Earlier this month, a German court ruled that the countryâs nationalist far-right party, Alternative for Germany (AfD), was potentially âextremistâ and could warrant surveillance by the countryâs intelligence apparatus.
Campaign ads placed by AfD have been allowed to appear on Facebook and Instagram anyway, according to a new report from the nonprofit advocacy organization EkÅ shared exclusively with WIRED. Researchers found 23 ads that accrued 472,000 views from the party on Facebook and Instagram that appear to violate Metaâs own policies around hate speech.
The ads push the narrative that immigrants are dangerous and a burden on the German state ahead of the European Unionâs elections in June.
One ad placed by AfD politician Gereon Bollman asserts that Germany has seen âan explosion of sexual violenceâ since 2015, specifically blaming immigrants from Turkey, Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq. The ad was seen by between 10,000 and 15,000 people in just four days, between March 16 and 20, 2024. Another ad, which had over 60,000 views, features a man of color lying in a hammock. Overlaid text reads, âAfD reveals: 686,000 illegal foreigners live at our expense!â
EkÅ was also able to identify at least three ads that appear to have used generative AI to manipulate images, though only one was run after Meta put its manipulated media policy into place. One shows a white woman with visible injuries, with accompanying text saying âthe connection between migration and crime has been denied for years.â
âMeta, and indeed other companies, have very limited ability to detect third party tools that generate AI imagery,â says Vicky Wyatt, senior campaign director at EkÅ. âWhen extremist parties use those tools with their ads, they can create incredibly emotive imagery that can really move people. So it’s incredibly worrying.â
In its submission to the European Commission’s consultation on election guidelines, obtained by a freedom of information request made by EkÅ, Meta says âit is not yet possible for providers to identify all AI-generated content, particularly when actors take steps to seek to avoid detection, including by removing invisible markers.â
Metaâs own policies prohibit ads that âclaim people are threats to the safety, health, or survival of others based on their personal characteristicsâ and ads that âinclude generalizations that state inferiority, other statements of inferiority, expressions of contempt, expressions of dismissal, expressions of disgust, or cursing based on immigration status.â
âWe do not allow hate speech on our platforms and have Community Standards that apply to all content â including ads,â says Meta spokesperson Daniel Roberts. âOur ads review process has several layers of analysis and detection, both before and after an ad goes live, and this system is one of many we have in place to protect European elections.â Roberts told WIRED the company plans to review the ads flagged by EkÅ but didnât respond to questions about whether the German courtâs designation of the AfD as potentially extremist would invite further scrutiny from Meta.
Targeted ads, says Wyatt, can be powerful because extremist groups can more effectively target people that might sympathize with their views and âuse Metaâs ads library to reach them.â Wyatt also says this allows the group to test which messages are more likely to resonate with voters.
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