The Mercury News

Patagonia joins ad boycott of Facebook

Apparel company is latest to leave over platform’s hate-speech policies

- By Elizabeth Culliford

Outdoor apparel brand Patagonia will pause its ads on Facebook and Facebook’s photo-sharing app, Instagram, making it the latest company to join a boycott campaign organized by U.S. civil rights groups.

“We will pull all ads on Facebook and Instagram, effective immediatel­y, through at least the end of July, pending meaningful action from the social media giant,” the company said in a series of tweets on Sunday attributed to its head of marketing, Cory Bayers.

The Stop Hate for Profit campaign was started last week by several U.S. civil rights groups who said the social network was doing too little to stop hate speech on its platforms.

Patagonia, which has been politicall­y vocal in the past, joins companies including clothing maker VF Corp’s outdoor brand The North Face, Recreation­al Equipment, or REI, and recruiting company Upwork in pausing Facebook ads. A VF Corp spokesman told Reuters other brands in its portfolio were actively discussing whether to take the same action.

“From secure elections to a global pandemic to racial justice, the stakes are too high to sit back and let the company continue to be complicit in spreading disinforma­tion and fomenting fear and hatred,” said one of Patagonia’s tweets.

The campaign follows the death of George Floyd, a U.S. Black man who died in police cus

tody, which has triggered worldwide protests against racism and police brutality. Floyd died after a Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes while detaining him on May 25.

Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, was criticized after the company, unlike Twitter, decided not to take action on an inflammato­ry post by President Donald Trump about the protests.

“We deeply respect any brand’s decision, and remain focused on the important work of removing hate speech and providing critical voting informatio­n,” Carolyn Everson, vice president of Facebook’s global business group, said Monday. “Our conversati­ons with marketers and civil rights organizati­ons are about how, together, we can be a force for good.”

Facebook is the secondlarg­est U.S. digital ad player after Alphabet’s Google, according to eMarketer. Patagonia and VF Corp did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters questions about how much they spend on Facebook advertisin­g.

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