Facebook to show who buys political ads
Political
advertisers will have to verify their identity and location and their posts
will carry a disclosure saying "paid for by".
The steps
come amid allegations that Russian-backed groups used social media ads to
interfere in the US election.
Executives
from Facebook and other internet giants will testify before a Senate hearing on
Tuesday.
"When
it comes to advertising on Facebook, people should be able to tell who the
advertiser is and see the ads they're running, especially for political
ads," Rob Goldman, Facebook's vice president of ads, said in a blog post.
By clicking
on the "paid for by" disclosure, users would be able to see more
details about the advertiser, he added.
Facebook
said it was expanding the transparency measures to all ads, and that they would
all have to be linked to a page. Users would also be able to view the ads any
page was running, it added.
Tests for
the new tools would start in Canada, with a goal of having them in place in the
US ahead of the midterm elections, in November 2018.
Tech giants
are keen to show they can self-regulate after it was found that Russian-backed
groups were exploiting their ad platforms.
On Tuesday,
Twitter announced similar transparency measures, including labels for
election-related ads and more details about who funded them.
It also
banned two of Russia's biggest media outlets - Russia Today (RT) and Sputnik -
from buying advertising amid fears they attempted to interfere with the 2016 US
presidential election.
Russia has
repeatedly denied claims that it interfered in the election, but the
allegations have sparked an investigation into possible links between Russia
and US President Donald Trump. He denies there was any collusion.
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