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Facebook is Being Sued Over Housing Discrimination (fastcompany.com)

The National Fair Housing Alliance, along with three other nonprofit housing advocacy organizations around the country, has filed a lawsuit against Facebook over its alleged discriminatory advertisements. From a report: The nonprofits, over the last few months, created a fake real estate company and used the Facebook ad platform to place housing ads. According to the lawsuit, the NFHA was able to place advertisements that "[excluded] families with children and women from receiving advertisements, as well as users with interests based on disability and national origin." In the NFHA's press release, the organization writes that "Facebook's advertising platform enables landlords and real estate brokers to exclude families with children, women, and other protected classes of people from receiving housing ads."

The lawsuit follows extensive reporting from ProPublica that investigated these potentially discriminatory practices. For over a year, the journalism outlet tested various ways that landlords could place ads for housing, and found that the targeting allowed for many people to be kept out of the loop. Given Facebook's massive user base of over 2 billion users, the group believes that the social network is in violation of the Fair Housing Act.

11 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. So let me get this right... by swirlingbrain · · Score: 3, Funny

    They're being sued because people are not getting spam? O_o

    1. Re:So let me get this right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well looks like these non-profits are just looking for a pay day. FB didn't do the advertising, the only provided a platform. Perhaps FB should sue them for deceit in creating fake companies and creating an ad campaign that purposely discriminates against people or review real estate companies who advertise on FB to see if they are discriminating against people. It's not FB who is in violation, it is those who are doing the advertising. It is not the gun manufacturer who kills people is is the people who are allowed to get their hands on guns they shouldn't have access to who kills people.

      I believe it is NFHA who is in violation of the Fair Housing Act, not FB.

  2. Violation of the Fork Fairness Act by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Funny

    In other news, I bought a fork, and attempted to stab minorities in the eye with it. Nothing the fork manufacturer did prevented me from stabbing minorities in the eye with the fork they made. Therefore, the fork manufacturer needs to give me millions of dollars.

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    1. Re:Violation of the Fork Fairness Act by jbmartin6 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think the FFA would read if you are going to stab 100 people in the eye with your fork, you must stab them in proportion to each group's representation in the general population. Good luck finding 0.2 Pacific Islanders

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    2. Re:Violation of the Fork Fairness Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think the FFA would read if you are going to stab 100 people in the eye with your fork, you must stab them in proportion to each group's representation in the general population. Good luck finding 0.2 Pacific Islanders

      Dude, that's what the knife is for.

  3. not all is off limits by supernova87a · · Score: 4, Informative

    By the way, just before anyone takes this scant article too far and starts yelling at their companies' bulletin boards, classified ads, etc:

    Finding roommates for a shared housing situation does not fall under the Fair Housing Act's provisions. It has been ruled a sufficiently personal and private matter by the courts that people are allowed to discriminate when they list to find a roommate.

    However, I believe it only extends to male/female, not other protected characteristics. ( https://www.craigslist.org/abo... )

    1. Re:not all is off limits by fluffernutter · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Roommate must be blond, at least a B-cup and hot". Facebook please help me.

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  4. Wrong target by chiefcrash · · Score: 3, Informative

    Facebook is the advertising *venue*, not the advertiser in this case. Facebook doesn't own the property for sale/rent. The people violating the Fair Housing Act in this case would be the (fake) real estate company...

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  5. If I'm interpreting the summary correctly, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the National Fair Housing Alliance et al (NFHA) need to step back and breath. I don't see Facebook as having done anything wrong if NFHA managed to give Facebook a neutrally worded ad with filters restricting whom the ads were being shown to. Yes, that would be a sneaky underhanded technique, but claiming that "Facebook broke the law! Give me money!" for falling for that technique would be equivalent to a landlord putting up advertisements in local papers in neighborhoods that omit protected groups. Or for that matter, having a landlord put up any advertisement in any media, and omitting selected medias for the purpose of making it so that protected groups are unlikely to see the advertisement in the first place. I just browsed the Fair Housing Act and I don't see any where in it that claims that you have to target your ads to the entire population, I do see that you can't have an ad that states that protected groups are not wanted, but there's nothing there that says that you have to make certain that the ad is available to everyone.

  6. Re:Not Facebook's fault by datavirtue · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The point is: you would never know if someone violated the fair housing act. Facebook is providing a a means to conduct illegal activity. The same principle applies to me as a software developer. I cannot create accounting software that lets people cook their books. I would go to prison. Everyone commenting on this is way off. These non-profits know their shit. If you don't like it, lobby to have the laws revoked.

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    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  7. Weird! This might be a loophole! by pikine · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Looking at the wording in Fair Housing Act, it doesn't seem to prohibit targeted advertisement. It's illegal to refuse renting or selling based on a protected class when someone makes an offer, or mention such preference in the advertisement, or falsely claim that the housing is unavailable. However, targeted advertisement does not fall under any of those illegal acts because the advertisement itself does not mention the preference. One can argue that if someone finds housing through another way, then as long as the landlord does not refuse the offer on the basis of protected class, and the real estate agent or mortgage broker does not refuse the transaction on the basis of protected class, there would have been no violation.

    But IANAL.

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