Albuquerque Journal

Facebook pressured to ban political ads

- BY MAE ANDERSON AND RACHEL LERMAN

SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter’s ban on political advertisin­g is ratcheting up pressure on Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg to follow suit. But so far, that doesn’t appear likely to happen.

Facebook’s policy is to accept paid political ads from candidates without fact-checking them or censoring them, even if they contain lies.

And Zuckerberg doubled down on that stand Wednesday following Twitter’s announceme­nt, reiteratin­g that “political speech is important” and that Facebook is loath to interfere with it.

Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites have come under fire over Russia’s use of such platforms to spread misinforma­tion and sow political division in the U.S. during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. That debate has heated up again in recent weeks along with the 2020 race for the White house.

Twitter chose to respond with a ban on all political advertisin­g, suggesting that social media is so powerful that false or misleading messages pose a risk to democracy.

The timing of the announceme­nt, the same day as Facebook’s quarterly earnings report, seemed designed to goad Zuckerberg.

“The pressure is going to be extremely strong on Facebook to do something similar, and if they don’t, the criticism of Facebook will only increase,” said Tim Bajarin, president of consultanc­y Creative Strategies.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg said, “I think other online platforms would do well to either accept their responsibi­lity for truth or question whether they should be in the business at all.”

But Zuckerberg stood firm.

 ??  ?? Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg

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