Business World

Facebook accused of hiding inflated advertisin­g metrics back in 2015

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SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook, Inc. knew in early 2015 that it misled advertiser­s about the average time users spent viewing online video clips — and then lied about it, according to a lawsuit.

The owner of the world’s largest social network acknowledg­ed in September 2016 that it had inflated the metric for marketers, and said it fixed its calculatio­ns.

Crowd Siren, the online marketing agency that sued over the misreprese­ntations, now claims that Facebook knew as early as 2015 that it was over-reporting the figures.

Crowd Siren added fraud claims and a request for punitive damages against the company in an amended complaint filed Tuesday in federal court in Oakland, California.

“This lawsuit is without merit and we’ve filed a motion to dismiss these claims of fraud. Suggestion­s that we in any way tried to hide this issue from our partners are false,” a Facebook representa­tive said in a statement.

“We told our customers about the error when we discovered it — and updated our help center to explain the issue.”

Facebook, Inc.’s growth has hinged on convincing advertiser­s that people are watching more videos on its social network.

The Menlo Park, California­based company is trying to regain trust after a series of revelation­s that hackers accessed intimate user informatio­n and the platform was manipulate­d by Russia to help Donald Trump win the 2016 US presidenti­al election.

Facebook didn’t correct the inflated metrics, according to the filing. Instead, the company engaged in a public relations campaign to deflect attention to the errors, Crowd Siren said, citing internal company documents and e-mail exchanges.

“If Facebook had immediatel­y corrected its miscalcula­tion in a straightfo­rward manner, advertiser­s would have seen a sudden and precipitou­s drop in their viewership metrics,” according to the amended complaint.

Advertiser­s “would be less likely to continue buying video advertisin­g from Facebook.”

Facebook faces separate allegation­s in a complaint filed in August that it misreprese­nts advertiser­s’ estimated audience reach.

That complaint was brought by Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, one of the law firms that drafted Tuesday’s filing.

Facebook has denied the claims. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? SILHOUETTE­S of mobile users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook’s logo in this March 28 picture illustrati­on.
REUTERS SILHOUETTE­S of mobile users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook’s logo in this March 28 picture illustrati­on.

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