Facebook mulls ban on political ads ahead of U.S. elections: Bloomberg
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[July 11, 2020]
By Elizabeth Culliford
(Reuters) - Facebook Inc is considering
imposing a ban on political ads on its social network in the days
leading up to the Nov. 3 elections in the United States, Bloomberg News
reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the company's thinking.
The potential ban is only being discussed and has not been finalized,
the report added. (https://bloom.bg/2ZY7F6X)
A Facebook spokesman said the company had no comment on the report.
The social media company has been under fire for its policy of exempting
politicians' ads and speech from fact-checking. Last year, smaller rival
Twitter Inc banned political ads, but Facebook has maintained that it
does not want to stifle political speech.
Republican President Donald Trump's campaign and Democratic presidential
candidate Joe Biden's campaigns did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
Last month Biden's campaign published an open letter to Facebook Chief
Executive Mark Zuckerberg calling for the company to fact-check
politicians' ads in the two weeks ahead of the election.
In a Twitter post on Friday, Biden's digital director Rob Flaherty
pointed to the issue of misinformation in unpaid content on the site.
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A 3D-printed Facebook logo is seen placed on a keyboard in this
illustration taken March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
"Requisite reminder that Facebook's problems are 80% about unpaid
content and so anything they do about paid content is an attempt to
distract you," he tweeted.
Facebook has drawn heat from employees and lawmakers in recent weeks
over its decisions not to act on inflammatory posts by the
president.
More than 900 advertisers have signed on to an ad boycott on
Facebook, organized by civil rights groups to pressure the world's
largest social media network to take concrete steps to block hate
speech and misinformation, in the wake of the death of George Floyd
in police custody.
(Reporting by Neha Malara and Elizabeth Culliford; Editing by Vinay
Dwivedi, Dan Grebler and Daniel Wallis)
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