Iran Daily

Labour joining Facebook ad boycott

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UK’S Labour is joining the advertisin­g boycott of Facebook “in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement”, one of the party’s senior MPS said.

Shadow minister, Rachel Reeves, told the BBC the party wanted “to express our concern about the failure of Facebook to take down some hateful material.”

Companies including consumer goods firm Unilever have also joined the campaign.

Facebook has said harmful posts would be removed but some could stay if they have news value.

The Facebook advertisin­g boycott was started by the “Stop Hate for Profit” campaign in the wake of George Floyd’s death in police custody in the US city of Minneapoli­s.

The organizers, including the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People, accused Facebook of allowing “racist, violent and verifiably false content to run rampant on its platform.”

Speaking to the BBC’S Andrew Marr, Reeves said, “All MPS in the Labour Party use Facebook to get across our message, but what we’re not doing at the moment is advertisin­g on Facebook.

“And that is in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter campaign but also in line with what many businesses are doing this month, which is to express our concerns about the failure of Facebook to take down some hateful material from their platform and take more responsibi­lity for the lies and propaganda that are sometimes put out there on Facebook.

“Facebook needs to do more to take responsibi­lity and this is just one way that businesses and the Labour Party and others can put pressure on Facebook to do the right things and take tougher action on hate crime and hate speech.”

Of the £40 million spent by political parties during the 2017 election, around £3 million went directly on Facebook ads, with the Conservati­ves spending twice as much as all the other parties combined.

Responding to the campaign toward the end of June, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg defended the firm’s record of taking down hate speech, pointing to a European Commission report that found the social network removed 86 percent of hate speech last year, up from 82.6 percent.

He said ads would be banned if they describe different groups, based on descriptor­s such as race or immigratio­n status, as a threat — as well as content deemed to incite violence or suppress voting.

However he also said occasional­ly content that violated the company’s policies would be left up “if the public interest value outweighs the risk of harm.”

“Often, seeing speech from politician­s is in the public interest, and in the same way that news outlets will report what a politician says, we think people should generally be able to see it for themselves on our platforms,” he said.

“We will soon start labeling some of the content we leave up because it is deemed newsworthy, so people can know when this is the case,” he said.

 ?? STEPHEN LAM/REUTERS ??
STEPHEN LAM/REUTERS

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