Evan Spiegel: Snapchat fact-checks all political ads

Subscribers:
4,200
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLKh3AwyPSM



Duration: 2:37
28 views
0


Reported today on TechSpot

For the full article visit: http://bit.ly/2XyaYjQ

Evan Spiegel: Snapchat fact-checks all political ads

Perhaps Facebook will some day decide to copy this feature

In brief: Snapchat's advertising business isn't the biggest among social giants, but the company has decided the only way it will allow political ads inside the app is to be the "arbiter of truth" that Facebook refuses to be.

As we get closer to the 2020 election, social giants are facing increased scrutiny over the way they moderate their platforms. For example, everyone is worried about the easy ways Facebook can be weaponized to influence the public towards a certain political outcome by almost anyone willing to pay for it. And former executives seem to confirm that some companies simply can't stay out of politics.

Snap isn't nearly as big as Facebook, but it turns out it has implemented at least one feature the latter has yet to copy: fact-checking political ads.

During an interview with CNBC, CEO Evan Spiegel said all advertising is subject to the same review process. He noted the company does want to "create a place for political ads on our platform, especially because we reach so many young people and first-time voters we want them to be able to engage with the political conversation, but we don't allow things like misinformation to appear in that advertising."

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg doesn't seem to agree with that view, and has been trying to portray his company as the champion of "free speech." He defends the social giant's insistence on letting politicians lie in ads by using China as a boogeyman that establishes a different kind of internet model in its country, one based around censorship and un-American values.

Twitter will start blocking all political ads globally starti




Other Videos By Colin Boyd SEO


2019-11-19In the ghost kitchen race, GV-backed Kitchen United aims to kill with kindness; here’s its playbook
2019-11-19Hackers can use a WhatsApp flaw in the way it handles video to take control of your phone
2019-11-19Uber is at fault for fatal self-driving crash, but it’s not alone
2019-11-19The Morning Show’s executive producers felt like early reviews were an ‘attack on Apple’
2019-11-19Slack stock falls after Microsoft boasts 20 million Teams users
2019-11-19Luna is a new kind of space company helping biotech find its footing in microgravity
2019-11-19Facebook’s latest experiment is a meme creation app, Whale
2019-11-19Karma’s new electric hinge-winged hypercar concept goes 0 to 60 mph in 1.9 seconds
2019-11-19Karma Automotive unveils its faster next act, the Revero GTS
2019-11-19Build trust with remote users to get qualitative feedback
2019-11-19Evan Spiegel: Snapchat fact-checks all political ads
2019-11-19The world's largest chip finds a home inside the world's fastest AI computer
2019-11-19Macy’s said hackers stole customer credit cards — again
2019-11-19Robotics startup Picnic, known for its automated pizza assembly system, raises $5 million
2019-11-19Here’s the first look inside Orbex’s Scotland rocket factory
2019-11-19Eden office management platform raises $25 million Series B
2019-11-19Four must-haves for the Tesla ‘Cybertruck’ all-electric pickup truck
2019-11-19The iRobot Roomba s9+ and Braava m6 are the robots you should trust to clean your house well
2019-11-19Xiaomi integrates earthquake alert system into MIUI OS, unveils Xiao AI 3.0 digital assistant
2019-11-19LA-based Maslo pivots to professional services, launching an AI product for executive coaching
2019-11-19India says law permits agencies to snoop on citizen’s devices