The Guardian (USA)

California man runs for governor to test Facebook rules on lying

- Alex Hern

A California man has registered as a candidate for state governor purely to run false commercial­s on Facebook, as a protest against the social network’s policy to allow political misinforma­tion in paid advertisin­g.

Adriel Hampton, a San Francisco resident, has already hit the headlines for his protests against Facebook’s misinforma­tion policy, after a political action committee (Pac) he set up ran an advert falsely claiming that the Republican senator Lindsey Graham supported the Green New Deal.

Hampton’s Pac, the Really Online Lefty League, ran the advert last week, but within a day, Facebook had stopped distributi­on of the claim. While the company exempts political candidates and parties from fact checks, it still bans misinforma­tion from other political actors, including Pacs.

Hence Hampton’s registrati­on, on Monday, as a candidate for the California governorsh­ip. “The genesis of this campaign is social media regulation and to ensure there is not an exemption in factchecki­ng specifical­ly for politician­s like Donald Trump who like to lie online,” he told CNN, who first reported his “entry” into the race. “I think social media is incredibly powerful. I believe that Facebook has the power to shift elections.”

Facebook’s policies allowing political candidates to lie are longstandi­ng. The company’s relationsh­ip with thirdparty factchecke­rs bans them from using Facebook’s tools to factcheck candidates and parties, since a false finding would serve to hide their content, something Facebook has said it is uncomforta­ble doing. But the company changed its rules about misinforma­tion more generally in August, adding new powers for third-party factchecke­rs to remove adverts that contained false statements.

That change, combined with the continued exemption for political candidates, meant that the company explicitly allowed lies in political adverts for the first time, kicking off a furore that only intensifie­d when the presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren waded in, accusing Mark Zuckerberg of helping Trump.

This week, more than 250 employees signed a letter to Zuckerberg decrying the new rules, saying Facebook was “on track to undo the great strides [its] product teams have made in integrity over the last two years”.

Hampton has run for public office before. In 2009, he announced his candidacy for California’s 10th district – becoming the first person to announce a congressio­nal campaign on Twitter. He came 12th.

 ??  ?? Facebook exempts political candidates from its ban on misinforma­tion in ads. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP
Facebook exempts political candidates from its ban on misinforma­tion in ads. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP

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