Media Expert Calls For The The Advertising Industry To ‘Cut Off The Air Supply To Fake News’

Attempts to reach mass audiences via digital automated ad placement that may support fake news sites, should be refrained from by the advertisers and the broader ad industry, a media professor has made this call.

“[Advertisers] have to cut off the air supply to fake news. They need to understand the signals of distrust and learn that they don’t want their brand over ‘digital urinals’. They’ve got to understand that quality matters,” Jeff Jarvis, a professor at the CUNY (The City University of New York) graduate school of journalism, told an audience at the Guardian’s Changing Media Summit in Londo.

“What programmatic advertising does, what individualized data and remarketing does, is cut the value of context and the value of placement. But that doesn’t mean you should cut out the value of quality and the value of trust. And we’ve got to figure out in the advertising industry how we do that,” he said.

While urging advertisers to have a more personal relationship with consumers, he said that a responsibility to tackle fake news also rests on the media, platforms such as Facebook and Google, the ad industry, PR practitioners and the public.

“The ad industry too has to reinvent itself and reinvent advertising. It has to move past reach to relationships. You have to understand how to have quality relationships with people, to know communities and to know and serve their needs and not just treat them as a mass to whom we are blasting messages.”

Citing the blue bar that appears on Guardian stories, platforms such as Facebook must do better at showing the sources of information appearing in people’s news feeds, Jarvis said.

Jarvis also asked Facebook’s EMEA director of media partnerships, Patrick Walker about how the social network is tackling fake news, during an interview of the later.

“We take it very seriously. It’s a much bigger issue: there are a number of different parts of society that have a role to play and I appreciate that people’s reliance on Facebook for news as well as other information has increased dramatically.

“We appreciate that there are concerns about the spread of false information… We are focused on pure fraud and things that are intended to deceive, or for financial gain,” Walker said.

To have people assess the accuracy of stories, Facebook is also working with fact checking organizations in North America, France and the Netherlands and has created tools for users to report news they suspect is fake.

“We as an organization are not in a position, nor should we be, where we are the arbiters of what is true and what is not true. You have all these different shades as well for parity, opinion et cetera and so news organizations such as Le Monde and AFP [Agence France-Presse] take a look at what is coming through this [reporting] tool and assess whether or not it is fake, and if they did see it as fake, it would then be marked within Facebook as disputed,” he added.

(Adapted from CNBC)



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