City
Epaper

Zuckerberg refuses to bow down, expects advertisers to return 'soon'

By IANS | Updated: July 2, 2020 21:55 IST

San Francisco, July 2 As hundreds of companies halt advertising on Facebook and Instagram, Its CEO Mark Zuckerberg ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 2 As hundreds of companies halt advertising on Facebook and Instagram, Its CEO Mark Zuckerberg is confident the brands would soon return on the platform.

According to a report in The Information, Zuckerberg told employees he was reluctant to bow to the threats of a growing ad boycott, saying "my guess is that all these advertisers will be back on the platform soon enough."

"We're not gonna change our policies or approach on anything because of a threat to a small percent of our revenue, or to any percent of our revenue," he apparently told the employees, according to the report on Wednesday.

Of the 25 largest spenders on Facebook ads, only three companies — Microsoft, Starbucks and Pfizer have confirmed pause ads on Facebook.

As Facebook ad boycott by more than 400 brands officially began on Wednesday, the social networking giant said it was getting better at removing harmful content and that the platform does not in any way profit from hate speech.

Writing an open letter to address concerns of advertisers, Nick Clegg, Facebook's Vice President of Global Affairs and Communications on Wednesday said that "platforms like Facebook hold up a mirror to society".

"I want to be unambiguous: Facebook does not profit from hate," said Clegg, who is a former Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

The call to boycott ads on Facebook started after the social networking giant decided to allow controversial posts by US President Donald Trump to stay up.

Facebook said that when it finds hateful posts on Facebook and Instagram, it takes a zero tolerance approach and removes them.

Facebook saw its market cap eroded in billions as more big brands boycotted its platform against the unchecked spread of hateful and disinformation on its platforms.

American food company Chobani, drug maker Pfizer and software major SAP were among the latest brands pulling who joined Coca Cola, adidas, cleaning supply firm Clorox, Conagra (the maker of Slim Jim, Duncan Hines and Pam), fast food chain Denny's, Ford and Starbucks to pull their ads from the platform.

Facebook's digital advertising accounted for more than 98 per cent of the company's nearly $70 billion in revenue last year.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: InstagramUnited KingdomMark ZuckerbergSan FranciscoFacebookNick CleggSan francisco bayTwitter and instagramInstagram and twitterFacebook-owned instagram
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSan Francisco Earthquake: 4.3 Magnitude Tremor Jolts Bay Area at 3 AM, No Tsunami Threat

Social ViralTicket Collector Sends Instagram Request to Female Passenger, Netizens Outraged

CricketRohit Sharma Shares Fun Moment With Daughter Samaira Playing ‘Don’t Spill the Water’ at Home (VIDEO)

NationalInstagram Affair Turns Fatal in UP: Lover Strangles Woman, Dumps Body in Mainpuri; Accused Arrested

TechnologyInstagram Down: Users Unable to Upload Stories as Meta-Owned App Suffers Outage

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyBSE resolved 190 investors’ complaints during September

TechnologyMorgan Stanley turns bullish on India, bets on financials, consumer plays, industrials

TechnologyFestive stocking, tax relief and GST cuts to drive auto demand in H2FY26; September sales show mixed trend

TechnologyCCPA slaps Rs 5 lakh fine on Drishti IAS for misleading UPSC 2022 result ads

Technology5G handsets now comprise 87 pc of smartphone shipments in India