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Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

FB Halts Potential Anti-Semitic Ads

Facebook Halts Potential Anti-Semitic Ads
     Facebook has disabled the ability for advertisers to focus on profiles that contain hate speech when the social media giant reportedly approved ad posts geared toward users interested in anti-Semitic subjects.

    The restriction comes when news organisation ProPublica said Thursday it conducted an experiment and paid $30 to own its articles specifically promoted to users WHO expressed interest within the topics "Jew hater," "How to burn jews," or "History of 'why jews ruin the planet.'"

It reportedly took Facebook no more than quarter-hour to approve all 3 of the targeted ads.

    ProPublica said the anti-Semitic categories were created by an algorithm and they were removed by Facebook when the corporate was created aware. The media outlet added  that its test exposed that such anti-Semitic targeting might happen, though it was not clear if it was actually occurring.

     Facebook, as a part of its review, noted during a post Thursday that it noticed  a "small percentage" of users entering "offensive responses" in their education or employer fields on their profiles. That allowed ProPublica to travel after such users with anti-Semitic subjects — not through an algorithm.

     "ProPublica surfaced that these offensive education and employer fields were showing up in our ads interface as targetable audiences for campaigns. we immediately removed them," Facebook said. "Given that the number of people in these segments was improbably low, a particularly small number of people were targeted in these campaigns."


Wanna buy ads targeted to reach Jew-haters? Until we told them about it, Facebook was selling them.https://www.propublica.org/article/facebook-enabled-advertisers-to-reach-jew-haters 


Facebook makes it clear : We won't allow users make it money from violence, porn, and fake news

Facebook makes it clear : We won't allow users make it money
from violence, porn, and fake news
     Facebook is making it harder to profit off of smut, vice and fake news.
The social media platform promised Wed to keep ads off content and videos that feature graphic pictures, nudity, violence or adult language.
      It also said that users who repeatedly post fake news might not be allowed to make cash on the site.
     The new rules should help assure companies that their ads won't seem alongside objectionable material. but it also puts Facebook within the position of deciding whether specific pages and videos are offensive.
      The move might help Facebook (FB, Tech30) to avoid issues that have plagued its cross-town digital ad rival.
      Google came struggling earlier this year when major brands discovered their ads were shown alongside YouTube videos created by extremists.
       AT&T , Verizon, Walmart, Johnson &Johnson and JPMorgan Chase were among the firms that temporarily pulled their ads off the video platform.
     The rules revealed by Facebook on Wed prohibit ads from running on content that features "fights, gore and beatings of either animals or people."
Content deemed to be "incendiary, inflammatory and demeaning" or that depicts "blood, open wounds, bodily fluids, surgeries, medical procedures or gore" won't be monetized.


Facebook: We won't allow users to profit
from fake news and violence
      The regulations should help undercut the business model of these who publish ballyhoo artist headlines and what Facebook describes as "false news," though it'll not solve the matter entirely, particularly because several of these people use Facebook not for ad revenue but to drive traffic to their sites, on which they sell ads.
The company has cracked down on fake news publishers within the wake of the 2016 presidential election, when huge volumes of misleading info was peddled on the site.
In late August, the corporate said that users who repeatedly share fake news would be prohibited from running their own ads on the site.

     Google and Facebook own huge chunks of the digital advertising business, and major brands are spending an increasing share of their ad budgets on their platforms.
But as advertisers direct more dollars to digital, several are demanding  proof that the ads are translating into sales, and are growing wary of the content to that their ads are connected.
WPP (WPPGF), the world's largest advertising company, warned last month that the transition from traditional ads to digital isn't going smoothly.
      "The digital marketplace has been dogged by problems such as measurability, viewability, fraud, and fake news," the company said in its income statement.

