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Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, on Wednesday 30 October, announced that Twitter has made the decision to stop all political advertising globally. The policy will be shared on 15 November and will come into force on 22 November.
This comes at a time when Facebook has taken fire after disclosing that it will not fact-check ads by politicians or their campaigns, which could allow them to lie freely. CEO Mark Zuckerberg told Congress last week that politicians have the right to free speech on Facebook.
Dorsey said that the reason for this is that we (twitter) believe political message reach “should be earned, not bought.”
Dorsey further went also gave reasons on why, political reach being earned, not bought.
He said that a political message ‘earns’ reach when people follow an account or retweet and paying for reach removes that decision, forcing optimised and targeted political messages on people.
Apart from that, he said that political advertising presents new challenges to the civic discourse like machine learning-based optimisation of messaging and micro-targeting, unchecked misleading information, and deep fakes.
“These are the challenges that will affect all internet communication, not just the political ads,” Dorsey said.
Saying that twitter will stay focused on the root problems, without additional burden and complexity that more money brings in, Dorsey gave an instance, in an apparent jibe at competitor Facebook, whose policy exempts ads from political candidates from its own fact-checking program.
In what seemed as an instance of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s recent Congress hearing, where he was grilled over fact checking political ads by Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Dorsey said that its not credible to say that “we are working hard to stop people from gaming our systems to spread misinformation, but if someone pays us to target and force people to see their ads, they can say whatever they want!”
Further, Dorsey said that even though ad transparency is a progress, there needs to be more political ad regulation.
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