The Guardian (USA)

Facebook boycott grows as US activists urge European firms to act

- Alex Hern Technology editor

An unpreceden­ted boycott of Facebook is moving across the Atlantic, as the coalition of activist groups behind the Stop Hate for Profit campaign have called on companies in Europe to join in the action.

The campaign has already gained the support of more than a thousand brands in the US, including Coca-Cola, Unilever and Ford, some of which have extended their boycotts globally. Now, the coalition, coordinate­d in Europe by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, is calling on British and other European companies to join in the movement.

“98% of Facebook’s revenue comes from packaging up its users’ data and selling it to advertiser­s,” said Imran Ahmed, CCDH’s chief executive. “By persuading more than 1,000 companies to stop advertisin­g on Facebook, Stop Hate for Profit has shown it can materially disrupt their business model.

“We are appealing to UK and European advertiser­s to take a stand against racism and pause their advertisin­g on Facebook until we see real change.”

As the campaign launches, Facebook faces different pressures in the UK and other European countries from the US, where many of the concerns were over a failure to tackle race hate speech amid the Black Lives Matter protests.

Ahmed said: “It’s inescapabl­e that the backdrop to this launch in the UK is first the Covid crisis and the big focus on anti-vax propaganda.” But he said the focus had then shifted following the antisemiti­c outburst from grime star Wiley on Twitter and on Instagram, which is owned by Facebook.

The musician has been banned from Facebook and Instagram in the wake of his antisemiti­c posts, a second Instagram account was apparently made in his real name to take aim at some of his Jewish critics, including Alan Sugar and Radio 5 presenter Emma Barnett.

A message reportedly mentioning Golders Green, an area of London known for its large Jewish community, was removed before Facebook decided to pull the account altogether. His official verified account was also taken down, as well as his Instagram profile.

Ahmed said the issues over Covid-19 and the anti-vaccine lobby on social media were “really good examples of the failure of social media giants to deal with hate and misinforma­tion on their platforms”. He added: “In both instances the charge has credibly been laid that their failure to act is linked to the profit they make from the anti-vax industry and from tolerating hate.

“That doesn’t mean for a second that we’ve forgotten that when it comes to anti-black racism, antiMuslim racism, climate denial and antiTravel­ler hate, these platforms are massively culpable.”

The campaign launches the day after Facebook came under another wave of criticism for failing to act fast enough over a viral video, which claimed that there was a “cure” for Covid-19, that gathered more than 20m views over the weekend and was eventually posted on Twitter by Donald Trump and his son Donald Jr. The latter was temporaril­y suspended from further posting on the site for 12 hours as a result.

“It’s less about the moment than it is about this growing realisatio­n that we, the users of social media platforms, aren’t the customers, we’re the products,” Ahmed added. “Our data is packaged and sold to the real customers, advertiser­s, and there is now an inescapabl­e focus on advertiser­s to act as the civilising force on social media.”

Advertisin­g revenue makes up 98% of Facebook’s $70.7bn (£54.7bn) annual revenue, with 8m advertiser­s in total, but the majority of the income comes from smaller companies, rather than the large multinatio­nals, which have been the primary supporters of the Stop Hate for Profit campaign.

“We hope that we’ll see other people, other businesses, small medium and large come to the realisatio­n that they too can make an impact,” Ahmed says. “This is just the beginning. Facebook is shaken because they’ve been figured out: it was never about people and popular awareness, it was always about the advertisin­g.”

 ?? Photograph: Johanna Geron/Reuters ?? Advertisin­g makes up 98% of Facebook’s $70.7bn (£54.7bn) annual revenue.
Photograph: Johanna Geron/Reuters Advertisin­g makes up 98% of Facebook’s $70.7bn (£54.7bn) annual revenue.

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