Facebook is taking more steps to address accusations that it enables advertisers to illegally discriminate by race.
The social network announced Tuesday that it would begin using its artificial intelligence tools to identify ads for housing, credit and jobs, then shut them down if they are targeted by "ethnic affinity" -- essentially Facebook's proxy for race.
SEE ALSO:Facebook sued over ads based on racial preferenceWhen Facebook recognizes that an advertiser is attempting to buy an ad in any of those categories, a window will now appear asking the buyer to confirm that they are following the company's discrimination rules.
Facebook is also tightening the language of its ad policy to make clear that advertisers should never discriminate around any of a number of personal attributes, including disability, gender identity and genetic condition.
"We heard concerns that discriminatory advertising can wrongfully deprive people of opportunities and experiences, particularly in the areas of housing, employment and credit, where certain groups historically have faced discrimination," a spokesperson wrote in a blog post announcing the changes Wednesday.
Facebook's ad discrimination problem first came to light with a ProPublicainvestigation last fall alleging that the platform enabled advertising that would be illegal under federal civil rights laws.
The company countered that its "ethnic affinity" tag -- which groups users by their interest in a certain race -- was different than actually identifying users by ethnicity.
Nevertheless, the company made some bare-minimum changes to its policy the following week and announced that it would look into more tools to address the problem. Facebook claims its solution was shaped by discussions with "policymakers and civil rights leaders" it has since had.
TopicsFacebook
(责任编辑:休閑)
J.K. Rowling makes 'Harry Potter' joke about Olympics event
MacBook Pro might become a lot more 'pro' this year, report claims
YouTube to premiere Gigi Gorgeous documentary at Sundance Film Festival
Dog elected for third term as mayor of Minnesota town
See the super collection of the Guinness World Record holder who owns 1,518 Superman items
Twitter will now loop all videos under 6.5 seconds after Vine closes
Trump didn't drain the swamp, he created these swamp monsters
Xiaomi accused of copying again, this time by Jawbone
Trump extended family member spotted at Women's March on Washington
Hiddleswift finally followed each other on Instagram after 3 excruciating days
16 great ideas we have for Nintendo's 'The Legend of Zelda: Breath Of The Wild'