Some of America's biggest advertisers are Engsub Archivesjoining their British counterparts in boycotting Google.
AT&T, car rental giant Enterprise, and pharmaceutical company GSK have each decided to suspend all YouTube ads after The Times of Londonreported that the brands had appeared alongside videos with hate speech and extremism.
The companies are among the first in the United States to join what's become a full-scale revolt among advertisers in the UK this week.
SEE ALSO: Google finally gives brands more ways to keep ads off hateful Youtube videosThe decisions all come the day after Google announced a handful of new tools meant to give advertisers more control over where their ads appear. The search giant has also apologized repeatedly and vowed to beef up the staff dedicated to sussing out extreme content.
Apparently the company's assurances weren't convincing enough.
“We are deeply concerned that our ads may have appeared alongside YouTube content promoting terrorism and hate," an AT&T spokesperson said in an email statement. "Until Google can ensure this won’t happen again, we are removing our ads from Google’s non-search platforms."
Enterprise took its statement a step further with an indictment of automated digital ads as a whole.
"Programmatic buying is a relatively new advertising 'science,' and has only become mainstream within the last four or five years," an Enterprise spokesperson said. "It appears that technology has gotten ahead of the advertising industry’s checks-and-balances.There is no doubt there are serious flaws that need to be addressed."
GSK said it was encouraged by Google's "first steps" towards solving the problem but would pull ads from all Google platforms until the issue is resolved.
"The placement of our brands next to extremist content is completely unacceptable to us and we have raised our concerns directly with Google," a company spokesperson said. "We are encouraged by Google’s steps over the past few days to take action and will continue to work with them to make further progress in developing adequate safeguards to ensure that advertisers are not placed in this position."
The companies join British advertisers like HSBC, the Royal Bank of Scotland, L'Oreal, ad agency Havas UK, and others that have pulled their spending from Google this week in the wake of reports that ads were appearing on videos from former KKK leader David Duke, a homophobic preacher who praised the Orland nightclub shooting, among other extremists.
Google wouldn't comment on the decisions but reiterated that it was working towards fixing the issue.
"We don't comment on individual customers but as announced, we’ve begun an extensive review of our advertising policies and have made a public commitment to put in place changes that give brands more control over where their ads appear," a spokesperson said Wednesday. "We're also raising the bar for our ads policies to further safeguard our advertisers’ brands."
Speaking at the Advertising Week Europe conference in London this week, Google's head of European operations acknowledged that the problem wasn't confined to the UK.
It appears he was right.
Update March 22, 6:30 p.m. ET:
Johnson & Johnson has reportedly pulled its YouTube ads as well.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Update March 23, 12 p.m. ET:
Lyft joins the boycott after a Mashable investigation. Monster.com says it is "investigating" an offensive placement.
Update March 24, 12 p.m. ET:
Starbucks, Walmart, Pepsi, GM and Dish have all joined too after the Wall Street Journal dug up ads on racist videos.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Topics AT&T Google YouTube
Diary of Nuance by Adam ThirlwellA Room with History by Saidiya HartmanRelentlessness: A Syllabus by Colm Tóibín169 Square Feet in Las Vegas by Meg BernhardI Love Birds Most by Kate RileyMy Rattling Window by Sophie HaigneyRivers Solomon, Elisa Gonzalez, and Elaine Feeney Recommend by The Paris ReviewShopping Diary by Adrienne RaphelHello, World! Part Three: Alice by Sheila HetiLove Songs: “Aguacero” by Carina del Valle SchorskeThe Dust by Christopher ChangLil B DeathLove Songs: “Aguacero” by Carina del Valle SchorskeForbidden Notebooks: A Woman’s Right to Write by Jhumpa LahiriIntuition’s Ear: On Kira Muratova by Timmy StrawIn Remembrance of Charles Simic, 1938–2022 by The Paris ReviewQuiet: A Syllabus by Victoria Adukwei BulleyBluetti Solar Generator (AC70): $270 off at AmazonThe Mother of the Mother of the Virgin Mary by Marta FiglerowiczRivers Solomon, Elisa Gonzalez, and Elaine Feeney Recommend by The Paris Review Anatomy of a Monitor Best Memorial Day 2025 mattress deals: Saatva, Nectar, Purple, and more Explainer: What is a File System? Huge, unusually powerful supernova explosion in space detected by scientists GPU Shootouts of This Generation and Pricing Update Melania Trump welcomes you into the AI audiobook era with new memoir NYT Strands hints, answers for May 29 The OLED Burn Palm Pilot: The Tablet That Schooled Apple Nvidia and AMD Seriously Want to Offload Current James Webb telescope flexes its muscle with this deep, deep view of space TechSpot PC Buying Guide: 2H 2024 NASA Mars helicopter sets a new extraterrestrial record Save $100 on the Bose QuietComfort headphones Webb telescope sees bizarre galaxy cluster triplets mid Scientists discover ancient Greenland shark in a really strange place NASA's Artemis The 10 best porn sites for when you want to find something new A star blew up, and scientists snapped a photo of the violent explosion My first orgasm: In order to get off, I had to log off
1.9317s , 10133.4765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Engsub Archives】,Defense Information Network