Facebook bans U.S. ads that call voting fraud widespread or election
invalid
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[October 01, 2020]
By Joseph Menn
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook Inc <FB.O>
on Wednesday banned ads on its flagship website and Instagram photo and
video sharing service that claim widespread voting fraud, suggest U.S.
election results would be invalid, or which attack any method of voting.
The company announced the new rules in a blog post, adding to earlier
restrictions on premature claims of election victory.
The move came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump used the first
televised debate with Democratic challenger Joe Biden to amplify his
baseless claims that the Nov. 3 presidential election will be "rigged."
Trump has been especially critical of mail-in ballots, and he cited a
number of small unrelated incidents to argue that fraud was already
happening at scale.
Facebook has been under fire for refusing to fact-check political ads
more broadly and for rampant organic misinformation.
Citing hate speech rules, it also moved Wednesday to remove Trump
campaign ads suggesting that immigrants could be a significant source of
coronavirus infections.
Facebook said the new election ad prohibition would include those that
"portray voting or census participation as useless/meaningless" or that
"delegitimize any lawful method or process of voting or voting
tabulation ... as illegal, inherently fraudulent or corrupt."
Facebook also cited ads that call an election fraudulent or corrupt
because the result was unclear on election night or because ballots
received afterward were still being counted.
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A Facebook logo is pictured on an Apple's Ipad in Bordeaux,
southwestern France, March 10, 2016. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/Illustration
The company added that as of Sept. 29, it has banned ads that
"praise, support or represent militarized social movements and QAnon"
from its platform.
QAnon followers espouse an intertwined series of beliefs, based on
anonymous web postings from "Q," who claims to have insider
knowledge of the Trump administration.
Starting Wednesday, Facebook will direct people to credible child
safety resources when they search for certain child safety hashtags,
as QAnon supporters are increasingly using the issue and hashtags
such as #savethechildren to recruit, the social media company said
in a blog post.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; additional reporting by Juby Babu;
Editing by Sandra Maler, Richard Chang and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)
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