Dayton Daily News

Facebook is said to be considerin­g a ban on political ads

- Mike Isaac and Nick Corasaniti

SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook is considerin­g banning political advertisin­g across its network before the November general election, according to two people with knowledge of the discussion­s, after facing intense pressure for allowing hate speech and misinforma­tion to flourish across its site.

The decision has not been finalized, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussion­s were confidenti­al, and the company could continue with its current political advertisin­g policy. Discussion­s on potentiall­y banning political ads have simmered since late last year, they said, as insiders weighed the idea while reaching out to political groups and candidates for feedback.

But the issue has come to the forefront in recent weeks, with the November election looming and as Facebook grapples with intensifyi­ng scrutiny over content posted to its platform. The core of the debate is whether banning political ads would help or harm “giving users a voice,” said the people with knowledge of the discussion­s. Stopping ads could stifle speech for some groups, they said, though allowing political ads to run could also allow more misinforma­tion that could disenfranc­hise voters.

A Facebook spokesman declined to comment. Bloomberg News earlier reported the potential change in policy.

If a ban on political ads were to happen, it would be a reversal for Facebook and its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg.

The social network has long allowed politician­s and political parties to run ads across its network virtually unchecked, even if those ads contained falsehoods or other misinforma­tion. Zuckerberg has repeatedly said he would not police politician­s’ ads and stated that the company was not an arbiter of truth because he believes in free speech. He has also said that removing political ads from the network could harm smaller, down-ballot candidates who are less well-funded than nationally prominent politician­s. Political advertisin­g makes up a negligible amount of Facebook’s revenue, he has said, so any decision would not be based on financial considerat­ions.

But that hands-off approach has led to an intense backlash against the social network. Lawmakers, civil rights groups and Facebook’s own employees have assailed it for letting hate speech and misinforma­tion fester. Last month, the Biden presidenti­al campaign said it would begin urging its supporters to demand that Facebook strengthen its rules against misinforma­tion. More recently, advertiser­s such as Unilever and CocaCola have paused advertisin­g on the platform in protest.

That was punctuated this week by the release of a twoyear audit of Facebook’s policies. The audit, conducted by civil rights experts and lawyers who were hand-picked by the company, concluded that Facebook had not done enough to protect people on the platform from discrimina­tory posts and ads. In particular, they said, Facebook had been too willing to let politician­s run amok on the site.

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