The Borneo Post

More firms use Facebook to block older job seekers

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A PROPOSED class action lawsuit alleging Facebook’s ad placement tools facilitate discrimina­tion against older job- seekers has been expanded to identify additional companies, further widening the latest front in claims that candidates are being filtered out by gender, geography, race and age.

“When Facebook’s own algorithm disproport­ionately directs ads to younger workers at the exclusion of older workers, Facebook and the advertiser­s who are using Facebook as an agent to send their advertisem­ents are engaging in disparate treatment,” a communicat­ions union alleged in the amended complaint- citing a legal test for employment discrimina­tion- filed Tuesday in San Francisco federal court. The union added claims under California’s fair employment and unfair competitio­n statutes to the lawsuit, which was initially filed in December.

The Communicat­ions Workers of America is suing on behalf of union members and other job seekers who allegedly missed out on employment opportunit­ies because companies used Facebook’s ad tools to target people of other ages. The original filing named defendants are Amazon.com Inc., Cox Media Group, Cox Communicat­ions Inc. and TMobile, as well as what the union estimates to be hundreds of employers and employment agencies who used Facebook’s tools to filter out older job hunters when seeking to fill positions.

The amended filing adds Ikea, Enterprise Rent-A- Car and the University of Maryland Medical System to its list of companies who allegedly used Facebook’s tools to filter by age. Those three entities, as well as Facebook, aren’t named defendants in the lawsuit.

Cox Communicat­ions declined to comment. Cox Media, Amazon, T-Mobile, Facebook, and the companies added to the amended complaint didn’t immediatel­y provide comment in response to inquiries made before regular business hours.

The union alleged in its amended lawsuit that Facebook also uses age- filtering in ads intended to find its own new employees. In January, the union filed an Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission complaint about the alleged practice, according to a copy obtained by Bloomberg News. The CWA says it has filed similar claims against dozens of companies, and that the agency has asked those employers, and Facebook, to respond to the allegation­s. An EEOC spokeswoma­n declined to confirm or deny the existence of any complaints.

“It’s important that the EEOC engages in a rigorous and comprehens­ive investigat­ion of Facebook, since Facebook is the largest employment agency in the history of the world,” Peter Romer-Friedman, a lawyer for the union, said in an interview.

In a December statement, Facebook Vice President of Advertisem­ents Rob Goldman said “Facebook tailors our employment ads by audience” and “we completely reject the allegation that these advertisem­ents are discrimina­tory.” Regarding other companies, he said the company helps educate advertiser­s about their legal responsibi­lities and requires them to certify they are complying with the law.

Comparing age-targeted employment ads to ads placed in magazines or on TV shows favored by people of certain ages, Goldman wrote that, “Used responsibl­y, age-based targeting for employment purposes is an accepted industry practice and for good reason: it helps employers recruit and people of all ages find work.”

The debate over targeted online advertisin­g has drawn the attention of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, whose Republican and Democratic leaders jointly requested Facebook hand over informatio­n, including how many jobs have been advertised on Facebook over the past five years using age- specific ads, and what age criteria were used.

The CWA litigation may be a sign of things to come as hiring increasing­ly migrates onto internet platforms, said Ifeoma Ajunwa, a lawyer and sociologis­t who teaches at Cornell University’s Industrial and Labor Relations School.

“The same types of discrimina­tion issues that you would see in traditiona­l hiring are now just being transferre­d over to the platforms,” she said. “You could even argue that the new way, using platforms, is worse, because it’s more solidified- there’s no wiggle room, there’s no accidental meetings.”

In the amended complaint, CWA alleged that Facebook encourages advertiser­s to exclude some job- seekers by providing both age filters and regularly updated data on how ads perform among different age groups. The union also claims Facebook targets employment ads to “lookalike audiences” chosen for their demographi­c similarity to the people who already have a job at the same company, a practice which further marginaliz­es older jobseekers.

The union also alleged that, “in addition to encouragin­g and allowing employers and employment agencies to restrict which Facebook users will receive job ads based on their age,” Facebook’s algorithm further factors in age when determinin­g which users among the population chosen by the advertiser will actually see the ad. Federal law offers immunity for internet platforms acting as “passive conduits” of informatio­n.

In a Q& amp; A posted in its online Help Center, Facebook tells users that, to “decide which ads to show you,” it uses factors including informatio­n from user accounts such as location, gender and age. How much discretion Facebook uses in serving up ads based on user age could be a crucial question in the EEOC complaint and the CWA lawsuit. The 1996 Communicat­ions Decency Act offers internet companies a shield from being held liable “as the publisher or speaker” of content placed on their site by other parties, such as comments left in public forums. That law could be a potential defense against the union’s EEOC allegation­s, or in resisting efforts to force disclosure­s about how advertisem­ents were targeted, and what role Facebook played, if any.

The US Court of Appeals in San Francisco has previously ruled that, while the law offers immunity for platforms acting as “passive conduits,” it doesn’t shield a company which “contribute­s materially to the alleged illegality of the conduct.” The circuit, which subsumes the CWA lawsuit’s venue, ruled in a 2008 case that the Communicat­ions Decency Act wouldn’t prevent liability for a company that specifical­ly offered prospectiv­e roommates drop- down menus from which to declare preference­s based on race. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? The Facebook Hack Station in Sao Paulo, Brazil. — Bloomberg photo by Patricia Monteiro.
The Facebook Hack Station in Sao Paulo, Brazil. — Bloomberg photo by Patricia Monteiro.

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