
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) β Google is making it harder for political advertisers to target specific types of people.
The company said that as of January, advertisers will only be able to target U.S. political ads based on broad categories such as gender, age and postal code. Currently, ads can be tailored for more specific groups β for instance, using information gleaned from public voter logs, such as political affiliation.
The change will take effect in the UK in the next week, before the general election, and in the European Union before the end of 2019. It will apply everywhere else in early January.
Google reiterated that ads making false claims are prohibited, adding that so-called deepfakes β realistic but false video clips β are not allowed. Neither are βdemonstrably falseβ claims that could affect voter trust in an election.
But in a blog post announcing the news, Google Ads vice president Scott Spencer noted that political dialogue is important and βno one can sensibly adjudicate every political claim, counterclaim and insinuation.β
βSo we expect that the number of political ads on which we take action will be very limited β but we will continue to do so for clear violations,β he wrote.
Like all Google ads, political advertisers can also use the broader practice of βcontextual targeting,β which involves placing ads about, say, climate change on articles about the environment.
The company is also requiring advertiser verification for a broader range of political messages. Previously, only ads mentioning candidates or officeholders for federal positions required verification. Now that will also include ads touching on state officials and candidates as well as ballot measures.
The move follows Twitterβs ban on political ads, which goes into effect on Friday.
Twitter also placed restrictions on ads related to social causes such as climate change or abortion.
In these instances, advertisers wonβt be able to target those ads down to a userβs ZIP code or use political categories such as βconservativeβ or βliberal.β Rather, targeting must be kept broad, based on a userβs state or province, for instance.
Facebook has not made sweeping changes to any of its ads policies, but thrust the issue into public discussion this fall when it confirmed it would not remove false or misleading ads by politicians.
Critics have harshly condemned Facebookβs decision. Twitter also faced a backlash from those who found its ban too far-reaching.
Google has taken a more middling stance, but itβs unlikely to please everyone. Earlier Wednesday, President Donald Trumpβs campaign staff took issue with reports that Facebook might consider limiting its targeting practices.
βFacebook wants to take important tools away from us for 2020,β the campaign tweeted from its official account. βTools that help us reach more great Americans & lift voices the media & big tech choose to ignore!β
Even Googleβs limited targeting could receive backlash.
Critics and civil rights groups have said targeting specific zip codes or other small geographic zones can allow advertisers to discriminate or sway elections.
The expansion to Googleβs verification process will take effect December 3.