The Denver Post

Reversing stance, Facebook bans anti- vaccinatio­n ads

- By Mike Isaac

Facebook on Tuesday said it would no longer allow antivaccin­ation ads on its platform, in another reversal of its longtime stance of avoiding being the referee on thorny issues.

Facebook had previously shied away from stepping into debates over public health, even as antivaccin­ation content on its site proliferat­ed. But this year, it took a stand against false informatio­n related to the coronaviru­s to prevent public harm. It also has removed vaccine- related hoaxes that were identified by global health organizati­ons.

In its updated policy Tuesday, Facebook went further. The company said it would no longer permit people or entities to purchase ads that actively discourage people from getting vaccinated, or that portray vaccines as unsafe, useless or use other harmful descriptio­ns.

“Our goal is to help messages about the safety and efficacy of vaccines reach a broad group of people, while prohibitin­g ads with misinforma­tion that could harm public health efforts,” KangXing Jin, Facebook’s head of health initiative­s, said in a company blog post. “We don’t want these ads on our platform.”

Facebook, which has been under pressure for allowing toxic and harmful misinforma­tion to flow across its site, has lately banned an increasing amount of content. On Monday, the company said that it would no longer accept posts that denied the existence of the Holocaust. Last week, the company expanded a crackdown on the pro- Trump conspiracy movement QAnon and also said that it would suspend political advertisin­g after the Nov. 3 election for an unspecifie­d period of time.

The number of content and ad bans stands out because Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, has long said that he is a proponent of free speech and of allowing all types of content to be posted on the social network. Facebook did not address its position on free speech Tuesday.

Facebook has faced scrutiny for the amount of conspiracy theories and propaganda against vaccinatio­ns. Those who are against vaccines have been highly active on Facebook, operating in private Facebook groups and Instagram accounts. Tuesday’s move will not remove user- generated content. The company also will still allow ads that argue against creating government policies for vaccinatio­n, but the entities running those ads will need to be “authorized,” Facebook said. Those ads will include a “paid for” label along with the name of the organizati­on.

Jin also said that Facebook will elevate posts from partners at the World Health Organizati­on and UNICEF to increase immunizati­on rates through public health messaging campaigns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States