“We are deeply concerned that our
ads may have appeared alongside YouTube content promoting terrorism and hate,”
AT&T said in a statement Wednesday.
AT&T is the latest high-profile company to pull its advertising from YouTube and Google as the search and advertising giant struggles to quell a controversy over online hate speech and its marketing platforms. Verizon has also suspended some of its Google advertising.
“We are deeply concerned that our ads may
have appeared alongside YouTube content promoting terrorism and hate,” a
spokeswoman for AT&T said in a statement to BuzzFeed News Wednesday. “Until
Google can ensure this won’t happen again, we are removing our ads from
Google’s non-search platforms.”
In a statement to BuzzFeed News Verizon
said: “Once we were notified that our ads were appearing on non-sanctioned
websites, we took immediate action to suspend this type of ad placement and
launched an investigation.”
Several other brands including McDonald’s,
HSBC, and L’Oreal, as well as the British government, have also recently pulled
advertising from YouTube over concerns that the company is not doing enough to
protect them from having their marketing campaigns tied to abusive and
extremist content online.
The sudden departure of advertising
partners, first reported by the Times,
followed an investigation that
Google had failed to remove hateful material from YouTube, in what appeared to
be a breach of its own guidelines.
Earlier this week Matt Brittin, the head
of Google’s operations for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, issued an
apology for the company’s apparent mishandling of ad placements. “I would like
to apologize to our partners and advertisers who might have been affected by their
ads appearing on controversial content,” he said. We take our responsibilities
to these industry issues very seriously.”
On Tuesday, Philipp Schindler, Google’s
chief business officer said the company would soon offer businesses tools to better control where
and when their ads appear, and to prevent their marketing campaigns from being
displayed alongside “potentially objectionable” and “higher risk” content.
In a statement concerning AT&T’s
move, a Google spokesperson told BuzzFeed News: “We don’t comment on individual
customers but as announced, we’ve begun an extensive review of our advertising
policies and have made a public commitment to put in place changes that give
brands more control over where their ads appear. We’re also raising the bar for
our ads policies to further safeguard our advertisers’ brands.”
Source from Buzzfeed...
Source from Buzzfeed...
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