San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

REPORT: TIKTOK BAD AT CULLING U.S. ELECTION MISINFORMA­TION ADS

- BY BARBARA ORTUTAY

Tiktok’s algorithms are very good at finding videos to keep people glued to their phone screens for hours on end. What they are not so good at, a new report has found, is detecting ads that contain blatant misinforma­tion about U.S. elections.

That’s despite Tiktok having banned all political advertisem­ents from its platform in 2019.

The report raises fresh concerns about the wildly popular video-sharing app’s ability to catch election falsehoods at a time when a growing number of young people use it not just for entertainm­ent, but also for finding informatio­n. The nonprofit Global Witness and the Cybersecur­ity for Democracy team at New York University published the report Friday.

Global Witness and NYU tested whether some of the most popular social platforms — Facebook, Youtube and Tiktok — can detect and take down false political ads targeted at U.S. voters ahead of next month’s midterm elections. The watchdog group has done similar tests in Myanmar, Ethiopia, Kenya and Brazil with ads containing hate speech and disinforma­tion, but this is the first time it has done so in the United States.

The U.S. ads included misinforma­tion about the voting process, such as when or how people can vote, as well as about how election results are counted. They were also designed to sow distrust about the democratic process by spreading baseless claims about the vote being “rigged” or decided before Election Day. All were submitted for approval to the social media platforms, but none were actually published.

Tiktok, which is owned by Chinese company Bytedance, performed the worst, letting through 90 percent of the ads the group submitted. Facebook fared better, catching seven out of 20 false ads — in both English and Spanish.

Jon Lloyd, senior advisor at Global Witness, said Tiktok’s results, in particular were “a huge surprise to us“ given that the platform has an outright ban political advertisin­g.

In a statement, Tiktok said it bans and prohibits election misinforma­tion and paid political ads from its platform.

“We value feedback from NGOS, academics, and other experts which helps us continuall­y strengthen our processes and policies,“the company said.

Facebook’s systems detected and took down the majority of the ads Global Witness submitted for approval.

“These reports were based on a very small sample of ads, and are not representa­tive given the number of political ads we review daily across the world,“Facebook said. “Our ads review process has several layers of analysis and detection, both before and after an ad goes live.” It added that it invests “significan­t resources“to protect elections.

Youtube, meanwhile, detected and took down all of the problemati­c ads, and even suspended the test account Global Witness set up to post the fake ads in question. At the same time, however, the Alphabet-owned video platform did not detect any of the false or misleading election ads the group submitted for approval in Brazil.

“So that goes to show that there’s a real global discrepanc­y in their ability to enforce their own policies,“Lloyd said.

Google said it has “developed extensive measures to tackle misinforma­tion” on its platforms, including false claims about elections and voting.

“In 2021, we blocked or removed more than 3.4 billion ads for violating our policies, including 38 million for violating our misreprese­ntation policy,“the company said in a prepared statement. “We know how important it is to protect our users from this type of abuse — particular­ly ahead of major elections like those in the United States and Brazil and we continue to invest in and improve our enforcemen­t systems to better detect and remove this content.”

Lloyd said that ramificati­ons of a failure to control misinforma­tion would be widespread.

“The consequenc­es of inaction could be disastrous for our democracie­s and our planet and our society in general,“Lloyd said. “Increasing polarizati­on and all of that. I don’t know what it’s going to take for them to take it seriously.”

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Tiktok, which is owned by Chinese company Bytedance, performed the worst, letting through 90 percent of the false political ads the group submitted.
OLIVIER DOULIERY AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Tiktok, which is owned by Chinese company Bytedance, performed the worst, letting through 90 percent of the false political ads the group submitted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States