Houston Chronicle

Google limits political targeting but not lies

- By Tony Romm

Google on Wednesday announced new restrictio­ns on political advertiser­s around the world, including rules that bar candidates, including President Donald Trump, from targeting narrow categories of Web users based on their political affiliatio­n.

The updates come as Google and its tech industry peers continue to face sharp criticism for allowing politician­s to lie in ads — a practice that Google did not entirely outlaw as it pledged that “trust in electoral processes” outweighed the “cost or impact to spending” on political ads.

Under the new rules, political advertiser­s in the United States and abroad now may target their ads in search and on Googleowne­d YouTube only down to the postal code level. These campaigns may also target people on the basis of gender or age, but they cannot do so based on voters’ political affiliatio­ns or public voter records, Google said, breaking with past policies.

Google also said it would bar “making demonstrab­ly false claims that could significan­tly undermine participat­ion or trust in an electoral or democratic process,” including those that seek to mislead people about voting.

But the company’s policy did not appear to prevent the sort of ad purchased by Trump’s 2020 campaign, which attacked former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic contender for the White House, with a series of falsehoods about his ties to Ukraine. The ads had been viewed millions of times on Google, according to the company’s ad archive.

“Of course, we recognize that robust political dialogue is an important part of democracy, and no one can sensibly adjudicate every political claim, countercla­im, and insinuatio­n,” wrote Scott Spencer, the company’s vice president for product management on ads. “So we expect that the number of political ads on which we take action will be very limited — but we will continue to do so for clear violations.”

Google’s announceme­nts Wednesday reflect Silicon Valley’s continued struggle to find the right balance around paid political speech. Years after Russian agents spread disinforma­tion on major social media sites, regulators and voters are more acutely aware about the ease with which popular online services can be weaponized to deceive them to the detriment of democracy.

Twitter this month set in motion a plan to ban advertisin­g from political candidates and their wellfunded allies. Facebook similarly has said it is open to changes, after staunchly defending its decision to allow the Trump campaign’s ad about Biden to remain online despite the former vice president’s request for it to be removed.

But the tech industry’s fixes have sparked mixed reactions from Democrats, who have pined for Silicon Valley to more tightly regulate ads, and the Trump campaign, which has sharply criticized the reforms. Top aides to the president’s re-election effort assailed Facebook on Wednesday for even considerin­g changes to its rules that would limit political targeting.

The announceme­nts address some of the criticism Google has faced in recent months. The company, for example, long had applied its political ad transparen­cy rules only to federal candidates. Now, it is preparing to expand the policies to include a wider array of actors, including political parties and state candidates. Google said it is considerin­g “additional transparen­cy” measures over the coming months.

Still, the changes don’t address the full litany of issues raised by lawmakers, digital experts and campaign-finance reform advocates. Many have called on Google to be more transparen­t with users and disclose more data about a wider variety of the ads they see, including those that touch on hotbutton political issues such as abortion or immigratio­n

Google’s political ad policies do not prevent political candidates and others from advertisin­g in a contextual way — such as displaying ads about their views on the economy around a YouTube video that touches on economic issues.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Facebook ads linked to a Russian effort to disrupt U.S. elections were shown in 2017 during a hearing on Capitol Hill. Social media giants like Google were urged to curb such interferen­ce.
Associated Press file photo Facebook ads linked to a Russian effort to disrupt U.S. elections were shown in 2017 during a hearing on Capitol Hill. Social media giants like Google were urged to curb such interferen­ce.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States