Telecoms giant
Vodafone has announced new rules to block its advertising appearing on websites
featuring hate speech or 'fake news'.
It said it had
updated its content controls to ensure its global ads do not appear alongside "offensive content". The group
added these controls will be monitored by Google, Facebook and its ad agency
WPP.
The moves comes
amid the intense debate about advertising from large companies appearing alongside objectionable online material.
The group said the
measure will mean its ads will not appear alongside material that is
"deliberately intended to degrade women or vulnerable minorities".
It
added that its messages will also not appear besides content "presented as
fact-based news (as opposed to satire or opinion) that has no credible primary
source (or relies on fraudulent attribution to a primary source) with what a
reasonable person would conclude is the deliberate intention to mislead."
The
telecoms group, which has operations in 26 countries and has almost 516 million
customers, said the changes will come into effect immediate effect.
Vodafone
chief executive Vittorio Colao said: "Hate speech and fake news threaten
to undermine the principles of respect and trust that bind communities
together.
"Vodafone has
a strong commitment to diversity and inclusion; we also greatly value the
integrity of the democratic processes and institutions that are often the
targets of purveyors of fake news. We will not tolerate our brand being
associated with this kind of abusive and damaging content."
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