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Facebook is rejecting ads from restaurants, hair salons, and job fairs because they're too 'political,' and people are furious

Jun 23, 2018, 02:19 IST

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  • Facebook launched a new policy to prevent abuse of political ads in May. Anyone running political ads on the social network must be authorized to do so by confirming their identity and location.
  • Facebook reviews the ads using a combination of artificial intelligence and human reviewers to determine whether they are meeting the criteria or not.
  • According to a report in The New York Times, the new system seems to have some flaws, as Facebook has been mistakenly rejecting ads from local businesses, claiming that they contain political content when they do not.

There appears to be a major glitch in Facebook's new policy for screening political ads, and it's putting some local businesses' noses out of joint.

On Thursday, The New York Times reported that Facebook has been mistakenly rejecting ads from local businesses, claiming that they contain political content when they do not.

The social-media platform recently made a rule that anyone running political ads on Facebook must be authorized to do so by confirming their identity and location.

"Advertisers will be prohibited from running political ads - electoral or issue-based - until they are authorized," the company said in April

According to The Times, Facebook reviews the ads using a combination of artificial intelligence and human reviewers to determine whether they are meeting the criteria or not, which leaves room for error.

Rob Leathern, Facebook's director of product management, told the Times that the review process wasn't always working as planned.

"These are new policies, and it's not going to be perfect at the start," he said, adding: "We think it's better than doing nothing at all."

The Times listed a series of different businesses that have seen their ads rejected on political grounds, including a hair salon, a vegetarian restaurant, and children's daycare center.

Michelle Benson, who runs a children's daycare center in Shirley, New York, told the Times that she tried to spend $100 on an ad informing parents that she had openings for more children this summer.

"I will beat anyone's rates and accommodate parents according to their schedule," the advertisement said.

Despite the ad not having any reference to politics, Benson received a notification from Facebook that it had been rejected because she was not "authorized to run ads with political content."

Other business owners have taken to social media to vent their frustrations:

 

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