Google, YouTube pull 300 plus Donald Trump ads as US president poll nears

Google pulls down political ads. (Photo: iStock)


Google and its video-sharing platform YouTube has pulled over 300 advertisements promoting US President Donald Trump, claiming they were violating the companies’ policies. The campaign videos, notably, ran over the summer.

The decision comes at a time when advertisements on social media have become a growing concern as the 2020 US presidential election approaches and tech giants are under fire over political ads.

On the same lines, social media website Twitter too has even decided to ban all kinds of political ads on its platform. It recently released new policies on political ads.

Over 300 video ads for President Trump were taken down, mostly over the summer, for violating the company policy. Compared to the TV, online ads can spread lies at an alarming rate — bolstered by machine-learning algorithms that can identify target audiences at enormous speed and scale, CBS News reported on Monday.

As per the report, even though the ads were taken down, the archive does not detail what policy was violated. It was not clear if it was a copyright violation, a lie or extreme inaccuracy.

The ads determined to be offending are not available to be screened. We found very little transparency in the transparency report, the report added. It is pertinent to note that political ads on social media do not adhere to different rules than political ads on TV.

The political ads on social media fall under specific scrutiny because of their unique ability to disseminate bad information and their inability to properly tackle them.

Meanwhile, earlier in November, Google announced new limits on political advertisers globally from micro-targeting users via election ads based on their political affiliation.

The main formats Google offers political advertisers are Search ads, YouTube ads and display ads. Under the new rules, political advertisers may target their ads only down to the postal code level.

(With input from agencies)