The Sunday Guardian

Twitter will strengthen and overhaul paid-content policy

- ADAM JOURDAN AND MATTHEW MILLER

Twitter has pledged to publish more informatio­n about political spots and other advertisem­ents, a policy change that reflects deepening concerns about how paid content affected the 2016 election.

With congressio­nal investigat­ors exploring how Russia projected its influence through social media during the last election, Twitter and other prominent companies are under intensifyi­ng pressure to explain how they monitor advertisem­ents that appear before millions of users.

Sen Mark Warner of Virginia, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee chastised Twitter in biting terms for a presentati­on on Russian interferen­ce he called “inadequate on almost every level”. Legislator­s have introduced a bill that would compel Twitter and others to disclose informatio­n about political ad buys, and executives have been summoned to testify in Congress next week.

Days before it plans to dispatch a representa­tive to Capitol Hill, Twitter announced that it would be launching a hub for advertisin­g informatio­n that describes all ads running on the platform.

More stringent disclosure rules will now apply to political ads that directly refer to a candidate or political party, Twitter said. Those tweets will now carry distinct visual features that announce they’re paid political content, and Twitter will publish informatio­n about who paid - and how much - for political campaigns.

It was less clear what Twit- ter intended to do with “issue-based ads” that do not specifical­ly identify a candidate. Campaign finance rules allow much more leeway in the murkily defined area of such advertisem­ents, which can carry a political message without expressly supporting or opposing office-seekers. Groups can spend unlimited sums on such ads.

“There is currently no clear industry definition for issue-based ads but we will work with our peer companies, other industry leaders, policy makers, and ad partners to clearly define them quickly and integrate them into the new approach mentioned above”, Twitter said in a blog post detailing the new rules.

Some of the social media advertisem­ents that have alarmed Congress did not mention specific candidates. Among the thousands of Facebook ads that flowed from Russian-linked fake accounts were messages that sought to stir social strife by fanning debate over divisive issues.

In embracing broader disclosure guidelines, Twitter moved to define what it releases on its own terms rather than await new rules from Congress. The company’s blog post referenced the new bill disclosing more online ad disclosure but did not take a position, saying “We look forward to engaging with Members of Congress and other key stakeholde­rs on these issues as the legislativ­e process continues”.

But if Twitter was hoping to forestall a legislativ­e push, it didn’t convince one of the new bill’s authors. Sen Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, said in a statement that Twitter’s changes were “no substitute for updating our laws”.

If Twitter is an advocate for this type of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity”, Ms Klobuchar said, ”I look forward to its support of my bipartisan legislatio­n“. REUTERS

 ??  ?? Twitter announced that it would be launching a hub for advertisin­g informatio­n.
Twitter announced that it would be launching a hub for advertisin­g informatio­n.

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