Technology
Facebook rolls out new tools to protect EU polls
San Francisco, March 29
Facebook has introduced new tools to protect the integrity of the European Parliament elections in May.
Richard Allan, Vice President, Global Policy Solutions at Facebook, said in a blog post on Thursday that the aim was to prevent online advertising from being used for foreign interference and increase transparency around all forms of political and issue advertising.
"To help prevent abuse and interference, all the European Union (EU) advertisers will need to be authorised in their country to run ads related to the European Parliament elections," said Allan.
Facebook will ask them to submit documents and use technical checks to confirm their identity and location.
"Importantly, this means that all the people who are reaching you with ads identified as related to politics or issues have been authorized as being in your country and will be required to provide accurate information about who they are," Facebook emphasised.
The social media giant said to increase transparency, all ads related to politics and issues on Facebook and Instagram in the EU must be clearly labelled -- including a "Paid for by" disclosure from the advertiser at the top of the ad.
"We are inviting all political campaigns to start the ads authorization process now and we will start to block political or issue ads that have not been properly registered from mid-April," Allan said.
Facebook has built an Ad Library to make it easy for everyone to find out about political or issue ads on its platforms.
"Here you will see all the ads that have been classified as relating to politics or issues and we will keep them in the library for seven years," said the company.
Facebook said it is expanding access to its API so that news organisations, regulators, watchdog groups and people can hold advertisers and the social media giant more accountable.
"We're also making transparency information more visible on Pages, expanding access to our API to help more people analyze political or issue ads, and exempting news publishers from labelling their ads as related to politics or issues in the US," added Satwik Shukla, Product Manager at Facebook.
The EU officials had criticised Facebook in January for not rolling out proper systems to tackle disinformation fast on its platform.
Richard Allan, Vice President, Global Policy Solutions at Facebook, said in a blog post on Thursday that the aim was to prevent online advertising from being used for foreign interference and increase transparency around all forms of political and issue advertising.
"To help prevent abuse and interference, all the European Union (EU) advertisers will need to be authorised in their country to run ads related to the European Parliament elections," said Allan.
Facebook will ask them to submit documents and use technical checks to confirm their identity and location.
"Importantly, this means that all the people who are reaching you with ads identified as related to politics or issues have been authorized as being in your country and will be required to provide accurate information about who they are," Facebook emphasised.
The social media giant said to increase transparency, all ads related to politics and issues on Facebook and Instagram in the EU must be clearly labelled -- including a "Paid for by" disclosure from the advertiser at the top of the ad.
"We are inviting all political campaigns to start the ads authorization process now and we will start to block political or issue ads that have not been properly registered from mid-April," Allan said.
Facebook has built an Ad Library to make it easy for everyone to find out about political or issue ads on its platforms.
"Here you will see all the ads that have been classified as relating to politics or issues and we will keep them in the library for seven years," said the company.
Facebook said it is expanding access to its API so that news organisations, regulators, watchdog groups and people can hold advertisers and the social media giant more accountable.
"We're also making transparency information more visible on Pages, expanding access to our API to help more people analyze political or issue ads, and exempting news publishers from labelling their ads as related to politics or issues in the US," added Satwik Shukla, Product Manager at Facebook.
The EU officials had criticised Facebook in January for not rolling out proper systems to tackle disinformation fast on its platform.
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