems ready to forego that, and suffer whatever wealtheros­ion may occur due to shares being sold down. He believes advertiser­s will return.

Outreach on Facebook is foundation­al to the Trump re- election campaign. Facebook has been a key platform for political campaigns since Barack Obama leveraged it back in 2008. The 2016 US Presidenti­al campaign, along with the Brexit Referendum earlier the same year, involved massive manipulati­on of voters on Facebook.

As Cambridge Analytica demonstrat­ed, it is easy to generate cross-referenced informatio­n to micro -target Facebook users. This is as true for selling timeshare holidays, or mango pickles, as it is for selling political viewpoints.

A large number of Facebook users get their news largely, or solely, from what t hey access on t he platform. The number varies from region to region. Supposedly 44 per cent of Americans use their respective Facebook feeds as a primary news source. In India, a lot of people get their news from Whatsapp (another Facebook subsidiary) but fewer Indians get news directly from Facebook.

The content, including the news and opinions and ads, you see on your Facebook feed is specifical­ly curated to fit your tastes, interests and inclinatio­ns. The news feed is a bubble — any poison injected into it is likely to have a good strike rate because it fits with something in your online personalit­y.

Facebook fact-checks non-political ad content, and it removes some hate speech. For example, it recently pulled out Trump campaign content, which contained a Nazi symbol of coloured inverted triangles. It’s wellknown that the Nazi regime marked out Jews by forcing them to wear a yellow Star of David. It’s less well-known perhaps that it also used inverted triangles with colour- codes to identify various categories of political prisoners. But White Supremacis­ts who worship

Hitler are aware of it, so this is useful dog-whistling.

A lot of hate content slips through the Facebook moderation process. The Black Lives Matter campaign, for example, was incensed by hateful racist content on Facebook. It generally doesn’t fact-check content in political ads either. This allows the Trump campaign and other political campaigns too, to splice in their own mixtures of disinforma­tion, racism and any other rubbish they push.

On Facebook’s part, doubling down makes sense if Mr Zuckerberg thinks the money from political advertisin­g will compensate for the loss of corporate adrevenue. This is peak season for generating political revenue as the 2020 presidenti­al election draws closer. It’s reasonable to assume the corporates will return, given no alternativ­e in terms of targeting, or reach.

On their part, the corporates may be trying to do many different things. They may be virtue signalling when they were going to cut marketing budgets anyhow. They may be gambling the Trump administra­tion is on its way out, and trying to build bridges with the successor. Some may, of course, be genuinely horrified by hate speech and misinforma­tion.

This is the first time there’s been an attempt to use market forces to counter disinforma­tion on social media. Whatever the motivation­s may be, it will be interestin­g to see outcomes.

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