Oman Daily Observer

Facebook toughens political ad policies ahead of general election

-

NEW DELHI: Facebook Inc is toughening up the rules governing political advertisem­ents in India to create more transparen­cy ahead of the country’s general elections due before May, the social media giant said late on Thursday.

Users will see political advertisem­ents with “published by” and “paid by” disclaimer­s, the Menlo Park, California-headquarte­red company said in a statement.

The move comes weeks after Facebook said it would extend some of its political advertisin­g rules and tools for curbing election interferen­ce to India, Nigeria, Ukraine and the European Union before significan­t votes in these places in the next few months.

Users will be able to access a library that allows them to search and find out more about political advertisem­ents such as how much is spent on them and the demographi­cs of advertisin­g views, Facebook said.

People will soon also be able to see country locations of users who manage Facebook pages that carry political ads.

“By increasing transparen­cy around ads and pages on Facebook, we hope to increase accountabi­lity for advertiser­s, help people assess the content they’re seeing and prevent future abuse in elections,” Facebook said.

The new features and becomes effective February 21.

The moves are part of Facebook’s attempts to reshape its public image which took a beating last year after a privacy scandal involving British data consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica.

The company has also faced intense pressure from India, one of the world’s biggest Internet markets, to curb the policy spread of misinforma­tion through its Whatsapp messenger that has led to a spate of killings.

Facebook said it is also making it tougher to run a page using a fake account by introducin­g two-factor authentica­tion and by asking for page administra­tors’ primary country location.

In past few years Facebook has effectivel­y been used globally by politician­s and their adversarie­s to distribute fake news and other propaganda.

Ads on Facebook can widen the reach of such material, but some of those influence efforts may violate election rules and the company’s policies.

Under intense global public scrutiny, Facebook last year introduced several initiative­s to increase oversight of political ads.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Silhouette­s of laptop users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook logo in this picture illustrati­on.
— Reuters Silhouette­s of laptop users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook logo in this picture illustrati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman