Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Meta to block political campaigns from using its AI tools for ads

☀️ Happy Thursday! This week we look at Meta’s new policy on AI in political ads, how advertisers’ keyword blocklists impact Black-owned publishing companies, and news outlets’ use of WhatsApp. Sign up here!

In todays email:

  • Top story: Meta to bar political campaigns from using its AI advertising tools
  • In other news: How Black-owned publishing companies suffer from advertisers’ keyword blocklists
  • Looking ahead: News outlets’ use of WhatsApp Channels
  • Chart of the week: The share of Republicans who say they follow the news has decreased substantially since 2016

🔥 Top story

Meta announced a new policy to bar political campaigns from using its generative AI advertising tools. The policy will also require political advertisers to disclose the use of third-party AI software to fabricate depictions of people and events. It will take effect next year, ahead of the 2024 election.

A 2020 Pew Research Center survey found that 54% of Americans say social media companies should not allow any political advertisements on their platforms, while 19% say some political ads should be allowed. About a quarter (26%) say these firms should allow all political ads on their platforms.

📌 In other news

📅 Looking ahead

This week, we look at news dissemination on WhatsApp and the app’s potential usage in the industry. News publishers around the world – such as La Nación, The New York Times, Vox, Chilango and The Times of India – have begun experimenting with WhatsApp Channels to share news stories.

A 2022 Center survey found that 26% of Americans use WhatsApp, although just one-in-ten WhatsApp users – or 3% of all U.S. adults – regularly get news there.

📊 Chart of the week

In the wake of Election Day, we look at how closely Americans of different political leanings have been following the news in recent years. In 2022, 37% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents said they follow news all or most of the time – a 20 percentage point decrease since 2016. Over the same period, the decline among Democrats and Democratic leaners was a more modest 7 points.

A line chart showing a steep decline over time in share of Republicans who say they closely follow the news.


👋 That’s all for this week. 

The Briefing is compiled by Pew Research Center staff, including Naomi Forman-Katz, Jacob Liedke, Sarah Naseer, Christopher St. Aubin, Luxuan Wang and Emily Tomasik. It is edited by Katerina Eva Matsa, Michael Lipka and Mark Jurkowitz, and copy edited by Rebecca Leppert.

Do you like this newsletter? Email us at journalism@pewresearch.org or fill out this two-question survey to tell us what you think.

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