The standards are pretty clear about nine categories banned from making money via Facebook:
  • Misappropriation of Children's Characters
  • Tragedy and Conflict (ex. natural disasters, crime, self-harm)
  • Debated Social Issues (ex. attacks on people or groups) 
  • Violent Content (against people or animals) 
  • Adult Content (ex. nudity, explicit or suggestive positions) 
  • Prohibited Activity (ex. sale or use of illegal products) 
  • Explicit Content (ex. blood, medical procedures, gore)
  • Drugs or Alcohol Use
  • Inappropriate Language

Facebook has mapped the entire world's population

Facebook has mapped the entire world's population as it prepares to build an internet in space

Facebook (FB) doesn't only know what its 2 billion users "Like."
It now knows where 7.5 billion humans live, everywhere on earth, to within 15 feet.
The company has created a data map of the planet's entire human population by combining government census numbers with information it's obtained from space satellites, according to Janna Lewis, Facebook's head of strategic innovation partnerships and sourcing.
The mapping technology, which Facebook says it developed itself, can pinpoint any man-made structures in any country on earth to a resolution of five meters.
Facebook is using the data to understand the precise distribution of humans around the planet.
That will help the company determine what types of internet service -- based either on land, in the air or in space -- it can use to reach consumers who now have no (or very low quality) internet connections.
"Satellites are exciting for us. Our data showed the best way to connect cities is an internet in the sky," Lewis told about 150 people gathered in San Francisco this week for a Space Technology and Investment Forum sponsored by the Space Foundation.
"We're trying to connect people from the stratosphere and from space," using high-altitude drone aircraft and satellites, to supplement earth-based networks, said Lewis.
Facebook hired Lewis, a former intellectual property lawyer with extensive experience in international aerospace law, roughly one year ago.
Her job, as she told the forum, is to work with partners in the aerospace industry to build a multi-pronged network to serve the entire planet.
The data is used "to know the population distribution" of earth to figure out "the best connectivity technologies" in different locales, Lewis said. "We see these as a viable option for serving these populations" that are "unconnected or under-connected," she said.
In addition to Lewis, Facebook is also hiring aerospace engineers to help it crack this market.
The mapping technology is part of a much-broader effort by U.S. companies to take advantage of a slew of data now available from the hundreds of satellites orbiting the earth.
""All this satellite data is coming from space, so people are trying to figure out what the business opportunities are," says Edward Swallow, senior vice president for civil and commercial systems for the Aerospace Corporation, an entity set up by the government in 1960 to protect America's pre-eminence in space.
Facebook rival Google (GOOGL), for example, sold its satellite-imaging business, formerly called Skybox, earlier this year "because they figured out they could get the data without having its own satellites," Swallow told CNBC in an interview.

Cheaper launches, more data

Space-related investment and market development is being driven by two things: the plummeting cost of launching satellites and the wealth of data they produce.
New aerospace companies including Elon Musk's SpaceX, Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic and Virgin Orbit have driven down the cost of launching a satellite into low-earth orbit dramatically.
Thanks to companies founded by this "billionaire boys club" -- as some at the space investing confab referred to them -- a company can now get a payload into space for as low as "tens of thousands of dollars per kilogram," said Monica Jan, senior director of strategy and customer experience for Virgin Orbit.
Before these companies entered the market, satellite launches typically cost millions or even billions of dollars, said Jan, whose worked in the aerospace industry for decades.
Virgin Orbit, based in Long Beach, California, was spun out of Virgin Galactic earlier this year to focus on small-satellite launches.
When asked by CNBC what she took away from Lewis' earlier presentation, said "it sounds like they (Facebook) wants to create a multi-tier system," or one that uses networks based on earth, in the stratosphere and in space.

A space-based internet

All of this activity has been spurred by the increasing commercialization of space, which was formerly an expensive realm inhabited by nation's alone.
Of the 576 U.S. satellites now in orbit, 286 -- or roughly half -- were launched for commercial reasons, according to Steve Butow, the west coast military lead for the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental, or DIUX.
The DIUX was set up during the Obama administration to speed the deployment of new technologies into the U.S. armed forces.
The end result of all this investment will likely be a "space-based broadband data network" that will the basis of "a new space economy," Butow told the space investing confab in San Francisco.
If and when that becomes a reality, Facebook will be ready for it.