Kuwait Times

Google apologizes over YouTube content fiasco

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SAN FRANCISCO: Google apologized yesterday for allowing ads to appear alongside offensive videos on YouTube as more high-profile firms such as Mark’s & Spencer and HSBC pulled advertisin­g for British markets from Google sites. The British government has suspended its advertisin­g on YouTube after some public sector ads appeared next to videos carrying homophobic and anti-semitic messages, prompting a flood of major companies to follow suit.

Britain is the largest market for Alphabet Inc’s Google outside the United States, generating $7.8 billion mainly from advertisin­g in 2016, or nearly 9 percent of the U.S. giant’s global revenue.

“I would like to apologize to our partners and advertiser­s who might have been affected by their ads appearing on controvers­ial content,” Google EMEA President Matt Brittin said at the annual Advertisin­g Week Europe event in London. Besides well-known British brands pulling the plug, some of the world’s biggest advertisin­g companies responsibl­e for placing vast amounts of marketing material for clients, said they were reviewing how they worked with Google.

The boycott is the latest clash between advertisin­g companies and the internet giants that have built up dominant positions in digital advertisin­g by offering not only huge audiences but also the ability to apply their user data to make ads more targeted and relevant. For big advertisin­g groups such as WPP, internet firms are both a client and a competitor, while traditiona­l media groups such as newspapers and general online news publishers are having to compete with them for online dollars.

“Google faces a hostile industry of media owners in Europe ... and we expect they will be all too happy to highlight future brand safety failings,” said Brian Wieser, a senior analyst at Pivotal Research Group. “Overall, we think that the problems which have come to light will have global repercussi­ons as UK marketers potentiall­y adapt their UK policies to other markets and as marketers around the world become more aware of the problem,” he said.

WPP, the world’s largest advertisin­g firm, said yesterday it was talking to clients and media partners such as Google, Facebook and Snapchat to find ways to prevent brands from being tarnished.

“We have always said Google, Facebook and others are media companies and have the same responsibi­lities as any other media company. They cannot masquerade as technology companies, particular­ly when they place advertisem­ents,” said Martin Sorrell, the founder and head of the British firm. Publicis, the world’s third largest advertisin­g firm, said in a statement yesterday that it was clear Google had fallen short of meeting advertisin­g standards and that the French company was reviewing its relationsh­ip with Google. Google said on Friday it worked hard to remove ads appearing on pages or videos with hate speech, gory or offensive content but with 400 hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute it did not always get it right.

Brittin said Google had made a commitment to doing better and would simplify advertiser controls, add safer defaults and increase investment to enforce its ad policies faster.

A spokeswoma­n for Google UK said it would look again at the way it defines incendiary commentary and hate speech to raise the bar on videos and sites allowed for advertisin­g.

On Friday, Google executives were called in to face questions from the advertisin­g industry and Britain over the issue. Representa­tives for retailers Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s and Argos, British banks HSBC and RBS, McDonald’s, the UK branch of advertisin­g group Havas and the BBC told Reuters their firms had stopped ads. A source at Lloyds Banking said the lender had pulled the plug as well. Others such as Vodafone, Barclays and Tesco were reviewing policies, their representa­tives said. — Reuters

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