The Guardian (USA)

Facebook allows advertiser­s to target children interested in smoking, alcohol and weight loss

- Josh Taylor

Facebook is allowing businesses to advertise to children as young as 13 who express an interest in smoking, extreme weight loss and gambling for as little as $3, research by the lobby group Reset Australia has found.

The organisati­on, which is critical of digital platforms, set up a Facebook page and advertisin­g account under the name “Ozzie news network” to see what ad options Facebook would provide through its Ads Manager platform.

While Facebook will not allow the advertisin­g of alcohol and other age in appropriat­e content to people under 18, it does not prevent advertiser­s from targeting children determined by Facebook’s profile to have an interest in alcohol, for advertisin­g that might not appear explicitly to be about those topics.

Facebook offered the page the ability to advertise to approximat­ely 740,000 Australian children aged between 13 and 17, but then when the group refined the advertisin­g by interest, found that, just as for those aged over 18, they were able to advertise to teens under 18 with interests in alcohol, smoking and vaping, gambling, extreme weight loss, fast foods and online dating services.

To advertise to 52,000 teenagers interested in alcohol would cost $3.03, while getting to 14,000 teens interested in gambling would cost $11.24, or to fewer than 1,000 teens interested in cigarettes or electronic cigarettes would cost between $138.50 and $210.97.

The organisati­on then tested it out by getting a number of ads mentioning winning prizes, or cocktails, or asking teens if they were “summer ready” approved for advertisin­g to those targeted demographi­cs. The ads were ultimately never sent out.

Reset Australia has called on the federal government to develop a code regulating how data about young people can be collected and used, saying there should be express consent from children and parents, and full transparen­cy over how the data is used, with only necessary data collected. “Facebook appears to use teenagers’ data in the same way as adults,” said Chris Cooper, executive director of Reset Australia. “This opens a can of worms about just how Facebook profits from underage data, and exactly what protection they have against inappropri­ate targeting.”

“Should a 13-year-old who lists their single status be getting targeted ads for a sugar daddy dating service? Should a 15-year-old profiled as interested in alcohol see ads that suggest cocktail recipes based on their parent’s alcohol cabinet? Do we want 16-year-olds to have ads about gambling or political extremism targeted at them?”

Facebook reviews every ad before it goes live but a spokespers­on said in a statement ads could also be reviewed after they run, and would need to be compliant with local laws.

“Keeping young people safe across Facebook and Instagram is vital,” the spokespers­on said. “We have significan­t measures in place to review all ads before and after they run, including automated systems and human reviewers.

“Anyone advertisin­g on our platforms must comply with our policies along with all local laws and codes, such as those restrictin­g the advertisin­g of alcohol to minors in Australia. To support this, we also have age restrictio­n tools that all businesses can implement on their accounts themselves to control who sees their content.”

On Tuesday Apple rolled out the latest update to its iOS software for iPhones and iPads, which allows users to opt out of apps like Facebook tracking people across the internet, limiting the data the company can collect for the purpose of developing profiles for advertisin­g.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? Facebook allowed a page set up by lobby group Reset Australia to target children with ads on gambling, alcohol and extreme weight loss.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters Facebook allowed a page set up by lobby group Reset Australia to target children with ads on gambling, alcohol and extreme weight loss.
 ?? Photograph: Reset Australia ?? Ads approved by Facebook for teenagers
Photograph: Reset Australia Ads approved by Facebook for teenagers

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