Google bans microtargeting and "false claims" in political ads
The country's largest digital advertising platform is trying to take a stand heading into the 2020 election this week, as it both limits the targeting of political ads and warns would-be political advertisers about making false claims.
On Wednesday, Google made an announcement "clarifying" its advertising policy for political ads, making it clear that outright lies are theoretically not welcome. "Whether you're running for office or selling office furniture, we apply the same ads policies to everyone; there are no carve-outs," the company said, adding:
It's against our policies for any advertiser to make a false claim—whether it's a claim about the price of a chair or a claim that you can vote by text message, that election day is postponed, or that a candidate has died.
To make this more explicit, we're clarifying our ads policies and adding examples to show how our policies prohibit things like "deep fakes" (doctored and manipulated media), misleading claims about the census process, and ads or destinations making demonstrably false claims that could significantly undermine participation or trust in an electoral or democratic process.
That said, the company adds, they can't judge "every political claim, counterclaim, and insinuation," so they expect the number of ads they block to be low.
Those ads will also have to be aimed at a comparatively broad segment of the population, Google said, to the dismay of campaigns on both the left and the right. While the company will allow political ads to be targeted to users based on age, gender, and postal code, it will not allow more narrow "microtargeting" to highly segmented, granular audiences such as those based on public voter records or political affiliation.
Back to you, Facebook
(Score: 0, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 25 2019, @03:53PM
It's not that simple.
First they need to see a news article saying it's a fake right-wing conspiracy, written by a journalist who used to be a Democratic Party activist and published in a newspaper run by a Democratic Party donor. Groups like Journolist can have such articles published in twenty such newspapers on the same day. It'll be funded by the State Department [federaltimes.com] under a project for fighting fake news.
They are. Where do you think "Social Justice" comes from? It's a Jesuit ideology bankrolled by the keepers of the Vatican treasury, the Rothschild family.
It's called the Muslim Public Affairs Council and they are also part of the group that Google uses to decide what's true or false. DHS/NSC had an "Inclusive America Project" to place MPAC/ISNA/CAIR political officers into high positions of power because Social Justice says you need Diversity! You might have heard of it when the Muslims in charge of Microsoft, under Suhail Khan, were caught monopolizing the game industry press a few years ago. War authority was used to stop anyone from complaining about it and to send all their identities to Qatar.