Who Targets Me? Who’s using Facebook ads to win your vote – and how are they doing it?
The WhoTargetsMe browser plug-in provides insight into the political actors that are targeting you using social media advertising. Over 50,000 people in fifty-plus countries have installed the tool, which support twenty languages. The aim of this project is to promote use of the plug-in by Dutch Facebook users. It helps voters understand how online political campaigns are chasing their votes and what they can do about it. WhoTargetsMe has already tracked political advertising in more than twenty election campaigns. Extensive coverage of the 2019 UK general election was recently provided, and work has now started on the US 2020 presidential primaries.
This project is supported within the joint call of SIDN Fund and Adessium Foundation: 'Public values in a digital society' (2019).
Update January 2021: Eva de Valk interviewed the project leaders of the projects from the call 'Public values in a digital society', including this project. What is the situation a year later and what has been achieved? Check the complete article series or read the article about this project.
The project has been completed (August 2021). Although the plugin has been installed more than 50,000 times in more than a hundred countries since 2017, the project has received little media attention in the Netherlands and the plugin has been downloaded relatively little. In the Netherlands, it turned out that the CDA mainly focused on targeted Facebook advertisements, although this did not result in a victory. Also in studies in other countries, WhoTargetsMe found no evidence that Facebook ads determine the outcome of elections. A nice result is that a Code of Conduct has been drawn up around the Dutch elections, which has been signed by almost every party. The project will be continued in Germany.