What's driving the Facebook ad boycott?

And what, exactly, do advertisers want to see changed?

Mark Zuckerberg.
(Image credit: GERARD JULIEN/AFP via Getty Images)

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Facebook is urgently trying to contain the damage from an ad boycott that "numbers more than 300 advertisers," said Tiffany Hsu and Mike Isaac at The New York Times. The boycott, which demands that Facebook curb hate speech on its platforms, was started by civil rights organizations and other advocacy groups after Facebook refused to take down inflammatory posts from President Trump, including one that warned, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts." Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg initially "struck a defiant tone," insisting that he would not put curbs on speech. But as the boycott has snowballed, Facebook has "tried to reframe the issue of hate speech as an industrywide problem," telling advertisers that if they cut ads on Facebook they should include Twitter and YouTube too. Now many of the world's biggest advertisers — Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Unilever, and others — have stopped ads across social media.

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