Facebook's ad delivery system shows gender bias, says new study
Apr 10, 2021, 17:51 IST
The ad delivery system of Facebook is biased towards women, showing them different job listings than it shows to men, a new study has revealed.
Researchers at University of Southern California found that Facebook's ad delivery system discriminates against women, reports The Verge.
The team of researchers bought ads on Facebook for delivery driver job listings that had similar qualification requirements but for different companies.
The findings showed that Facebook targeted the Instacart delivery job to more women and the Domino's delivery job to more men.
According to the researchers, Instacart has more female drivers but Domino's has more male drivers.
"Facebook's ad delivery can result in skew of job ad delivery by gender beyond what can be legally justified by possible differences in qualifications," the researchers wrote, "thus strengthening the previously raised arguments that Facebook's ad delivery algorithms may be in violation of anti-discrimination laws."
In a similar experiment on Microsoft-owned LinkedIn, the researchers found that the professional networking platform showed the Domino's listing to as many women as it showed the Instacart ad.
A Facbeek spokesperson said in a sttaement that their system takes into account "many signals to try and serve people ads they will be most interested in, but we understand the concerns raised in the report".
"We've taken meaningful steps to address issues of discrimination in ads and have teams working on ads fairness today. We're continuing to work closely with the civil rights community, regulators, and academics on these important matters," the spokesperson was quoted as saying.
This is not the first time Facebook has faced allegations over gender bias in its algorithms.
Another ProPublica probe found that Facebook allowed housing advertisers to target audiences by race and exclude minorities, raising questions about whether the company is in compliance with federal fair housing rules that prohibit such discrimination.
Facebook, however, called it a "technical failure".
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Researchers at University of Southern California found that Facebook's ad delivery system discriminates against women, reports The Verge.
The team of researchers bought ads on Facebook for delivery driver job listings that had similar qualification requirements but for different companies.
The findings showed that Facebook targeted the Instacart delivery job to more women and the Domino's delivery job to more men.
According to the researchers, Instacart has more female drivers but Domino's has more male drivers.
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In a similar experiment on Microsoft-owned LinkedIn, the researchers found that the professional networking platform showed the Domino's listing to as many women as it showed the Instacart ad.
A Facbeek spokesperson said in a sttaement that their system takes into account "many signals to try and serve people ads they will be most interested in, but we understand the concerns raised in the report".
"We've taken meaningful steps to address issues of discrimination in ads and have teams working on ads fairness today. We're continuing to work closely with the civil rights community, regulators, and academics on these important matters," the spokesperson was quoted as saying.
This is not the first time Facebook has faced allegations over gender bias in its algorithms.
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In 2017, a joint investigation by US-based non-profit organisation ProPublica and The New York Times found companies like Verizon, Amazon, Goldman Sachs, Target and Facebook place recruitment ads limited to particular age groups. Another ProPublica probe found that Facebook allowed housing advertisers to target audiences by race and exclude minorities, raising questions about whether the company is in compliance with federal fair housing rules that prohibit such discrimination.
Facebook, however, called it a "technical failure".
SEE ALSO:
Six new Nokia smartphones announced – price, specifications and availability details you should know
Founders, take note: here’s why most startups fail
Google Phone app now lets you record calls automatically from unknown numbers
Serum Institute of India buys into IPO-bound insurance unicorn PolicyBazaar, as True North sells part stake in secondary sale