The Jerusalem Post

Facebook to stop ethnicity-based targeting for some advertisem­ents

- • By DUSTIN VOLZ

Facebook Inc. said on Friday it will no longer allow certain advertiser­s to exclude racial or ethnic groups when placing ads on its service, following criticism that the practice is discrimina­tory.

The move comes amid growing scrutiny of how the world’s largest online social media network’s policies and algorithms shape what content appears in a user’s news feed.

The unexpected victory of Donald Trump in the US presidenti­al election has prompted questions over how much voters were swayed by inaccurate or misleading news items shared on Facebook, mostly in favor of Trump.

Facebook will disable use of the advertisin­g tool, called “ethnic affinities,” for ads that offer housing, employment and the extension of credit; areas where certain groups have historical­ly faced discrimina­tion, Facebook said in a blog post.

“There are many non-discrimina­tory uses of our ethnic affinity solution in these areas, but we have decided that we can best guard against discrimina­tion by suspending these types of ads,” Erin Egan, Facebook’s chief privacy officer, wrote.

Facebook collects vast amounts of data on its users, including photograph­s, allowing it to demographi­cally categorize them in ways that allow advertiser­s to precisely target content to those they want to reach.

The company said it will now use tools that automatica­lly detect and disable ads offering housing, employment or credit that rely on ethnic affinity marketing, Egan said. It will also update its policies to more explicitly require advertiser­s to not engage in discrimina­tory advertisin­g.

The changes come two weeks after ProPublica, a nonprofit investigat­ive news organizati­on, published an article showing how Facebook allowed advertiser­s to exclude groups on the basis of ethnic affinities, a practice it said may violate US federal housing and civil rights laws passed in the 1960s. A group of Facebook users filed a lawsuit against the company after the ProPublica report, claiming such ad targeting violated the US Fair Housing Act and Civil Rights Act.

Facebook has attracted criticism in recent months for how it polices several forms of content for its 1.8 billion users, including extremist propaganda, nudity and misleading or inaccurate political articles, which have become known as “fake news.”

The company has been accused by reporters, political observers and some in Silicon Valley of helping Trump win Tuesday’s election by doing little to limit the spread of such items, many from dubious websites, on its service.

On Thursday, Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg rejected those claims.

“I think the idea that fake news on Facebook, [which is] a very small amount of the content, influenced the election in any way, is a pretty crazy idea,” he said at a technology conference in California.

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