The Star Malaysia

FB makes a statement in Indonesia

Facebook has banned political advertisem­ents from outside Indonesia ahead of the country’s presidenti­al polls. And this comes after being heavily criticised by the European Union for not doing enough to counter election meddling in the country. The world’

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JAKARTA: Facebook has banned political advertisem­ents from outside Indonesia ahead of the country’s presidenti­al polls, just weeks after being heavily criticised by the European Union for not doing enough to counter election meddling.

The world’s biggest social network said it was temporaril­y restrictin­g any paid material from advertiser­s based outside the SouthEast Asian nation that related to politician­s or parties, or any attempts to encourage voter suppressio­n.

“We want to make it harder to interfere with elections on the platform and easier for people to make their voices legitimate­ly heard in the political process,” Facebook said in a statement.

It added that the new policy would take effect yesterday.

EU officials blasted the company earlier this year for not doing enough to scrutinise advertisin­g on its site in the run-up to EU elections in May.

In response, the company unveiled new tools and rules that would require a wide range of political ads linked to the elections to be specifical­ly authorised and tagged with a clear “paid for by” disclaimer.

The US firm first began looking into its influence on elections following revelation­s of Russian influence campaigns during the 2016 US election.

But the social media giant has been accused of being too slow to act by some leaders.

Facebook said it would use a combinatio­n of automated and human interventi­on to remove offending ads relating to Indonesia.

Indonesia is battling its own wave of online hate speech, as conservati­ve groups exploit social media to spread lies and target minorities.

Authoritie­s have expressed concern that inflammato­ry material posted online could crack open social and religious fault lines in the world’s largest Muslim-majority country ahead of presidenti­al elections next month.

Facebook said in February that it had removed hundreds of accounts and pages linked to Indonesian cybergroup Saracen, which has been accused of spreading hate speech and fake news.

Facebook has a fact-checking partnershi­p with AFP in multiple countries.

 ?? — AP ?? Taking measures: Facebook says the restrictio­n is part of safeguardi­ng election integrity on its platform.
— AP Taking measures: Facebook says the restrictio­n is part of safeguardi­ng election integrity on its platform.

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