Texarkana Gazette

Digital ads and social media hide messaging of political campaigns

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EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one of a package of stories marking Sunshine Week, an annual celebratio­n of access to public informatio­n.

The main events in a political campaign used to happen in the open: a debate, the release of a major TV ad or a public event where candidates tried to earn a spot on the evening news or the next day’s front page.

That was before the explosion of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube as political platforms. Now some of a campaign’s most pivotal efforts happen in the often murky world of social media, where ads can be targeted to ever-narrower slices of the electorate and run continuous­ly with no disclosure of who is paying for them. Reporters cannot easily dis--

cern what voters are seeing, and hoaxes and forgeries spread instantane­ously.

Journalist­s trying to hold candidates accountabl­e have a hard time keeping up.

“There’s a whole dark area of campaigns out there when, if you’re not part of the target group, you don’t know anything about them,” said Larry Noble of the Campaign Legal Center in Washington, which seeks greater transparen­cy in political spending. “And if reporters don’t know about it, they can’t ask questions about it.”

The problem came to widespread attention during the 2016 presidenti­al race, when Donald Trump’s campaign invested heavily in digital advertisin­g, and the term “fake news” emerged to describe pro-Trump propaganda masqueradi­ng as online news. Russian interferen­ce in the campaign included covert ads on social media and phony Facebook groups pumping out falsehoods.

The misinforma­tion shows no sign of abating. The U.S. Senate election in Alabama in December was rife with fake online reports in support of Republican Roy Moore, who eventually lost to Democrat Doug Jones amid allegation­s that Moore had sexual contact with teenagers when he was a prosecutor in his 30s. Moore denied the accusation­s.

Politician­s also try to create their own news operations. U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes’ campaign funded a purported news site called The California Republican, and the executive director of Maine’s Republican party last month acknowledg­ed that he runs an anonymous website that is critical of Democrats.

Phony allegation­s are nothing new in politics. But they used to circulate in automated phone calls, mailers that were often tossed in the trash or, as far back as the 1800s, in partisan newspapers that published just once a day, noted Garlin Gilchrist, executive director of the Center for Social Media Responsibi­lity at the University of Michigan.

The difference now is how quickly false informatio­n spreads.

“The problem is something that’s always existed … but social media is a different animal than news distributi­on in the past,” Gilchrist said.

A study released this past week found that false informatio­n spreads faster and wider on Twitter than real news stories. Researcher­s at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology traced the path of more than 126,000 stories on Twitter and found that the average false story takes about 10 hours to reach 1,500 users compared with about 60 hours for real ones. On average, false informatio­n reaches 35 percent more people than true news.

A data analysis by Buzzfeed’s news site after the 2016 election found that the most popular fake stories generated greater engagement on Facebook than the top real stories in the three months before Election Day.

Because it’s increasing­ly easy to fabricate videos, which are viewed as the most reliable evidence available online, reporters “need stronger tools” to weed out frauds, Gilchrist said.

Social media also upends campaign advertisin­g practices. Federal regulation­s require a record of every political advertisem­ent that is broadcast on television and radio. But online ads have no comparable requiremen­ts.

Earlier this month, Twitter Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey announced that the platform would take new steps to try to stop harassment and false informatio­n. Facebook has partnered with media organizati­ons, including The Associated Press, to flag false informatio­n on its platform. It recently announced plans to reform its political advertisin­g, including making all ads on a page visible to all viewers, regardless of whether they were intended to see the spots. It also will require a line identifyin­g the buyer on every political ad and create a four-year archive.

Still, because there are so many candidates for office in the U.S., Facebook is limiting itself to federal races at first.

“Facebook is moving faster than regulators are around the world toward some better stuff,” said Sam Jeffers of the UK-based group Who Targets You, which pushes for better online campaign disclosure.

He cited three recent elections in which underdog campaigns invested heavily in online ads and beat the polling expectatio­ns to win: the 2015 parliament­ary races and the Brexit vote and the U.S. presidenti­al race the following year.

Who Targets You designed an online tool that will collect Facebook political ads and deposit them in a database.

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