Facebook has disabled ethnicity advert targeting system [SEE REASONS HERE]
Facebook has temporarily turned off a system
that let advertisers choose which ethnic and minority groups saw their ads.
It said it
would investigate how the feature was being used by advertisers.
News
organisation ProPublica discovered that the system could be abused by posting
discriminatory ads on the social network.
Facebook
said it would look for a way to change the system so it could not be used
"inappropriately".
Last year,
ProPublica first discovered the ethnic discrimination via advertising was
possible.
US laws prohibit
discrimination in the way ProPublica demonstrated - in adverts relating to
housing, for example - was possible.
Last week,
ProPublica tried again to post discriminatory ads that were not shown to people
who were:
African-American
Jewish
Hispanic
interested
in Islam
part of
other ethnic or minority groups
All the ads
it submitted were approved.
Facebook
does not explicitly ask its users to declare their ethnicity, but it typically
infers someone's ethnic group from their activity on the social network.
When the
targeting was first uncovered, Facebook said it would find a way to spot and
block attempts to post discriminatory ads.
Facebook's
failure to do this raised questions about "its ability and commitment to
police discriminatory advertising", said ProPublica.
On Thursday,
Facebook boss Sheryl Sandberg said it had now turned off the tools that let
advertisers choose which "multicultural affinity segments" they
wanted to reach.
Ms Sandberg
said it would also look into how these tools were used especially in respect of
"potentially sensitive segments" such as those with disabilities.
But she also
defended ads that were targeted on the basis of ethnicity or culture - saying
the practice was common and legitimate in the industry.
In an
earlier statement, Facebook said the ads placed by ProPublica had been approved
because of a "technical failure" in its enforcement system.
"We're
disappointed that we fell short of our commitments," Ami Vora,
vice-president of product management, told the news organisation.
Ms Vora said
the discrimination-spotting system Facebook had created after ProPublica's
first investigation had managed to spot millions of other ads that had broken
its guidelines.
"Our
systems continue to improve, but we can do better," she said.
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