New York Post

Anti-social campaigns

Facebook & Twitter feature in prez, Biden ads

- By AMANDA SEITZ and BARBARA ORTUTAY

Social media has become the target of dueling attack-ad campaigns being waged online by the sitting president and his election rival. They’re shooting the messenger while giving it lots of money.

President Trump has bought hundreds of messages on Facebook to accuse its competitor, Twitter, of trying to stifle his voice and influence the November election.

Democratic challenger Joe Biden has spent thousands of dollars advertisin­g on Facebook with a message of his own: In dozens of ads on the platform, he’s asked supporters to sign a petition calling on Facebook to remove inaccurate statements, specifical­ly those from Trump.

The major social-media companies are navigating a political minefield as they try to minimize domestic misinforma­tion and rein in foreign actors from manipulati­ng their sites as they did in the last US presidenti­al election. Their new actions — or in some cases, lack of action — have triggered explosive, partisan responses, ending their glory days as self-described neutral platforms.

Even as the two presidenti­al campaigns dump millions of dollars every week into Facebook and Google ads that boost their exposure, both are also using online ads to criticize the tech platforms for their policies. Trump is accusing Twitter and Snapchat of interferin­g in this year’s election. Biden has sent multiple letters to Facebook and attacked the company for policies that allow politician­s, Trump specifical­ly, to freely make false claims on its site. Biden is paying Facebook handsomely to show ads that accuse Facebook of posing a “threat” to democracy.

Meantime, Trump is paying Facebook to run ads trashing the medium he uses like none other, Twitter.

“Twitter is interferin­g in the 2020 Election by attempting to SILENCE your President,” claimed one of nearly 600 ads Trump’s campaign placed on Facebook

It’s “a huge departure from 2016,” said Emerson Brooking, a fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, a Washington think tank.

“If you were leading the Trump or Clinton campaign, you weren’t writing letters to Facebook all day long. It wasn’t so much a central campaign issue. Now it seems like it very much is.”

Since the last presidenti­al election, Facebook and Twitter have banned votingrela­ted misinforma­tion and vowed to identify and shut down inauthenti­c networks of accounts run by domestic or foreign troublemak­ers. Before this year’s election, Twitter banned political ads altogether, a decision a company spokesman told the AP it stands behind. And Facebook, along with Google, began disclosing campaign-ad spending while banning non-Americans from buying US political ads.

Facebook didn’t comment for this story.

Calls to deflate Big Tech’s ballooning power have only grown louder from both Democrats and Republican­s — even though the two parties are targeting different companies for different reasons to rally supporters.

Those politics will no doubt be on full display Wednesday, when four big tech CEOs testify to a House Judiciary Committee panel as part of a congressio­nal investigat­ion into the tech industry’s dominance.

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 ??  ?? AD WAR: In ads on Facebook, Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden (left) asks supporters to petition the platform to regulate political speech in its advertisin­g. Meanwhile, President Trump pays the firm, run by Mark Zuckerberg (right), for ads decrying rival platform Twitter.
AD WAR: In ads on Facebook, Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden (left) asks supporters to petition the platform to regulate political speech in its advertisin­g. Meanwhile, President Trump pays the firm, run by Mark Zuckerberg (right), for ads decrying rival platform Twitter.

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