CNN Interviews Jamie Turner About Facebook Political Ad Policy
Recently, Jamie Turner was interviewed by CNN to discuss the controversy surrounding Facebook’s political advertising policy.
The policy states that ads run by politicians are not subject to review by the regular third-party fact-checkers that Facebook uses for other ads.
The policy has created a great deal of negative publicity which prompted CNN to interview Jamie Turner about the issue.
This issue in a nutshell:
Facebook has decided not to fact-check
advertising from political candidates.
The decision was made, in part, because Facebook
(and Mark Zuckerberg) feel as though this would be a form of censorship.
But this decision has opened up a can of worms.
Essentially, this means that a political candidate can run Facebook ads that contain
lies designed to mislead the public.
Facebook is facing considerable backlash because
of this policy. Whether they change the policy or not is up for debate.
In an added twist, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey
decided to ban all political advertising on his platform.
Official Facebook policy regarding political ads:
This is taken directly from a speech by Nick
Clegg, Facebook’s V.P. of Gobal Affairs and Communications: “We
don’t believe that it’s an appropriate role for us to referee political debates
and prevent a politician’s speech from reaching its audience and being subject
to public debate and scrutiny. That’s why Facebook exempts politicians from our
third-party fact-checking program. We have had this policy on the books for
over a year now, posted publicly on our site under our eligibility guidelines.
This means that we will not send organic content or ads from politicians to our
third-party fact-checking partners for review.”
Digging a little deeper:
On Monday, 250 employees signed an open letter
imploring the company to change its policy and implement some reforms before
politicians weaponize the platform.
“Free speech and paid speech are not the same
thing,” the open letter said.
“Allowing paid civic misinformation to run on the
platform in its current state has the potential to increase distrust in our
platform by allowing similar paid and organic content to sit side-by-side, some
with third-party fact-checking and some without.”
“Additionally, it communicates that we are okay
profiting from deliberate misinformation campaigns by those in or seeking
positions of power.” (Side note: Facebook
said that political ads will only represent 0.5% of its ad revenue, so this is
not about money, they say, it’s about principle.)
Interestingly,
Facebook’s policy only holds for political candidates. If a Political Action
Committee runs an ad that contains a lie, that ad will be banned.
Probable
outcome for Facebook:
This
is a PR nightmare for Facebook. No matter what they do now, they’ve stirred up
a hornet’s nest.
It’s
possible, but unlikely, that Facebook will reverse course and follow Twitter’s
lead by banning all political ads.
It’s
also possible that Facebook will keep the policy as it now stands, but this
invites regulation from the Federal government which is not what Facebook
wants.
It’s
most likely that Facebook will update their policies so that political ads are
held to the same standards as other ads. This is the most logical and
reasonable outcome, but there are no guarantees that Facebook will follow this
course of action.
Additional background:
From Sep. 25 to Oct. 1, the Trump campaign spent over $1.6
million on Facebook ads, many of which included false or misleading
claims.
Facebook took down one of these ads – which referred to Joe
Biden as a ‘bitch’ — because it violated its ad policy against profanity.
The Trump campaign then revised the ad to include a debunked
claim about Biden, and this ad was allowed to stay up because Facebook ads from
politicians are not eligible for third-party fact-checking.
Elizabeth Warren and other Democratic officials have challenged
Facebook’s misinformation policies, asserting that the social media platform is
promoting Trump’s lies, and making money by doing so.
Quotes
from Mark Zuckerberg:
“Although I’ve considered whether we should not carry these ads in
the past, and I’ll continue to do so … so far I’ve thought we should continue,”
“In a democracy, I believe that people should be able to see for
themselves what politicians that (people) may or may not vote for are saying
and should judge their character for themselves.”
Quote
from Ted Cruz:
“Incumbent politicians have tons of money and a huge megaphone to
spread their message,” Senator Ted Cruz argued recently. “If you ban political
advertising from social media, how on earth is any upstart challenger supposed
to beat an incumbent? If you think America would be better with more career
politicians, in both parties, entrenched in power for life, then Twitter’s
proposed ban is a good idea.”
Jamie Turner
Jamie Turner is an internationally recognized author, speaker and network TV news contributor who has helped The Coca-Cola Company, AT&T, CNN and other global brands tackle complex marketing problems. He is the CEO of SIXTY, a marketing consultancy and advisory firm that has worked with The Coca-Cola Company, Holiday Inn, SAP and others. He is also the CEO of 60SecondMarketer.com a business blog that is read by hundreds of thousands of people around the globe. Jamie is a regular guest on CNN and HLN on the topics of business, digital media and leadership. He is the co-author of Go Mobile, which was the #1 best-selling mobile marketing book on Amazon when it was first released, and How to Make Money with Social Media, which is now in its second edition. Jamie has been profiled in the world’s best-selling marketing textbook and is an internationally recognized keynote speaker at trade shows, events and corporations around the globe. You can follow Jamie on Twitter @AskJamieTurner and via his blog on the 60 Second Marketer.