Baltimore Sun

Facebook ads to be searchable

Company’s plan for the US follows legal settlement

- By Frank Bajak

BOSTON — Facebook says it will make advertisem­ents for jobs, loans and credit card offers searchable for all U.S. users following a legal settlement designed to eliminate discrimina­tion on its platform.

The plan disclosed in an internal report issued this week voluntaril­y expands on a commitment the social medial giant made in March when it agreed to make its U.S. housing ads searchable by location and advertiser.

Ads only were delivered selectivel­y to Facebook users based on such data as what they earn, their education level and where they shop.

The audit’s leader, former American Civil Liberties Union executive Laura Murphy, was hired by Facebook in May 2018 to assess its performanc­e on vital social issues.

Murphy has consulted with dozens of civil rights groups on the subject as part of her yearlong audit, assisted by lawyers from the firm Relman, Dane & Colfax. The 26-page report, which also deals with content moderation and enforcemen­t and efforts to prevent meddling in the 2020 U.S. elections and census, was her second update.

The database of searchable housing ads will roll out by the end of 2019, Facebook says, and Murphy said she expects the databases of employment and financial product offerings to be available within the next year.

Murphy said she’s “very excited” about the move she believes will positively affect the social mobility of millions in the United States.

Targeted ads tailored to individual­s are Facebook’s bread and butter — accounting for all but a sliver of its more than $50 billion in annual revenue last year. It’s unlikely that making the ads searchable would have a significan­t effect on Facebook’s business. Analysts have cautioned, however, that any restrictio­ns on Facebook’s ability to target ads could scare off advertiser­s.

The move is likely part of Facebook’s strategy to show regulators that is doing a good job policing its own service — putting it in compliance with existing anti-discrimina­tion law — and doesn’t need a heavyhande­d approach from lawmakers. It comes as the company is facing increasing regulatory pressures.

As part of the settlement with plaintiffs, including the ACLU and the National Fair Housing Alliance, Facebook agreed in March to stop targeting people based on age, gender and ZIP code and to also eliminate such categories as national origin and sexual orientatio­n.

The groups had sued, claiming Facebook violated anti-discrimina­tion laws by preventing audiences, including single mothers and the disabled, from seeing many housing ads — while some job ads were not reaching women and older workers.

Galen Sherwin, senior staff attorney at the ACLU and the group’s lead attorney in the case, said making the three Facebook databases searchable by anyone “definitely creates greater access to informatio­n about economic opportunit­ies.”

Civil rights groups are concerned that the secretive, proprietar­y algorithms that govern how the company steers ads — even when not consciousl­y targeting specific groups — still could be discrimina­tory.

“I wish we could see into the black box,” Sherwin said.

Facebook still faces a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t complaint over housing ad targeting and delivery. Murphy, the auditor, said she thinks the company understand­s it’s “going to have to look at the algorithms” behind them.

The company also faces privacy and antitrust investigat­ions in the U.S. and Europe over its invasive data collection practices and struggles to police hate speech globally, with sometimes lethal repercussi­ons.

Facebook is in talks to create an external oversight board to monitor such issues, and its level of independen­ce is one subject of debate.

Sunday’s audit update also addresses Facebook’s efforts to shed “harmful content,” including a new U.S. pilot program where dedicated monitors will focus on hate speech alone. A few dozen are involved so far, the company said. All come from the more than 20,000 outsourced content moderators who screen the 2.3 billion-user platform, the company said.

Audit t eam recommenda­tions include ending a carve-out for humor as an exception in hate speech and devising better mechanisms for blocking harassment, which can be especially overwhelmi­ng when automated.

Simply defining actionable hate speech — which can vary by nation, region, language and cultural context — is a tall order.

The report says Facebook is committed to stepping up efforts to fight voting suppressio­n in 2020 elections and plans to have policies to counter attempts to interfere in the census ready by fall.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP ?? Facebook says it will make advertisem­ents for jobs, loans and credit card offers searchable for all U.S. users within the next year.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP Facebook says it will make advertisem­ents for jobs, loans and credit card offers searchable for all U.S. users within the next year.

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