---
abstract: |
  Micro-targeting could have potentially damaging results in the context
  of political advertising
author:
- P.J. George
- Pranesh Prakash
- Kiran Chandra
authors:
- name: P.J. George
- name: Pranesh Prakash
- name: Kiran Chandra
categories:
- Freedom of expression
citation:
  abstract: Micro-targeting could have potentially damaging results in
    the context of political advertising
  accessed: 2020-10-15
  author: P.J. George
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2019
      - 11
      - 8
    iso-8601: 2019-11-08
    literal: 2019-11-08
    raw: 2019-11-08
  citation-key: georgeShouldOnline2019a
  container-title: The Hindu
  ISSN: 0971-751X
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2019
      - 11
      - 8
    iso-8601: 2019-11-08
    literal: 2019-11-08
    raw: 2019-11-08
  language: en-IN
  section: Comment
  source: www.thehindu.com
  title: Should online political advertising be regulated?
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/should-online-political-advertising-be-regulated/article29912107.ece"
comments:
  hypothesis:
    theme: clean
date: 2019-11-08
engines:
- path: /opt/quarto/share/extension-subtrees/julia-engine/\_extensions/julia-engine/julia-engine.js
keywords:
- Facebook
- advertising
- privacy
- targetted ads
- disinformation
license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/should-online-political-advertising-be-regulated/article29912107.ece"
publication: The Hindu
title: Should online political advertising be regulated?
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# Should online political advertising be regulated?

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Micro-targeting could have potentially damaging results in the context
of political advertising

*On October 31, Twitter announced that it will no longer carry political
advertisements as the power of Internet advertising "brings significant
risks to politics, where it can be used to influence votes". On the
other hand, Facebook has said it will not fact-check political
advertisements as it does not want to stifle free speech. In a
conversation moderated by P.J. George, Pranesh Prakash (board member,
The Centre for Internet and Society) and Kiran Chandra (General
Secretary, Free Software Movement of India) discuss how platforms and
constitutional authorities can deal with the challenges posed by online
political advertising to democracies.* Edited excerpts:

> **We have always had political advertising. What is it that makes
> online political advertisements different or maybe even problematic?**

Pranesh Prakash: There are two things that make online political
advertising different. One is targeting. Online advertising allows,
especially on social networks, for a kind of targeting that wasn't
possible at the same level before. Earlier, if you wanted to target a
particular segment of people for your political messaging, you could
find out what kind of magazines they subscribe to and put fliers in
those magazines. But you couldn't engage in personalised targeting based
on multiple attributes that is possible through platforms like Facebook
and Twitter. The second is the invisibility of this kind of advertising.
If there's a billboard in the real world, everyone gets to see it.
However, if there's targeted advertising on a social media platform, not
everyone gets to know of it.

Kiran Chandra: App-based organisations have designed advertisement
models to specifically allow targeting. Facebook, for instance, allowed
you to choose a person from a particular caste and also from a
particular class in the same caste. If somebody wants to look at an
advertisement for an Audi, they can go to one class of newspapers or
look at billboards in some localities; the very existence of the product
is not opaque to society. But targeted advertising makes it possible for
two people connected to the Internet from the same source, using the
same equipment, studying in the same school or college, working in the
same workplace, and living in the same habitat to get two different
advertisements. And micro-targeting has got potentially damaging results
in the context of political advertising, particularly for elections.
These platforms make it possible to go from manufacturing consent to
manipulating consent. A person is continuously fed with information to
vote for a particular party.

> **Twitter said it will no longer carry political advertisements,
> considering the repercussions seen in the U.S. in the past elections.
> On the contrary, Facebook says political advertisements are necessary
> and that people should see if their politicians are lying. How
> culpable is a platform in the case of a problematic online political
> advertisement?**

KC: Platforms, particularly Facebook, have been washing their hands of
the issue saying they are only intermediaries providing space; that the
content is being generated by the people to be consumed by the people,
and they have no role to play. But this is false. If you look at the
complete business model of Facebook, Google, or any of the platforms,
they clearly provide micro-targeting, or allow people to be manipulated
for a particular purpose. So, these platforms can't just wash their
hands of the issue. In the Maharashtra election, you saw a lot of
advertisements coming out which are untraceable. How can this happen
without the platform itself allowing for such a possibility? The
Election Commission (EC) needs to step in on all these issues. These
corporations need to be very transparent in the context of elections.
They need to bring out all the ways in which advertisements are
displayed and also the money associated with it.

When somebody publishes it \[an ad\] on a Facebook wall, it is as good
as publishing it in a newspaper. So, all the legislation that apply now
for reasonable restrictions and freedom of speech and the freedom of
press also apply to these platforms. These platforms are culpable when
the very intent of their business model allows such subversion of the
democratic process. They need to be brought in line to ensure that
Indian democracy is safe.

