- Meta extends ban on new political, social issue ads past Election Day.
- Policy originally introduced in 2020 to limit misinformation in critical voting periods.
What happened
Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has extended its pre-election ban on new ads covering political and social issues until later this week. The policy, which aims to reduce the risk of last-minute misinformation campaigns, was originally scheduled to lift by the end of Election Day. However, on Monday, Meta announced that the ad restriction would remain in place temporarily, with no confirmed end date yet.
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This extension affects new political and issue-related ads that hadn’t already served at least one impression by October 29, when the ban took effect. Meta first implemented this policy in 2020, following CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s assertion that “the best antidote to bad speech is more speech,” but he acknowledged that the timing around elections required additional safeguards. Meta’s goal is to prevent the spread of unverified claims that could sway opinions in the final hours before voting. This year, both pro-Biden and pro-Trump groups spent significant sums on Meta platforms, making the ad freeze a substantial development for campaigns.
Why this is important
Meta’s extension of its political ads ban underscores the growing role that tech companies play in election integrity. The policy, initially put in place during the contentious 2020 election cycle, is intended to curb misinformation, giving fact-checkers and journalists a window to review content before it spreads widely. Though ads that had already run are still viewable, any new political content is restricted until Meta lifts the ban later this week.
Google is implementing similar restrictions, albeit starting only after polls close, which highlights the contrasting approaches among tech giants regarding election-period content. As Meta and Google double down on policies that limit new political ads, it reflects broader concerns within the tech industry about transparency, misinformation, and their potential impact on democratic processes.