ProPublica, a non-profit newsroom known for its investigative journalism, published an article yesterday, written by Jeremy B Merrill, their news app developer, on their investigative project around Facebook. They collected over 100,000 targeted Facebook Ads to understand and report how political messaging works on Facebook. It was also meant to analyze how the system manipulates the public discourse.
Merrill states that they launched their Facebook Political Ad Collector project in fall 2017 which was joined by over 16,000 people. As a part of the project, all the participants were required to install a browser plug-in that would anonymously send the ads they see on browsing Facebook. As the data was getting collected, it was observed that the number of ads collected from Democrats and progressive groups was larger than from Republicans or conservative groups.
“We tried a number of things to make our ad collection more diverse: to start, we bought our own Facebook ads asking people across a range of states to install the ad collector. We also teamed up with Mozilla, maker of the Firefox web browser, for a special election-oriented project, in an attempt to reach a broader swath of users”, writes Merrill.
However, since the political ad collector was entirely anonymous, not much information could be gathered about the audience. Another issue was that the left-leaning groups made use of Facebook advertising more than the conservative groups.
To solve this issue, ProPublica partnered up with a research firm called YouGov. This was to create a panel of users ranging from a wide spectrum of demographic groups and political ideologies who would be okay with a new less-anonymous ad collector plug-in. A unique ID was assigned to these users that were tied back to the data about them such as demographics, political preference, race, and residence state, which was provided by YouGov. This partnership was funded by the Democracy Fund. YouGov was able to link the answers of the users to demographic questions such as age and partisanship to the ads received.
The process of collecting data from the users of the original and publicly available ad collector plug-in that did not participate in the YouGov survey was still the same. These users still remained anonymous to ProPublica. On the other hand, ads that were seen by the participants in the YouGov survey, with their demographic data stripped, became a part of ProPublica’s existing ads database.
After receiving a diverse sample of data regarding the Facebook political ads, ProPublica reached the following conclusions:
Merrill states that although they found out a way to determine how an ad is targeted, there are other complexities to Facebook’s systems which it can’t detect or understand. ProPublica is still looking out for answers to questions such as the impact of the algorithm used by Facebook to show ads to people who are most likely to click, the effect of some people seeing more expensive ads than others, how are cheap ads different from more expensive ones, and so on.
ProPublica is currently working on the Ad Collector project and will make future announcements regarding their further studies.
For more information, read the official ProPublica Post.
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