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Signal tried an ad campaign that revealed the targeting data behind it—Facebook rejected it

The Signal app open on a phone next to an example of a rejected Facebook add the app tried to run.

Signal, the popular encrypted messaging app, tried to highlight the data collection practices of Facebook and Instagram by making an ad campaign that used data the social media giant had collected on users.

But before the ads could run, they were rejected by Facebook, Signal says.

In a blog post on Tuesday, the messaging app outlined how it intended to create an ad campaign on Instagram that would "show you the personal data that Facebook collects about you and sells access to."

The ads would "simply display some of the information collected about the viewer which the advertising platform uses," the messaging app wrote.

After working on the campaign, Facebook rejected it before it could run, according to a screenshot shared by Signal. The screenshot also shows how Signal's ad account was disabled.

The ads would have said something like: "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.

"Facebook is more than willing to sell visibility into people’s lives, unless it’s to tell people about how their data is being used," the app's blog post reads. "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."

Facebook did not return a request for comment by the Daily Dot about Signal's blog post. We'll update this story if we hear back.

The social media giant's polices do prohibit ads that "asserts or implies personal attributes" including "direct or indirect assertions or implications" about a person's race, religion, beliefs, sexual orientation, gender identity, or other identifying features.

https://twitter.com/moxie/status/1389653364925816832

The move by Signal—which is well known as an aggressively privacy-centric company—shows a contrast between the data collection practices of the two companies.

Last week, Signal wrote a blog post detailing how little information it keeps on its users.

When ordered to provide information on users as part of an investigation by the United States Attorney’s Office in the Central District of California, the app explained that it was only able to hand over the times and dates when accounts were created and the last time they connected to the app.

The post Signal tried an ad campaign that revealed the targeting data behind it—Facebook rejected it appeared first on The Daily Dot.

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