April 11, 2021
2 mins read

‘Facebook job ads biased against women’

Researchers at University of Southern California found that Facebook’s ad delivery system biased against women…reports Asian Lite News

The ad delivery system of Facebook is biased towards women, showing them different job listings than it shows to men, a new study has revealed.

Researchers at University of Southern California found that Facebook’s ad delivery system discriminates against women, reports The Verge.

The team of researchers bought ads on Facebook for delivery driver job listings that had similar qualification requirements but for different companies.

The findings showed that Facebook targeted the Instacart delivery job to more women and the Domino’s delivery job to more men.

According to the researchers, Instacart has more female drivers but Domino’s has more male drivers.

“Facebook’s ad delivery can result in skew of job ad delivery by gender beyond what can be legally justified by possible differences in qualifications,” the researchers wrote, “thus strengthening the previously raised arguments that Facebook’s ad delivery algorithms may be in violation of anti-discrimination laws.”

Facebook. (File Photo: IANS)
Also read:Gender inequalities on art of writing

In a similar experiment on Microsoft-owned LinkedIn, the researchers found that the professional networking platform showed the Domino’s listing to as many women as it showed the Instacart ad.

A Facbeek spokesperson said in a sttaement that their system takes into account “many signals to try and serve people ads they will be most interested in, but we understand the concerns raised in the report”.

“We’ve taken meaningful steps to address issues of discrimination in ads and have teams working on ads fairness today. We’re continuing to work closely with the civil rights community, regulators, and academics on these important matters,” the spokesperson was quoted as saying.

This is not the first time Facebook has faced allegations over gender bias in its algorithms.

In 2017, a joint investigation by US-based non-profit organisation ProPublica and The New York Times found companies like Verizon, Amazon, Goldman Sachs, Target and Facebook place recruitment ads limited to particular age groups.

Another ProPublica probe found that Facebook allowed housing advertisers to target audiences by race and exclude minorities, raising questions about whether the company is in compliance with federal fair housing rules that prohibit such discrimination.

Facebook, however, called it a “technical failure”.

Also read:61 lakh Indians hit by Facebook data leak

Previous Story

Power struggle intensifies in Iran

Next Story

‘Unlocking may cause 3rd Covid wave in UK’

Latest from -Top News

Ivory Coast tightens protest ban

Two-month ban on demonstrations deepens fears of repression as opposition leaders barred and hundreds detained ahead of October 25 vote…reports Asian Lite News Ivory Coast authorities have imposed a sweeping two-month ban

Huge crowds as Odinga’s body heads home

Chaos and grief mark final journey of opposition leader Raila Odinga as thousands gather in western Kenya for mourning ceremonies that have already left at least five dead this week Vast crowds

Africa Braces For Trade Shock  

End of US-Africa trade pact threatens thousands of jobs and exports as tariffs loom African manufacturers and workers are bracing for a major economic shock as the United States prepares to end

UK-China Embassy Row Escalates

The delay signals a growing diplomatic strain that could affect broader UK-China relations at a sensitive moment for trade, security, and geopolitical cooperation. Tensions between Britain and China have intensified after Beijing

Pakistan, Afghanistan Seek Calm

The Doha talks are seen as a crucial step in de-escalating hostilities, addressing security concerns, and preventing further civilian casualties along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. Afghanistan and Pakistan have agreed to an immediate
Go toTop

Don't Miss

UAE Gender Balance Council, Meta discuss cooperation

The UAE Gender Balance Council received Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating

SC slams Army for ‘discrimination’

Supreme Court directs Centre to consider granting permanent commission to