Facebook's latest Trump ad takedown further exposes its laughable policies

关于我们 2024-09-23 07:26:07 1

Facebook has been pretty clear that it won't police the truthiness of political ads on its platform. But the company apparently does have some sort of threshold for removing certain ads, and it's pretty silly in the grand scheme of things.

As noted by Fast Company, a number of ads pushed out by President Trump's Make America Great Again Committee have been removed from the platform because they violated Facebook's "Advertising Policies."

Here's one example.

Mashable ImageThis ad is a no-no.Credit: Screenshot / Facebook

As far as political ads go, this is one is relatively innocuous. (Well, depending on what you think about the repercussions of the killing of Qassem Soleimani.)The ad doesn't contain any outright lies or deepfakes.

The issue with the ad? Those YES and NO buttons at the top. Clicking those buttons doesn't actually contribute your vote to any poll. Instead, it sends you to a survey you can fill out that also happens to collect your personal data that the campaign can use to contact you in the future.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

This, as Fast Companypoints out, violates the "nonexistent functionality" part of Facebook's advertising policy. That part states that ads can't "contain images that portray nonexistent functionality. This includes imagery that replicates play buttons, notifications, or checkboxes, as well as ads containing features that do not work, such as multiple choice options in the ad creative itself."

Even though the text above the image clearly states that a survey is involved, those buttons are a sneaky way of getting users (many of whom probably don't bother reading that text) to click through, which clearly violates this portion of the policy.

SEE ALSO:Facebook: Lies in political ads are allowed, but you can choose to see fewer of them

As if to prove this point, the exact same ad– minus the fake poll buttons in the image but still linked to the survey – is alive and well on Facebook.

Mashable ImageThis ad is totally fine.Credit: Screenshot / Facebook

Considering the damage and misinformation that can (and has) been spread on Facebook via political ads, flagging an ad because it has fake buttons is a laughable level of technicality. It's like nailing mob bosses for tax evasion after they've already run rampant for years, causing general mayhem.

But if there's one thing that defines Facebook, it's "too little, too late," so I'm not sure what else we should have expected.

TopicsFacebookSocial MediaDonald TrumpPolitics

本文地址:http://x.zzzogryeb.bond/html/66a399658.html
版权声明

本文仅代表作者观点,不代表本站立场。
本文系作者授权发表,未经许可,不得转载。

全站热门

雅安市第四人民医院:工娱治疗让患者康复之路充满希望

Patreon updates content reporting tool, hires human moderators

[Graphic News] S. Korea's fruit imports reach record high in 2017

Man accused of threatening Busan sex worker with severed finger

Webb telescope discovers 6 rogue worlds. They didn't form the way you'd expect.

我市举行第32届元旦环城赛跑活动

Dyson spent over 10 years developing the 360 eye robot vacuum. How does it rank?

Elon Musk 'likes' trending #BanTheADL posts as white supremacist ad runs on platform

友情链接