PP: I completely disagree with Kiran on a number of points. For
instance, those who are running a platform shouldn't automatically be
liable for what people are seeing on those platforms. The people who are
actually saying things should be liable, not necessarily those who are
carrying it without knowing what they're carrying most of the time.
Kiran also mentioned manipulation. The job of all advertising is to
manipulate. The job of newspapers is to manipulate public opinion. And
there's always money associated with this. Newspapers carry
advertisements as well. You don't necessarily know who has paid for each
ad in the newspaper. What online platforms are able to provide is
actually greater transparency in this regard, at least based on what
Facebook is attempting to do with its ad library. Calling this
manipulation doesn't quite work. Because then you have to specify why
certain categories of things you think of as manipulating, while other
categories you think of as influencing.

Second, as far as I know, Facebook does not ask for your caste. Nor does
it actually allow advertisers to use caste as a category for
advertising. To address the larger question of whether to carry
political advertisements or not, I don't think there are simple answers.
For instance, in different jurisdictions there are different rules as to
whether different kinds of media are allowed to carry political
advertisements or not. In the U.S., all broadcasters are required by law
not to censor on the basis of the content of political advertising.
Which means that broadcasters in the U.S. cannot say to a candidate,
'this advertisement that you've sent to us contains a lie and we're not
going to associate ourselves with the lie and we're not going to carry
it'. Now, when a platform like Facebook says that it will voluntarily
adopt a similar standard as applies to broadcast organisations by law,
all hell breaks loose. And again, there might be good reasons for it.
But to say that political advertising should not contain lies, and hence
should be censored, is not a viable opinion across the board.

KC: I would like to clarify one thing here. There is a clear distinction
between Facebook asking your caste and Facebook allowing you to
micro-target people based on their caste and class. In 2016, I created
an advertisement with a tag called Brahmin bags and it allowed inclusion
and exclusion based on caste and economic status. And now, after this
had been made an issue for the last three years, Facebook says that
advertisers can select topics that are specific to a particular caste.
For instance, Dalit topics, Iyengar topics, etc. So Facebook, in its
design, allows such kind of sensitivities to be used for
micro-targeting. And one should not confuse general advertising with
political advertising. If the advertisement is just about manipulating
for buying a particular product, that has something to do with the
business houses; even if one agrees with it or not. But when you speak
about political advertising, when people come to participate and engage
in a democratic process, the EC and The Representation of the People Act
(RPA) mandate that people should be allowed to take a very clear stand,
to look at what has happened in the last five years, and decide how to
vote, freely and fairly. That is why the RPA clearly lists a certain set
of things for free and fair elections, where even the use of money and
manipulation should not be allowed to happen. Yes, the U.S. has a
different context. American democracy is different from Indian
democracy. We have got our own statute. This methodology in which these
platforms have got their business models and are engaging deeply in
subverting the Indian democratic process is a serious cause of concern.
The EC should come up with new methodologies, if the existing ones are
not sufficient.

> **Can you elaborate on how the EC can play a role in this?**

KC: We brought these issues to the notice of the EC prior to the 2019
general election. The EC said it does not have enough manpower to deal
with this situation for now. The EC does not have power over the police
or the administration; but once the elections are on, it has the
capability to take in different departments and ensure that such
subversion of the democratic process does not happen. A fundamental
problem with the EC's method is that it said it was in discussion with
the digital platforms to make more people vote in the election. And that
itself is problematic. How is it going to be done? The EC should make
public the way in which this advertising is being conducted, the money
associated with it, and the people who are being reached with it. For
instance, if we look at TV channels for ads during primetime, there is a
mechanism, like TRP ratings, which allows them to understand and
evaluate the target sections. If you look at the Maharashtra election,
the advertiser itself is not known. Have people been sent communal
messages? Have people been targeted based on caste, which can disqualify
the contestant? The EC should reach out to the Government of India and
look at the departments that are capable of handling this. If they don't
exist, it should start creating infrastructure that will be able to look
into all these aspects. Also, concrete guidelines should be given to
these digital platforms. And whatever comes in contradiction, or comes
in the way of implementing the RPA, the EC should stop the platforms
from doing it.

PP: For me, it's not clear to what extent I would draw a distinction
between advertising and other things which the EC has not been able to
curtail, such as paid news and political ownership of media, which allow
for very skewed viewpoints to be expressed. But insofar as what can be
done about online platforms --- and again, only online platforms which
deal in advertising --- the biggest source of online political messaging
in India is WhatsApp. So, excluding the elephant in the room from this
discussion, what the EC could do is bring the largest platforms together
to get transparency commitments from them. Then this information needs
to be made publicly available, so that the invisibility which happens
with targeting gets countered. The second thing... Given that elections
are geographical in nature in India, if you want to engage in
advertising, you have to do it on the basis of geography, not on the
basis of specific kinds of attributes of a person. And let's also be
aware that most of these attributes or guesses about people that these
platforms are making are based on what people post on social media
platforms, what they click. So, the one thing that can be done on a
global level is transparency and restrictions on various targeting but
anything else such as limitations on, say, lying in political
advertising, I don't think that can or should be sold on a global level.
It's dependent far too much on each country and their models and how
they interpret freedom of expression.

*Pranesh Prakash is a member of the Board of the Centre for Internet and
Society; Kiran Chandra is General Secretary of the Free Software
Movement of India*
