The Guardian Australia

Facebook limits scrutiny of political advertisin­g before Australian election

- Christophe­r Knaus

Transparen­cy advocates have criticised Facebook for changes that make it harder for Australian not-for-profits and journalist­s to monitor political advertisin­g on the platform just months out from the federal election.

Facebook has made repeated pledges to shed greater light on the way politician­s and interest groups use the medium to tailor and target advertisin­g to specific individual­s.

But it was revealed on Monday that Facebook had restricted the ability of external transparen­cy campaigner­s to collate and scrutinise ads.

One of the affected groups, the USbased not-for-profit investigat­ive journalism outfit ProPublica, said a tool it had developed to help monitor Facebook political advertisin­g had been restricted in a wider crackdown on thirdparty plug-ins accessing unauthoris­ed data from its site.

ProPublica’s tool is used by organisati­ons in Australia – including Guardian Australia – to monitor the way political advertisin­g is being deployed. In 2017, Guardian Australia used the ProPublica tool to reveal how Clive Palmer’s United Australia party, the Liberal, Greens and Labor parties, unions and not-for-profits had paid Facebook to push content into users’ feeds.

Such ads would have otherwise been largely hidden from the general public, only visible to those who had been deliberate­ly targeted.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, which is this week preparing to release its report on how Australian­s perceive government corruption, said the timing of the recent changes was particular­ly poor, given the proximity to the federal election.

“It does certainly show poor judgment in the lead-up to the election, where the community is going to be very interested in the broader issues around transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, and strengthen­ing parliament­ary standards,” Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s chief executive, Serena Lillywhite, said. “We should be able to see freely and openly and in real time exactly what advertisin­g is being done for political purposes on Facebook and what the links may be in trying to attract political donations.”

The recent changes were designed to crack down on third-party plug-ins – ad blockers, for example – accessing data from the platform in unauthoris­ed ways. A Facebook Australia spokesman said the changes were part of a “routine update”.

“We regularly improve the ways we prevent unauthoris­ed access by third parties like web browser plug-ins to keep people’s informatio­n safe,” the spokesman said. “This was a routine update and applied to ad blocking and ad scraping plug-ins, which can expose people’s informatio­n to bad actors in ways they did not expect.”

Facebook’s treatment of targeted advertisin­g came under intense scrutiny following the Cambridge Analytica scandal. It has since flagged significan­t restrictio­ns on political advertisin­g. In some countries, it released searchable public databases of political ads late last year. It is unclear whether this will be deployed in Australia and, if so, whether it will be available before the federal election.

Facebook has taken other steps to improve transparen­cy and integrity around political advertisin­g. It has attempted to proactivel­y identify and take down fake accounts and spam, improve transparen­cy around pages and their current ads, and has increased its community operations team to 30,000 people. The company has also establishe­d a “war room” to help safeguard the integrity of the platform, made up of 24 experts in a range of areas, including software engineerin­g, threat intelligen­ce, data science, and legal.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvic / Reuters/Reuters ?? A Facebook crackdown on third-party plug-ins has made it harder for not-for-profit groups and journalist­s to monitor political advertisin­gbefore the Australian election.
Photograph: Dado Ruvic / Reuters/Reuters A Facebook crackdown on third-party plug-ins has made it harder for not-for-profit groups and journalist­s to monitor political advertisin­gbefore the Australian election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia