Signal says it was only trying to make ads that showed Instagram users what data of theirs is used to target ads to them.
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Facebook rejected ads that Signal tried to buy on Instagram that sought to highlight the types of data it collects from users, the encrypted messaging service said in a blog post Tuesday.
In a blog post titled The Instagram ads Facebook won’t show you, Signal said it created a “multi-variant targeted ad” that would “show you the personal data that Facebook collects about you and sells access to.”
The proposed ads would have informed Instagram users that “You got this ad because you’re a K-pop-loving chemical engineer. This ad used your location to see you’re in Berlin. And you have a new baby. And you just moved. And you’re really feeling those pregnancy exercises lately,” according to screenshots shared by Signal.
“The ad would simply display some of the information collected about the viewer which the advertising platform uses. Facebook was not into that idea,” Signal wrote, sharing another screenshot that showed its Instagram ad account had been disabled.
“Being transparent about how ads use people’s data is apparently enough to get banned; in Facebook’s world, the only acceptable usage is to hide what you’re doing from your audience,” the company wrote in its post.
Facebook taps users’ personal information to precisely target ads to its users — a business that provided nearly all its $85.9 billion last year. But Facebook’s data collection practices have come under scrutiny following a controversy involving Cambridge Analytica, a digital consultancy with ties to the Trump presidential campaign that improperly obtained data on up to 87 million Facebook users without their permission.
Facebook didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment but in a statement to The Information dismissed the episode as a “stunt” on Signal’s part.
“This is a stunt by Signal, who never even tried to actually run these ads — and we didn’t shut down their ad account for trying to do so,” Facebook told the news outlet.
Signal, which uses end-to-end encryption, has a history of fighting any entity that asks for user data. It was one of several encrypted-messaging apps that saw a massive surge in new users in January after tech mogul Elon Musk urged his audience to drop Facebook-owned WhatsApp over privacy policy changes that gave it permission to see communications between users and businesses within the app for marketing or Facebook advertising.