Facebook announces changes to make Ads, Pages more transparent

Mark

Facebook has continued changes meant to address issues around data privacy and the usage of its platform. The latest changes are being made to the way Ads and Pages are managed on its platform and on Instagram.

These changes are designed to increase transparency and accountability as well as prevent election interference.

A statement release by VP, Ads, Rob Goldman and VP, Local & Pages, Alex Himel, today read: “We believe that when you visit a Page or see an ad on Facebook it should be clear who it’s coming from. We also think it’s important for people to be able to see the other ads a Page is running, even if they’re not directed at you.”

“That’s why today we’re announcing important changes to the way we manage ads and Pages on Facebook as well as Instagram. These are designed to increase transparency and accountability, as well as prevent election interference,” they said.

Increased transparency and accountability for electoral and issue ads

Last October, the platform announced that only authorized advertisers will be able to run electoral ads on Facebook or Instagram. And today, the company is extending that requirement to anyone that wants to show “issue ads” — like political topics that are being debated across the country.

Facebook is working with third parties to develop a list of key issues, which the company will refine over time.

To get authorized by Facebook, advertisers will need to confirm their identity and location. Advertisers will be prohibited from running political ads — electoral or issue-based — until they are authorized.

In addition, these ads will be clearly labeled in the top left corner as “Political Ad.” Next to it Facebook will show “paid for by” information. The company started testing the authorization process this week, and people will begin seeing the label and additional information in the US later this spring.

Facebook is also investing in artificial intelligence and adding more people to help find advertisers that should have gone through the authorization process but did not.

The company realized it won’t catch every ad that should be labeled, and it encourages anyone who sees an unlabeled political ad to report it. People can do this by tapping the three dots at the top right corner of the ad and selecting “Report Ad.”

View ads and searchable political archive

In Canada, Facebook has been testing a new feature called view ads that lets you see the ads a Page is running — even if they are not in your News Feed.

This applies to all advertiser Pages on Facebook — not just Pages running political ads. The company plans to launch view ads globally in June.

In June Facebook also plans to release a public, searchable political ads archive. This will contain all ads with the “Political Ad” label, and will show the image and text, as well as additional information like the amount spent and demographic audience information for each ad.

Increased authenticity and transparency for pages

Today, Facebook is also announcing that people who manage Pages with large numbers of followers will need to be verified. Those who manage large Pages that do not clear the process will no longer be able to post. This will make it much harder for people to administer a Page using a fake account, which is strictly against our policies. Facebook will also show you additional context about Pages to effectively assess their content. For example, you can see whether a Page has changed its name.

Why is Facebook doing this?

The company knows it is slow to pick-up foreign interference in the 2016 US elections. Today’s updates are designed to prevent future abuse in elections — and to help ensure you have the information that you need to assess political and issue ads, as well as content on Pages. By increasing transparency around ads and Pages on Facebook, Facebook can increase accountability for advertisers — improving our service for everyone.