Lying in Facebook political ads is Women Who Have Tasted Swapping [Uncut]ok — as long as the lie isn't infringing on people's right to cast their vote.
During a conference call Monday in which Facebook detailed its latest efforts to bolster election integrity and stop the spread of misinformation, Mark Zuckerberg announced some new measures the company is taking to fight voter suppression.
Voter suppression is a term that describes efforts to prevent people from voting by spreading anti-voting sentiment, sharing incorrect information about how to vote, and even undermining get out the vote efforts and voting infrastructure.
Now, Facebook will outright prohibit ads that discourage people from voting. For example, Facebook wouldn't allow someone to publish an ad that suggests that voting is pointless.
Facebook expanded its policies around voter suppression content ahead of the 2018 U.S. midterms. That included prohibiting content that spread false information about how and when to vote, incorrect voter qualifications (such as misleading I.D. requirements), and suggestions of violent or race-based retribution for voting. Now, the new policy specifically addresses anti-voting sentiment in paid ads.
Facebook also says that it is proactively removing and preventing the posting of this content before people report it: "Our Elections Operations Center removed more than 45,000 pieces of content that violated these policies — more than 90% of which our systems detected before anyone reported the content to us," the blog post explaining the change reads.
During the question and answer portion of the call, Zuckerberg answered questions about how the new policy would work in practice. For example, recent reports detailed that Facebook would allow politicians to run ads that contain false information — a sentiment that Zuckerberg repeatedly defended on the call on the basis of free political speech. Reporters asked, if a politician ran an ad that contained false information about voting, which policy would take precedence?
Zuckerberg answered that the anti-voter suppression rules would win out.
"The voter suppression rules would be paramount in that case," Zuckerberg said. "We give very broad deference to political speech... but it's not everything."
Apparently, it is possible for a politician to cross a line.
Topics Facebook Elections Politics
'Work It' is the sleek, funny dance movie we deserve: ReviewJake the extremely good waterboy is the star of minor league baseballSamsung's new Galaxy Watch3 will raise your fitness gameThe unsexy, degraded parts of national parks just got vital fundingThis slide reveals Facebook's cringeworthy hate speech policiesTwitter may have to pay hundreds of millions in fines for privacy screwYoungest Solange fan finally gets to FaceTime with her celebrity idolTwitter's latest fight against misinformation gets thumbsMicrosoft confirms it's in talks to buy TikTok, and Trump is involvedKoala and dog stuck down an abandoned mineshaft get rescuedGoogle Ventures partner tweets heartbreaking story about his son's preKoala and dog stuck down an abandoned mineshaft get rescuedCadillac's first electric vehicle goes after Tesla'Handmaid's Tale' protesters hit back at healthcare bill at the CapitolWindow Swap lets you pretend to work from other people's homesGoogle promotes wearing a face mask in helpful DoodleA disgusted mom posted a very creepy baby onesie and the internet is not into itAssuming that women journalists don't tweet strong opinions is 'complete bollocks'The Queen receives £6 million pay riseWith TikTok under attack, Snapchat tests in NYT mini crossword answers for March 23, 2025 NYT Strands hints, answers for March 22 Iowa State vs. Lipscomb 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free Wisconsin vs. BYU 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 21, 2025 Today's Hurdle hints and answers for March 24, 2025 Much of what lies on the seafloor remains a mystery. NASA is fixing that. How to watch 'Wicked' at home: Here's where it's streaming March Madness 2025 livestream: How to watch NCAA basketball for free 'Split Fiction' is getting a movie adaptation Saracens vs. Harlequins 2024 livestream: How to watch Premiership Rugby for free Today's Hurdle hints and answers for March 21, 2025 More KFC, Taco Bell, and Pizza Hut locations will get AI Mississippi State vs. Baylor 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free Best Echo deal: Save $20 on Amazon Echo Show 5 NYT Strands hints, answers for March 23 Best Fitbit deal: Save $40 on the Charge 6 at Amazon Mexico vs. Panama 2025 livestream: Watch Concacaf Nations League for free NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for March 22: Tips to solve Connections #180 Best tablet deal: Save $45 on the Amazon Fire Max 11
2.208s , 8200.828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Women Who Have Tasted Swapping [Uncut]】,Warmth Information Network