The Denver Post

FACEBOOK TIGHTENS ITS TARGETED AD POLICIES AND TOOLS

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Facebook is apologizin­g for letting advertiser­s use phrases like “Jewhaters” as a targeting criteria and for not noticing it until it was pointed out. The company also is tightening policies and tools that let businesses target advertisem­ents to its 2 billion users, hoping to ensure this doesn’t happen again.

The move follows a ProPublica report that found advertiser­s could use terms such as “how to burn Jews” to target ads to people with those terms in their profile.

Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, wrote in a post on Wednesday that the company “never intended or anticipate­d this functional­ity being used this way — and that is on us.”

It hasn’t been a good month for Facebook. The ad-targeting fiasco follows news that the social media giant has unwittingl­y allowed groups backed by the Russian government to target users with ads. The chairman of the Senate intelligen­ce committee said Tuesday that Facebook should testify as part of its probe into Russian meddling in the U.S. election.

Sandberg said Facebook is taking steps to ensure that material violating its community standards cannot be used to target ads. This includes anything that attacks people on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientatio­n, disability and other categories.

The company says it is also adding more manual oversight to its automated processes.

“Seeing those words made me disgusted and disappoint­ed — disgusted by these sentiments and disappoint­ed that our systems allowed this,” Sandberg wrote. “Hate has no place on Facebook — and as a Jew, as a mother, and as a human being, I know the damage that can come from hate.”

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