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Facebook tightens ad policy in face of ‘Jew hater’ controversy
JTA
Sandberg also announced in the message posted on Facebook last week that the company is strengthening its policies and tools on targeted ads.
ProPublica, an investigative website, reported earlier this month that a news website was able to target ads at Facebook users who expressed interest in “Jew hater” and “how to burn Jews”. Facebook removed the categories after being alerted to their existence and said it would seek to prevent such categories from popping up for potential advertisers.
Sandberg wrote in her post: “Seeing those words made me disgusted and disappointed – disgusted by these sentiments and disappointed that our systems allowed this. Hate has no place on Facebook – and as a Jew, as a mother, and as a human being, I know the damage that can come from hate.
“The fact that hateful terms were even offered as options, was totally inappropriate and a fail on our part. We removed them and when that was not totally effective, we disabled that targeting section in our ad systems.”
She defended targeted advertising, which allows companies to place ads based on demographics on the buying history of consumers, or on behaviour and self-identification. Facebook relies heavily on algorithms to find and highlight content.
“Targeted advertising is how Facebook has helped millions of businesses grow, find customers, and hire people,” Sandberg wrote. “Our systems match organisations with potential customers who may be interested in their products or services.
“The systems have been particularly powerful for small businesses, who can use tools that previously were only available to advertisers with large budgets or sophisticated marketing teams.”
Sandberg said Facebook would clarify its advertising policies and tighten enforcement processes to ensure that content that goes against Facebook’s community standards, cannot be used to target ads; by adding more human review and oversight to the automated processes; and by creating a programme to encourage users to report potential abuses directly to the company.
“We hope these changes will prevent abuses like this going forward,” Sandberg notes, adding that Facebook has had “a firm policy against hate”.
Meanwhile, last Wednesday, Facebook sent out Happy New Year messages to users it believed to be Jewish. But many who received the message are not Jewish and may have received the greetings because they followed a group with a Jewish theme or posted a message on the Facebook page of a Jewish friend, Mashable reported.
“We send messages about religious moments to people in countries where a large proportion of the population observes the religion, or where the religious date is a public holiday,” firm policy against hate. “We may also show the message to people who’ve expressed interest in the holiday.” (JTA)