Technology
Facebook criticized by Free Press for empty PR response to ad boycott
In the face of mounting advertiser pressure over its handling of hate speech, Mark Zuckerberg today met with the leaders of the NAACP, the Anti-Defamation League, the Free Press, and the Color Of Change. It did not go well.
With an ever-increasing number of business pulling advertising dollars from Facebook as part the #StopHateForProfit boycott, the social media behemoth’s COO, Sheryl Sandberg, announced Tuesday the “need to take action.” Unfortunately, according to the group behind the campaign that has grown to encompass massive brands like Unilever and Verizon, that action consisted of a meaningless “PR exercise” that resulted in “no commitment” from the Zuckerberg-helmed company.
So claims a scathing blog post published by Free Press following the meeting. According to Free Press Co-CEO Jessica J. González, Facebook — and by extension Zuckerberg and Sandberg — was all talk and no action.
“Facebook approached our meeting today like it was nothing more than a PR exercise,” wrote González. “But boycott coalition leaders and advertisers understand that the #StopHateForProfit effort is about the lives, safety and freedom of our communities.”
.@DerrickNAACP says @Facebook is more interested in having dialogue than generating outcomes. They allow white supremacist groups and hate groups to gather and recruit. We should expect more from a company like Facebook. #StopHateForProfit
— Free Press (@freepress) July 7, 2020
At issue is Facebook’s continued profiting off of white supremacy. As BuzzFeed News reported last week, Facebook has been for months taking money to run ads promoting racism and civil war.
SEE ALSO: Here are the (many) companies pulling their ads from Facebook
We reached out to Facebook for a response to Free Press’ claims, but received no immediate response. We’d say maybe the company is too busy taking action to respond, but from all outward appearances that doesn’t appear to be true.
-
Business7 days ago
API startup Noname Security nears $500M deal to sell itself to Akamai
-
Entertainment6 days ago
NASA discovered bacteria that wouldn’t die. Now it’s boosting sunscreen.
-
Entertainment7 days ago
How to watch ‘Argylle’: When and where is it streaming?
-
Business6 days ago
Tesla drops prices, Meta confirms Llama 3 release, and Apple allows emulators in the App Store
-
Business5 days ago
TechCrunch Mobility: Cruise robotaxis return and Ford’s BlueCruise comes under scrutiny
-
Entertainment5 days ago
‘The Sympathizer’ review: Park Chan-wook’s Vietnam War spy thriller is TV magic
-
Business4 days ago
Tesla layoffs hit high performers, some departments slashed, sources say
-
Business4 days ago
Meta to close Threads in Turkey to comply with injunction prohibiting data-sharing with Instagram