Daily Tribune (Philippines)

FB acts vs political ads

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SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) — Facebook has demanded that New York University (NYU) pull the plug on a research project into the platform’s targeting practices for political ads, saying it is a violation of terms to collect user data.

“A week ago, Facebook sent me a (cease and desist order) asking us to take down AdObserver and delete our data. The public has a right to know how political ads are targeted, so we will not be complying with this request,” Laura Edelson, a PhD student and researcher with NYU Ad Observator­y, said in a post Friday.

With just 10 days until the US election, Facebook is being sharply scrutinize­d for the role it plays in campaignin­g, and the way candidates and political groups use the social media network to influence voters.

The researcher­s are collecting informatio­n using an extension, or plugin, called AdObserver that can be installed on a web browser and copies Facebook ads into a public database.

Edelson and others are tracking informatio­n such as which profiles are targeted by which types of ads.

“We informed NYU months ago that moving forward with a project to scrape people’s Facebook informatio­n would violate our terms,” Facebook spokesman Joe Osborne said.

“Our Ad Library, which is accessed by more than 2 million people every month, including NYU, already provides more transparen­cy into political and issue advertisin­g than TV, radio or any other digital ad platform.”

But Edelson said the system is not perfect.

“Our cybersecur­ity analysis shows vulnerabil­ity in Facebook’s transparen­cy algorithms that reveals they routinely miss including political ads in its public archive,” she said.

California- based Facebook has tightened its rules on political advertisin­g ahead of the 2020 election. In particular, it has prohibited attempts to undermine the electoral process and banning certain racist or xenophobic statements.

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