Google bans abortion poll ads in Ireland
- Published
Google will ban all advertisements relating to Republic of Ireland's forthcoming referendum on abortion, which takes place on 25 May.
On Tuesday, Facebook started to block ads relating to the referendum that did not originate from advertisers inside Ireland.
However, Google said all ads relating to the vote would be blocked.
Google's ads appear on millions of websites, including its video-sharing platform YouTube.
"Following our update around election integrity efforts globally, we have decided to pause all ads related to the Irish referendum on the Eighth Amendment," the company said in a statement.
Voters will decide whether to repeal the Eighth Amendment to the Republic of Ireland's constitution, which states "the right to life of the unborn".
At present, the country has a near-total ban on abortion, with terminations very rarely allowed.
In April, Irish data protection commissioner Helen Dixon said it was possible, external that foreign organisations could try to sway the referendum.
Ireland's electoral laws ban foreign organisations from funding campaign groups in the country. However, social media sites and search engines are not prohibited from carrying foreign-funded advertisements.
Google said ads relating to the vote would be "paused" from 10 May.
Analysis
by Emma Vardy, Ireland correspondent
There has been mounting pressure on social media companies for greater transparency, following revelations over who is behind political advertising campaigns and how they target us.
Claims that Cambridge Analytica used data gathered from millions of Facebook profiles, and that Russia-backed advertising influenced the US presidential election, have led to fears that political campaigning on social media could be a threat to democracy.
In Ireland, there have already been complaints from local groups that foreign campaigners with big budgets were trying to sway the vote.
Whether or not foreign entities really do have the power to unduly influence election results is unclear.
But recent scandals have shown that allowing political advertising on social media to go unchecked risks undermining confidence in the result and can leave the public feeling manipulated.
This latest move from Google and Facebook shows social media companies are now prepared to play a much more proactive role.
- Published8 May 2018