Categories: Social Media

Facebook in trouble over targeted advertising platform in Europe, hits back at “sensational” media coverage

Facebook may soon be forced by the European Commission to explicitly ask permission from its users in Europe to display targeted advertising, that’s according to The Telegraph.

The European Commission plans to introduce a new Directive in January that will ban Facebook from showing targeted advertisements in Europe unless specifically permitted by users of the social network. The Directive may see Facebook introduce a Google-style opt-out feature from targeted advertising.

Vice-president of the European Commission Viviane Reding wants social media sites to be “more transparent about how they operate” and commented that site “users must know what data is collected and further processed for what purposes”.

Facebook users’ willingness to share intricate details about their lives, interests and hobbies, and of course the social graph, places Facebook in a great position to serve highly targeted ads.

Advertisers can target specific groups of users defined by a myriad of parameters, including location to city-level accuracy, by age, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, level of education, by workplace, and through a long list of activity and hobby interests like cooking, gardening, politics, music, films, sport, and even those with upcoming birthdays, to name but a few – and this concerns the European Commission.

Facebook has re-acted to what it calls “sensational” journalism by The Telegraph who initially reported on the matter using terminology like ‘eavesdrop’ and ‘harvest’, referring to the collection of users’ data, which Facebook state is not the case.

In a written response to enquiries made by Read Write Web to that specific article, Facebook state that they “do not use tracking technology to serve adverts” and that advertisers are only provided with “anonymised and aggregated information for the purpose of targeting ads”.

Facebook even states that users have already consented to receiving targeted advertising by agreeing to Facebook’s 4,000 word terms of service before joining the network.

Facebook’s privacy issues are constantly under scrutiny from the European Union, including an EU regulatory investigation into Facebook’s facial recognition system which commenced in June of this year.

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

Recent Posts

Reality intelligence startup Track3D raises $10M to tackle construction delays

Construction is one of the world’s most complex industries to manage. Projects run late, costs…

1 day ago

UK to force digital ID, Blair Institute claims 62% of Brits favor digital identity

Illegal immigration is the Trojan Horse of choice to deliver mandatory digital ID: perspective Using…

1 day ago

97% of CIOs, CTOs concerned about unethical use of AI at companies: Report

Since the launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in late 2022, use of artificial intelligence (AI) has…

2 days ago

We can’t eat it, but AI will feed the world

Since its massification in the early 2020s, AI has been slowly integrated into sectors as…

1 week ago

To monitor disinformation Von der Leyen urges European Democracy Shield, Center for Democratic Resilience

The EU, UN, WEF, and G20 all call on stakeholders to mitigate the harmful effects…

1 week ago

Trump Takes Aim at Remote Work—Is He the Movement’s Top Adversary?

Back in 2018, I wrote a story, To Kill an Outsourcing Bird. For my younger readers,…

1 week ago