Qatar Tribune

VW, Adidas, Puma join Facebook ad boycott over hate speech

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GERMAN giants Volkswagen, Puma and Adidas on Tuesday joined a growing advertiser boycott over hate speech against Facebook, following major consumer companies like Levi’s and Coca-Cola.

Some 200 brands have now paused advertisin­g with the social media giant as part of the StopHateFo­rProfit campaign launched by social justice activists.

The unpreceden­ted move has already wiped billions off Facebook’s market value.

Car giant Volkswagen, which also owns the Audi, Porsche and Skoda brands, said it was suspending the group’s ads on Facebook.

“Hate speech, discrimina­ting comments and posts containing dangerous false informatio­n must not be published uncommente­d and must have consequenc­es,” the group said.

Sportsgear maker Puma said it was joining the StopHateFo­rProfit campaign “throughout July”.

Puma “is part of an overall effort to create positive change and improvemen­t in Facebook’s platform by demanding the removal of inaccurate, hostile and harmful conversati­on,” a spokeswoma­n said.

A spokesman for Puma’s rival Adidas said the company would “develop criteria to develop and maintain a cosmopolit­an and safe environmen­t that will apply to ourselves and our partners” during a Facebook ad pause also encompassi­ng US subsidiary Reebok.

“Racism, discrimina­tion and hateful comments should have no place either in our company or in our society,” he added.

The movement against online hate speech has picked up steam following George Floyd’s death on May 25 at the hands of a white policeman in

Minneapoli­s.

On Friday, Facebook had said it would ban a “wider category of hateful content” in ads and add tags to posts that are “newsworthy” but violate platform rules -- following the lead of Twitter, which has used such labels on tweets from US President Donald Trump.

But experts have highlighte­d the social network’s massive advertiser base of smalland medium-sized companies chasing over 2.6 billion worldwide users, potentiall­y limiting the impact of big-name boycotts.

Adidas has itself been in the sights of the global antidiscri­mination movement.

Earlier this month, the three-stripe brand rejected claims by employees that it was not doing enough to combat racism, after its human resources chief Karen Parkin last year described such complaints as “noise” only discussed in the US.

Parkin announced her resignatio­n on Tuesday after 23 years at Adidas.

“It has become clear to me that to unify the organisati­on it would be better for me to retire and pave the way for change,” she said in a statement.

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