Facebook has apologised for reportedly allowing advertisers to target emotionally vulnerable people as young as 14,Two Couples Affair in Broad Daylight as a 23-page leaked document obtained by The Australianrevealed.
According to the news outlet, the document prepared by two top Australian Facebook executives uses algorithms to collect data (via posts, pictures, and reactions) on the emotional state of 6.4 million "high schoolers," "tertiary students," and "young Australians and New Zealanders … in the workforce," indicating "moments when young people need a confidence boost."
In other words, data says they feel "worthless" or "insecure" and are therefore well-positioned to receive an advertiser’s message.
SEE ALSO: Facebook blasted again for not quickly removing child pornA spokesperson for the social media giants said an investigation has been opened, telling The Australianon the weekend, "we have opened an investigation to understand the process failure and improve our oversight. We will undertake disciplinary and other processes as appropriate."
Additionally, a Facebook spokesperson told Mashable that the document's insights were never used to target ads.
"Facebook does not offer tools to target people based on their emotional state. The analysis done by an Australian researcher was intended to help marketers understand how people express themselves on Facebook," said the spokesperson. "Facebook has an established process to review the research we perform. This research did not follow that process, and we are reviewing the details to correct the oversight."
Still, there's no denying that data mining algorithms such as this one not only exist, but in keeping with the basic principles of production for profit, they're being used all the time.
What makes things worse for Facebook is that the real-time monitoring of young people's emotions in the document marked "Confidential: Internal Only"and dated 2017 seems to be in breach of the Australian Code for Advertising & Marketing Communications to Children.
Mining Facebook for young people and children feeling "stressed," "overwhelmed," and "useless" seems kinda contrary to ethical standards.
As The Australianpoints out, the Code defines a child as a person 14-years-old or younger, and states that children must "obtain a parent or guardian's express consent prior to engaging in any activity that will result in the collection or disclosure … of personal information." That is, "information that identifies the child or could identify the child."
Mining Facebook for young people and children's negative emotions including "stressed," "defeated," "overwhelmed," and "useless" seems contrary to the ethical standards the Code's authors, the Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA), champions.
The report is the latest example of Facebook's intelligence being used in the service of what some would consider unethical advertising. A ProPublicainvestigation in 2016 alleged that the platform enabled advertisers to discriminate by race -- what Facebook calls its "ethnic affinity" tag.
In February, the company announced that it would begin using its AI to identify ads for housing, credit, and jobs, and remove any ads that targeted race.
Perhaps news that Facebook is allowing ads to target young Australians based on their low emotional state will result in another "bare minimum" policy change. Either that, or it may create even more AI tools to try and address the problem.
The AANA have been contacted for comment.
Topics Facebook Advertising
'Pokémon Go' reveals trainer battles coming this monthBruce Miller discusses 'The Handmaid's Tale' Season 2Mom and toddler's 'potty time' song is way too catchyGreat Fire of London comic book stamps will reignite your love for letter writingNeighbors who thought they scored a free doormat were in for a gross surpriseFacebook collections are now shareable and collaborative'The Cher Show' on Broadway review: Should you Believe?Samsung caught using stock photo taken with DSLR to showcase Galaxy A8 cameraColumbia Sportswear has a brand new Star Wars jacket for you to covetHuawei's 'hole punch' phone, the Nova 4, is coming Dec. 17Don't bin them: You can mail back your used Nespresso coffee podsThe 8 best new television shows of 2018The best Android apps of 2018, according to Google8 absurdly expensive iPhone cases you definitely should not buyBoomer Phelps is the real king of the pool in new Instagram videoBruce Miller discusses 'The Handmaid's Tale' Season 2Here are all the 5G devices coming in 2019... so far8 absurdly expensive iPhone cases you definitely should not buyCan you find the hot dogs among the Instagrams of people's legs?Kanye West called out on Twitter for being on his phone during Broadway performance Those sonic attacks on U.S. officials in 2017 might've been microwaves 6 business podcasts to listen to this fall Twitter just made securing your account way more convenient Exact moment of Arecibo telescope collapse captured on video Trump's White House nixes Obama effort to collect data on pay by gender and race Kate Flannery recalls Meredith getting hit by a car on 'The Office' Online testing is a biased mess, and senators are demanding answers 'Immortals Fenyx Rising' is a love letter to Greek myths: Game review 8 young people on the value of Afropunk and black Apple redesigns Accessibility hub, launches videos on new features Thanks to 'squiggle brows,' your eyebrows can finally look like tiny snakes Activists demand Google open up about user data shared with police VW’s electric ID.4 feels way more personalized than a Tesla How to see if Amazon is stealing your internet bandwidth for Sidewalk Beloved author Terry Pratchett's dying wish to steamroll his hard drive fulfilled Every moment of John Oliver's diabolical long Netflix's 'Selena' is a glowing, unnecessary remembrance of an icon Hinge rolls out new features including Roses. Yes, like 'The Bachelor'. Melania Trump's new hat helpfully reminds us that she is FLOTUS Monolith mystery over? Stunt artists take credit and sell copies.
1.1861s , 10130.8125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Two Couples Affair in Broad Daylight】,Openness Information Network