The Palm Beach Post

News groups rip Facebook ad action

Some news articles are now being categorize­d as political content.

- By Naomi Nix

Facebook faces more criticism for its decision to categorize the promotion of news articles as political content, with global publishers now urging Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg to change its policy.

Seven trade groups representi­ng media publishers and broadcast organizati­ons in more than 120 countries including the New York Times, BBC.com and 21st Century Fox, sent a letter Monday to Zuckerberg. They’re criticizin­g the social media giant’s decision to place ads publishers buy to boost exposure to their political articles in a public database alongside the ad informatio­n of political candidates.

“We see your policy as another step toward furthering a false and dangerous narrative that blurs the lines between real reporting from the profession­al media and propaganda,” the letter said. “Marketing our products, or subscripti­ons to our products, is not separate from our journalism or from press freedom.”

Under the new rules, any ads promoting political content — even news articles on politics and elections —- will be placed in an archive that includes the identities of who’s paying for the ads and the demographi­cs of who’s seen the ads for up to seven years. The archive began in the U.S., but Facebook has said it plans to expand the approach globally.

“Facebook must recognize the value of journalism created by independen­t news media companies and respect the critical role journalism plays in supporting societies across the world,” World Associatio­n of Newspapers and News Publishers president Michael Golden said in a statement.

A Facebook representa­tive didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The Menlo Park, Calif.-based company first alerted publishers to the new rules last month following months of criticism over Russian operatives’ use of the site to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Within hours of a Bloomberg News report on the initiative and the criticism from news organizati­ons, Facebook said it would work with publishers to come up with a policy that distinguis­hes journalism from political advocacy.

News Media Alliance Chief Executive Officer David Chavern, one of the loudest critics of the new policy, offered last month an alternativ­e plan that would exempt a “white list” of mainstream news organizati­ons from the new requiremen­t.

Chavern’s group organized the coalition that sent the letter Monday, which includes Digital Con-

tent Next, American Society of News Editors, European Publishers Council, MPA — The Associatio­n of Magazine Media, News Media Alliance, Society of Profession­al Journalist­s and The World Associatio­n of Newspapers and News Publishers. Bloomberg News is a member of Digital Content Next.

In an email obtained by Bloomberg News, Campbell Brown, Facebook’s head of news partnershi­ps, responded by saying the company would “take your suggestion­s to heart” but said the company planned to negotiate with publishers directly.

Separately, the issue of political ads on social media has caught the attention of Congress.

Democratic Sens. Mark Warner of Virginia and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota introduced the Honest Ads Act, which would subject online political ads to similar disclosure rules that now govern advertisin­g content in other media such as TV and radio.

The measure has the support of Facebook and Twitter.

The Federal Election Commission is also considerin­g new regulation­s that would require disclaimer­s identifyin­g the sponsors of online, mobile and other forms of digital ads, offering alternativ­e rules.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was sent a letter from a coalition of news organizati­ons. Facebook said it would work with publishers on a policy that distinguis­hes journalism from political advocacy.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was sent a letter from a coalition of news organizati­ons. Facebook said it would work with publishers on a policy that distinguis­hes journalism from political advocacy.

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