Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Facebook to release Russia ads, beef up election ‘integrity’

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NEW YORK -- Facebook is slowly acknowledg­ing the outsized — if unintended — role it played in the 2016 US presidenti­al elections.

Bowing to pressure from lawmakers and the public, the company said it will provide the contents of 3,000 ads bought by a Russian agency to congressio­nal investigat­ors, while also pledging to make political advertisin­g on its platform more “transparen­t.”

“I don't want anyone to use our tools to undermine democracy,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a Facebook video and wrote in an accompanyi­ng post . “That's not what we stand for.”

The moves Thursday come amid growing pressure on the social network from members of Congress, who pushed Facebook to release the ads after the company disclosed their existence in early September. Facebook has already handed over the ads to the special counsel investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 US presidenti­al election.

Facebook's reluctance to be more forthcomin­g with informatio­n that could shed light on possible election interferen­ce has prompted the chairman of the Senate intelligen­ce committee to call for the company to testify in its election-meddling probe.

A more transparen­t Facebook

In one of the first steps Facebook has ever taken to open up its secretive advertisin­g system to observatio­n, the company will now require political ads to disclose both who is paying for them and all ad campaigns those individual­s or groups are running on Facebook.

That's a key step that will allow outsiders to see how many different variants of a given ad are being targeted to various groups of individual­s, a tactic designed to improve their effectiven­ess. At the moment, there's no way for anyone but Facebook to track these political ads, or for recipients to tell who is sponsoring such messages.

Since average users “don't know if you're seeing the same messages as everyone else,” Zuckerberg said, Facebook will “make it so you can visit an advertiser's page and see the ads they're currently running to any audience on Facebook.”

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