The Scotsman

As elections loom, wait goes on for political ads reform

There are signs a long-awaited overhaul of online adverts is coming, but will it be enough, asks Martyn Mclaughlin

-

Is it a sign of fecklessne­ss or stubbornne­ss that, more than a year on from the Cambridge Analytica data scandal, online political advertisin­g remains a lawless Wild West?

The glacial pace of government­al consultati­ons in the age of Brexit means the questions that were being asked last spring have yet to receive a satisfacto­ry answer.

It is no wonder that Louise Edwards, director of regulation at the Electoral Commission, has reiterated her calls for a “very clear change in law” which will compel parties and campaigner­s to disclose who is paying for the adverts.

As long ago as last June, the commission warned that “urgent improvemen­ts” were needed to ensure transparen­cy for voters in the digital age.

It demanded government­s and legislator­s across the UK take action to ensure online advertisin­g materials produced by parties, candidates and campaigner­s must also clearly state who has created them, in much the same way that printed pamphlets and letters are required to have an imprint.

It also recommende­d a wholesale review of spending return disclosure­s so as to include the money that goes towards online ad campaigns, and said social media firms should label political adverts and detail plans to catalogue them in online databases.

After nearly a year in which the majority of these issues have been kicked into the long grass, there are signs that the gears of government are slowly beginning to grind.

At the weekend, the Cabinet Office announced that extending the imprint regime to digital communicat­ions is “essential for promoting fact-based political debate” and tackling

disinforma­tion. It has promised to work with the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport to look at how such regulation­s can be put into practice and, crucially, “which third party organisati­ons it would extend to”.

A detailed technical proposal for the digital imprint regime will follow later this year, but unless the likes of Facebook and Twitter fall into that “third party” category, the proposal’s bark will lack any bite.

Granted, both those firms have gone above and beyond the commission’s recommenda­tions by introducin­g databases of political ads, but they merely pay lip-service to the concept of transparen­cy.

Twitter, for instance, only discloses the ads an account has run in the past seven days, and includes only rudimentar­y billing informatio­n about who has paid for the campaigns. There is no detail at all about the reach of the ads, or the way in which they were targeted.

Facebook at least reveals the demographi­c breakdown of how political ads were targeted, but its claim that all disclaimer­s must include “informatio­n on the entity that paid for the ad” is laughable.

Only last week, Nathaniel Gleicher, the company’s head of cybersecur­ity policy, had the gall to warn that foreign agents were trying to recruit users in other nations in order to purchase political adverts on the platform on their behalf.

In pursuing such a circuitous route, Facebook’s strict new rules – which include providing proof of a postal address in the country where the ad is places – would be satisfied. “No security protocol is foolproof,” cautioned Mr Gleicher.

That is especially true when the protocols put in place are about as robust as a water biscuit. The

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom