Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Facebook The Courts Advertising Communications Network Networking Social Networks The Almighty Buck The Internet News Technology

Facebook Users Sue Over Alleged Racial Discrimination In Housing, Job Ads (arstechnica.com) 177

In response to a report from ProPublica alleging that Facebook gives advertisers the ability to exclude specific groups it calls "Ethnic Affinities," three Facebook users have filed a lawsuit against the company. They are accusing the social networking giant of violating the Federal Housing Act of 1964 over its alleged discriminatory policies. Ars Technica reports: ProPublica managed to post an ad placed in Facebook's housing categories that excluded anyone with an "affinity" for African-American, Asian-American, or Hispanic people. When the ProPublica reporters showed the ad to prominent civil rights lawyer John Relman, he described it as "horrifying" and "as blatant a violation of the federal Fair Housing Act as one can find." According to the proposed class-action lawsuit, by allowing such ads on its site, Facebook is in violation of the landmark civil rights legislation, which specifically prohibits housing advertisements to discriminate based on race, gender, color, religion, and other factors. "This lawsuit does not seek to end Facebook's Ad Platform, nor even to get rid of the "Exclude People" mechanism. There are legal, desirable uses for such functionalities. Plaintiffs seek to end only the illegal proscribed uses of these functions," the lawyers wrote in the civil complaint, which was filed last Friday. The proposed class, if approved by a federal judge in San Francisco, would include any Facebook user in the United States who has "not seen an employment- or housing-related advertisement on Facebook within the last two years because the ad's buyer used the Ad Platform's 'Exclude People' functionality to exclude the class member based on race, color, religion, sex, familial status, or national origin."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Facebook Users Sue Over Alleged Racial Discrimination In Housing, Job Ads

Comments Filter:
    • by galabar ( 518411 )
      Uber can't force drivers (contractors) to accept fares. Otherwise, they'd be employees.
    • Facebook supplies the racial affinity of a user to its advertisers, for the purpose of exclusion.

      On the other hand, Uber supplies the first name of a passenger to its self-employed drivers, for the purpose of picking them up.

      What do you want Uber to do? Assign a randomly generated nickname or password to each passenger. And even then, that wouldn't prevent an Uber driver from visually noticing that a passenger he/she is picking up is black and male.

      • Assign a randomly generated nickname or password to each passenger.

        Not a bad idea. And it adds a bit of privacy for the user. The driver doesn't need to know the name.

        • Not a bad idea. And it adds a bit of privacy for the user.

          Only the first name is being transmitted to the driver, and the passenger can already change that first name to whatever they wish.

          That's enough privacy I think.

          The driver doesn't need to know the name.

          Knowing a first name does make pickups in front of crowded night clubs/bars easier.

          People who take Ubers are not always sober, nor always fluent in English, but at least they know their own first name.

          • People who take Ubers are not always sober, nor always fluent in English, but at least they know their own first name.

            Assuming that they have a first name. Not all cultures do.

            [Searches for link] Here it is : Falsehoods Programmers Believe About Names [kalzumeus.com], from which several relate directly to your incorrect assumptions (note from the numbers how far down the list your assumptions are ; there are much more fundamental mistakes you can make, e.g. that people have names) :

            18. Peopleâ(TM)s names have an orde

            • Damn. The guy obviously writes on a system with a different code page to either mine, Slashdot's, or both. And we all know how broken Slashdot's assumptions about it's users and their languages are. And just for Rei [slashdot.org], here's a thorn : (AltGr+p)þ ; (character entity "& THORN ;" which should also be UNICODE 00DE) ; (character entity "& thorn ;" which should also be UNICODE 00FE) ; and there's one in my thumb too.
            • No, that's not the objection I was going for.

              It doesn't matter if there is an occasional name collision, or if someone left a blank field as their first name.

              My point was about convenience during pickups. The system doesn't need to be perfect.

              If the system takes an extra minute or two for finding a passenger once in a while, it's not the end of the world.

      • What do you want Uber to do? Assign a randomly generated nickname or password to each passenger.

        Or even a user-provided nickname and/ or password?

        Hey, Slashdot let me choose my user name nearly 20 years ago (actually, shouldn't the 20th anniversary be coming up soon? Quick Wiki : "Launched October 5, 1997; "). From the increasing desperation of noob's user names, there is probably some effort to avoid close similarities with existing user names. If Slashdot can do it for nearly 20 years, it's probably not

  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Monday November 07, 2016 @06:28PM (#53233571) Homepage Journal

    The allegedly-violated itself obviously violates the First Amendment and is thus invalid.

    It is both unconstitutional, which should be enough in theory, and ineffective in practice — quite obviously, the interracial relations in this country continue to stink [pbs.org] despite (or because of?) our having a half-Black President.

    Whatever it was we tried for over 50 years to achieve racial harmony, is not working. Let's stop sacrificing actual rights to it...

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      Bogus law outlawing Thought-crimes

      An action was taken that affected others. It's not a 'thought crime'.

      The allegedly-violated itself obviously violates the First Amendment and is thus invalid.

      Obviously?

      It is both unconstitutional, [...]

      Through the lens of the first amendment... any limitations on making death threats, committing slander, leaking intelligence to foreign governments, yelling fire in a theater, printing bootleg copies of movies and selling them, and perjury, are all obviously" unconstitutional too. And yet you probably support at least some of those.

      So is the first amendment is only the most important thing when it supports the thing you want to

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        An action was taken that affected others. It's not a 'thought crime'.

        What made the action illegal is the thought held by the "perpetrators". That makes it a thought-crime.

        limitations on making death threats

        Perhaps unlike "grabbing pussy", credible death threats are assaults [thefreedictionary.com].

        committing slander

        Slander has been a tort (not a crime) since well before the First Amendment was written. It was never in conflict with the Bill of Rights.

        leaking intelligence to foreign governments

        People gaining legitimate access to su

        • by vux984 ( 928602 )

          What made the action illegal is the thought held by the "perpetrators". That makes it a thought-crime.

          That's a pretty unconventional definition of thought crime. Where did you come up with that? I can't even find any reference that supports that definition, even as a 2ndary use of the term.

          Your definition of 'thought crime' includes murder.

          credible death threats are assaults.

          Of course they are. What's your point? Didn't you make the argument that the first amendment trumps criminal law?

          Slander has been a tort (not a crime) since well before the First Amendment was written.

          Well duh. The first amendment was written to correct an oversight in the law before it was written. Hence... 'amendment'.

          Should not be illegal either.

          Its all fun and games until someone is

          • by mi ( 197448 )

            Why its almost as if the authors didn't actually think the first amendment mean you could say anything you wanted anytime you wanted.

            So, is anything protected by the Amendment, or is Congress really free to ban any speech it wants to — provided, some justification can be articulated?

            • by vux984 ( 928602 )

              So, is anything protected by the Amendment,

              Political speech mostly, and the expression of ideas are the most protected.

              Commercial speech (including commercial advertising) is some of the least protected. (Consider that its not just this anti-discrimination in advertising law, but also truth in advertising laws, labelling laws, trademark law, and so forth are all effectively a limitation on people from saying anything they want to sell a product... in that you can't say your snake oil contains unicorn tears, cures cancer, and then stick the J&J

              • by mi ( 197448 )

                Political speech mostly, and the expression of ideas are the most protected.

                That's a very vague answer...

                The sad reality is, once you accept even a seemingly innocuous infringement — such as, for example, that famous example of yelling "fire" (or "gun!") in a crowd, you start down a very steep and slippery slope. For example, Trump is — according to millions of Americans — a very dangerous man to this country, his election promising to be a disaster far more dangerous than a handful of de

                • by vux984 ( 928602 )

                  such as, for example, that famous example of yelling "fire" (or "gun!") in a crowd, you start down a very steep and slippery slope.

                  Pretty much everything is a continuum. It's not wrong to be concerned about the slippery slope from one side of the continuum to the other, and we should be constantly vigilant. That's basically me agree with what you wrote in bold.

                  But everything is a slippery slope to something else. And more importantly every ideal conflicts with every other ideal so compromise is inevitable.

                  A Republic (and a Democracy) can survive such bogus claims being legal. They are a nuisance, but not a threat.

                  I disagree. A republic and a democracy can't abide them being legal. The people want freedom of speech, but they also want justice a

                  • by mi ( 197448 )

                    A republic and a democracy can't abide them [false advertising claims -mi] being legal.

                    Why? It is not illegal to lie in most other circumstances, what's so especially damaging about false advertising? It is certainly annoying — and disgusting — but it poses no special threat...

                    Back to my question a few posts ago — is the First Amendment (the free speech part) meaningful at all in your opinion? Or is Congress allowed, contrary to what the Amendment states, to make speech-limiting laws as l

                    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

                      Why? It is not illegal to lie in most other circumstances, what's so especially damaging about false advertising? It is certainly annoying â" and disgusting â" but it poses no special threat...

                      Turn the question upside down. What is the "special benefit" to society of allowing false advertising? The overwhelming majority want it illegal isn't that pretty much by definition sufficient for it to be made so?

                      Back to my question a few posts ago â" is the First Amendment (the free speech part) meaningful at all in your opinion? [...] Or is Congress allowed, contrary to what the Amendment states, to make speech-limiting laws as long as some excuse for that can be found?

                      A 2/3rd majority in congress and the senate plus 38 state legislatures and they can just amend the constitution to allow them to make any adjustment they like.

                      your waxing argument about inevitability of compromises seems to suggest, a popular law can limit various kinds of speech

                      That or anything else really. The 18th coming and going nicely illustrates the fluidity possible. The idea that anything is somehow fixed i

                    • by mi ( 197448 )

                      What is the "special benefit" to society of allowing false advertising?

                      Why should I "turn the question upside down"? Ours is a free country — what is not prohibited is allowed, not the other way around. For you to limit/ban an activity, you and/or other proponents of the ban have to present (good) reasons, not the other way around.

                      When the activity is speech, no such bans are legal for as long as the First Amendment remains unamended.

                      A 2/3rd majority in congress and the senate plus 38 state legislatu

      • Through the lens of the first amendment... any limitations on making death threats, committing slander, leaking intelligence to foreign governments, yelling fire in a theater, printing bootleg copies of movies and selling them, and perjury, are all obviously" unconstitutional too. And yet you probably support at least some of those.

        No "lens" needed. It's written plainly and simply. Any limitations violate the first amendment and are unconstitutional.

        I don't support any restrictions on speech, including whatever strawman you want to prop up. The government cannot restrict speech. You can be held responsible and culpable for the direct results of your speech, however. If you can't see the distinction, you're a useful idiot.

        • by vux984 ( 928602 )

          I don't support any restrictions on speech, including whatever strawman you want to prop up.

          Ok... this sounds like nutter talk.

          You can be held responsible and culpable for the direct results of your speech, however.

          Ah... ok; all speech is unrestricted but there can be consequences for what you say... that's reasonable then.

          If you can't see the distinction, you're a useful idiot.

          But it's a distinction without much difference in this case. What is the so-called 'direct result' of speech? All results of speech can be argued indirect. Unless the speech is literally so loud it damages your ears.

          Here the arguably direct result of selectively not showing advertising for housing to black people is "discrimination in advertising housing based on r

  • This sort of crap is exactly how we end up with (for example) the likely next president saying she wants to make gun manufacturers liable for the criminal use of their products. Issues like that sound like single-topic voter hot buttons, but they're not. The instinct to look for the nearest deep(er) pockets and blame the existence of a tool for how someone else uses it ... that's the sort of thing that this election is all about. Because this election is really about the Supreme Court.
    • Because this election is really about the Supreme Court.

      Exactly what the democrats are saying to scare people into voting for Hillary. Funny how both sides use the same argument.

  • Advertising looking for "favorable" traits can also be used to discriminate. Interestingly I have not seen any proof that discrimination occurred, but that the tagging system would allow such (obviously).

    The SJWs deserve much pain as they eat themselves.

  • by c ( 8461 ) <beauregardcp@gmail.com> on Monday November 07, 2016 @06:33PM (#53233601)

    three Facebook users have filed a lawsuit against the company

    A bunch of lawyers found three Facebook users who'd agree to have their names thrown onto a lawsuit so they could cash in on some of that big class-action legal fee action.

    As usual, the winners will be the lawyers.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @06:41PM (#53233637)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Speaking of Canada, you might find this interesting. At my kid's high school, they are collecting used winter jackets specifically for Native families. Doesn't that sound discriminating against every non-Native in Canada? If they were collecting winter jackets for white families only you just know there would be a stink. Really, it should be a collection for poor families, as poverty is colour blind.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      Fighting racism is a kind of magical machine that produces political power and moral righteousness as outputs. The people that benefit from it I think actually fear the end of racism because it will reduce their political power.

      I think what's left at this stage isn't racial animosity but cultural animosity. It's not about skin color, it's about an amalgamation of cultural values that people object to. This would seem to explain things like anti-Islamic attitudes, where race is often quite ambiguous, or

    • by Clsid ( 564627 )

      The sensationalism surrounding these cases are indeed something to worry. It's almost like somebody is out there making sure the racial divide is preserved. But on the other hand, racism is a very real thing that you have to deal with if you are a non-white. Probably you do not think it is an issue because it has not happened to to you. Sure you can just let it go and look the other way, but when it comes to important stuff like housing, it is important to have these laws in place.

      I think the greatest Obama

  • by Anonymous Coward

    https://www.propublica.org/documents/item/3191165-Facebook-Propublica-Ad.html

    The event was about fighting back if rent is illegally high. They targeted the event at a certain demographic.

    I don't know how this becomes "Facebook practices housing discrimination". I don't use or care for Facebook, but this might just be a problem with their advertising system.

    I'm not even sure if Propublica would be on the hook if they did make actual housing ads. Facebook is just the platform while Propublica is the one do

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is not discrimination... that's like saying that subway is discriminating against aliens because they don't advertise on the moon... the whole concept of targeted ads is not discriminator.. its targeted! If by some chance a black person sees one of these housing ads its not like they will be stopped from buying a house.

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      the whole concept of targeted ads is not discriminator.

      The whole concept of targeted ads is discriminatory. Targeting is practically a synonym for discriminating. Most discrimination or targetting isn't illegal though, but discriminating on race generally is.

      So targeting people who like hockey by advertising during a hockey game instead of an NBA is legal. As is telling facebook to show the ad only to people who 'liked' hockey.

      But telling facebook to only show an ad to white people ? That's probably going to end up being found not legal.

      If by some chance a black person sees one of these housing ads its not like they will be stopped from buying a house.

      Where is this part of yo

  • by castus ( 4552487 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @06:50PM (#53233683)

    The proposed class, if approved by a federal judge in San Francisco, would include any Facebook user in the United States who has "not seen an employment- or housing-related advertisement on Facebook within the last two years because...

    This has to be the first time in history someone has been wronged by not being shown an ad

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's happened before, e.g. when real estate agents neglect to show some people certain properties because they want to keep them racially segregated.

  • by laughingskeptic ( 1004414 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @07:08PM (#53233773)
    This is just as ridiculous as suing a wrench manufacturer because a few people may have used wrenches to commit crimes. I am a landlord and I know that you can't discriminate in housing. Any employer should also know. Why should Facebook have any liability for this sort of misuse of their system? Seems more appropriate for the Justice department to file a warrant with Facebook and go after every business (if any) that committed these (highly traceable) crimes. This reeks of an inventive attempt by attorneys williammost@gmail.com, jrf@atalawgroup.com and smkh@atalawgroup.com to generate a large class that will make the attorneys megabucks and the plaintiffs nothing.
    • Exactly this. It seems more like a violation by the advertisers to make use of available options that are illegal in their specific cases when they should know damn well it is illegal for them to do so. Facebook providing the options in and of itself isn't what is at fault here as there are definitely certain products and services that appeal more to certain demographic.

      Also given that there will be very easily associated keywords it should be very easy to provide the courts with advertisers for housing and

    • It's about as funny as the Nvidia tying G-Force experience to a mandatory user account, and then in the thread of complaints seeing people saying they are getting legal advice about this. Like wtf America.

    • Because Facebook is the one that actually did the restricting of who could and couldn't see the ads, and so are complicit.

      Think of it like going to an ad agency and saying "Hey, I want to put this ad up for this place I'm renting, but I don't want brown people to see it."

      The ad agency would tell you to go pound sand, because they'd be complicit in violating the law if they ran an ad campaign like that.

      Facebook is the ad agency here, and they failed to tell the racist to go pound sand.

      It's very similar to th

  • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @07:26PM (#53233863)

    ProPublica managed to post an ad placed in Facebook's housing categories that excluded anyone with an "affinity" for African-American, Asian-American, or Hispanic people.

    Note that ProPublica posted the racist ad themselves, and there was no actual discrimination.

    Furthermore, this is about ad targeting by demographics, not housing discrimination; you know, like you don't want to target Hip Hop events to Norwegian bachelor farmers, or gay pride events to Black protestant church goers. And if ad targeting is discriminatory for a specific product, then it's the advertiser, not the publisher, that's at fault.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Exactly... This is about as racist as Redfin or Zillow choosing to advertise during Big Bang Theory on CBS, but not some other show on BET.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I don't know what you mean by actual discrimination. Here is what the law says:
      "Section 804(c) of the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. 3604(c), as amended, makes it unlawful to make, print, or publish, or cause to be made, printed, or published, any notice, statement, or advertisement, with respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling, that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national

      • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @07:47PM (#53233961)

        Facebook's problem is they can't just push this off onto ProPublisha because Facebook monitors postings for objectionable content.

        This isn't about illegal content, it's about ad targeting. Ad targeting isn't prohibited by law: read what you quoted.

        Accepting an illegal posting in itself illegal. Newspapers have the same problem once they sell an ad they are responsible if the ad is illegal not only for housing but for threats and extortions.

        It's not that simple. Newspapers are potentially liable when they have real estate sections and when they knowingly accept discriminatory ads. Since Facebook advertising is automatic and there is no separate real estate section, their situation is different. Facebook's liability is likely the same as for any other content: they need to remove it once they know about it. But, again, that doesn't even apply in this situation, since ProPublica isn't complaining about content, but about targeting.

        • That's not how similar tech cases have gone down.

          Willful ignorance is not a defense. Facebook COULD know if those ads were discriminatory or not, but choose not to. In similar situations, the courts find that they are just as liable as if they DID know.

          That's why YouTube responds to DMCA take-downs the way it does - because it is feasible that they react immediately, they are required to react immediately. Because it is possible for them to detect potentially infringing material and remove it, they are requ

          • Willful ignorance is not a defense. Facebook COULD know if those ads were discriminatory or not, but choose not to.

            Well, those ads weren't discriminatory, they were targeted. Ad targeting is not illegal under the letter of non-discrimination laws AFAIK, but you are welcome to develop a novel legal theory.

            Furthermore, most forms of discrimination by private entities simply aren't illegal anyway.

      • by pauljlucas ( 529435 ) on Tuesday November 08, 2016 @08:47AM (#53236677) Homepage Journal
        The key words are "that indicates," i.e., the text of the ad must indicate a preference or discrimination. It does not say anything about to whom you show the ad.

        The law was written well before anyone could place housing ads on the internet. The closest non-internet equivalent would be if you posted your ad on telephone poles except in predominantly non-white neighborhoods. But even that isn't illegal. So if that isn't, why is not showing an ad to certain people online illegal?

        You might be able to argue that it should be illegal, but, as written, it's not.

    • And if ad targeting is discriminatory for a specific product, then it's the advertiser, not the publisher, that's at fault.

      By forcing the publisher to defend itself, the lawsuit is probably hoping that Facebook will be forced to disclose which advertisers are doing the same thing. After which, the lawsuit against Facebook can stop and the advertisers in question can be sued instead.

      But it's not in Facebook's financial interest to throw their own customers (their real customers, their advertisers) under the bus.

      • By forcing the publisher to defend itself, the lawsuit is probably hoping that Facebook will be forced to disclose which advertisers are doing the same thing. After which, the lawsuit against Facebook can stop and the advertisers in question can be sued instead.

        It is perfectly legitimate for most advertisers to discriminate by race. Furthermore, the advertisers who most commonly discriminate based on race, sexual orientation, or gender are those who actually benefit minorities and women. So, you want to hur

    • And if ad targeting is discriminatory for a specific product, then it's the advertiser, not the publisher, that's at fault.

      I'm not sure this distinction would hold legally, given that the "publisher" (Facebook, in this instance) is specifically including a mechanism to do discriminatory ad targeting (if indeed the ad targeting is ruled discriminatory).

      It's kinda like arguing that a hit man isn't "at fault" for targeting a person for assassination. After all, the employer hired the hit man. Moreover, the hit man gave him a run down of his services, even specifically offering to assassinate A or B or C to help the employer ac

      • I'm not sure this distinction would hold legally, given that the "publisher" (Facebook, in this instance) is specifically including a mechanism to do discriminatory ad targeting (if indeed the ad targeting is ruled discriminatory).

        There are many legitimate uses for ad targeting, so providing the mechanism isn't per se discriminatory. Furthermore, discrimination is legal in many contexts; for example, Hillary Clinton has targeted many of her ads to different racial groups.

        Also, by the way, I'm assuming you w

        • The discrimination for Ebony Magazine is behavioral, just like Facebooks. That is, nobody is keeping you from behaving in a way so that these ads are targeted at you.

          Except Facebook's model is not transparent. You don't know what data they have on you. You don't know what groups you're in. You don't know how you're being targeted (or what ads you might never see).

          Hence, you cannot know how you might change your behavior to see ads you don't even know exist, because you don't know what behaviors have caused Facebook's classifications.

          Well, I don't use Facebook and I don't know how they target. On Google, however, you can see what information Google has inferred about you, and you can also turn off ad targeting.

          That's nice. Hooray for Google. This is a discussion about Facebook, however, and its potential liability for the way it designs its

          • Except Facebook's model is not transparent. You don't know what data they have on you. [...] This is a discussion about Facebook, however, and its potential liability for the way it designs its system.

            So what? I simply pointed out that this wasn't "housing discrimination" in the FHA or public accommodations sense. This is about ad targeting, something that historically has not been illegal.

            You're welcome to share your vast legal expertise with ProPublica and set them right on what they are actually complain

    • How they said it?
  • by l2718 ( 514756 ) on Monday November 07, 2016 @08:20PM (#53234135)

    Suppose for the moment the story is true: people buying ad space from Facebook can ask the automated algorithm to only show their ads to certain demographics. Those who posted the ads may very well have violated the law, but how does it make Facebook responsible? They aren't checking each and every ad for legal compliance, after all, and the ads don't represent Facebook itself.

    This is a moral point (Facebook shouldn't be held responsible for discriminatory content posted by users) but it may have legal teeth, depending on the previous contours of the liability shield of 47 USC 230 [wikipedia.org].

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The issue is that Facebook provides tools which can be abused in this way, and does nothing to police their use. I'm surprised Facebook hasn't simply disabled this kind of targeting for certain categories, like real estate and dating.

      It may or may not be illegal, but I imagine the goal is probably to draw attention and convince Facebook to alter its policy.

    • This is a moral point (Facebook shouldn't be held responsible for discriminatory content posted by users)

      Except it's not the ad content that is potentially discriminatory. It's not like we're talking about people running ads saying, "Apartment/job available. Whites applications only, please." That would be discriminatory content in the ad itself.

      Instead, we're talking about a system deliberately designed to deliver ads to individuals (and not show them to other individuals) potentially based on their race. That system is created by Facebook. Facebook is potentially liable for misuse of such a system.

      T

  • It's a tool people. It allows bacon manufacturers to not piss off Muslims or Jewish people by spamming them with coupons for their products. It allows businesses to target their advertising dollars. If illegal discrimination is occurring, go after the parties discriminating, not everyone in-between. Is ProPublica going after Apple next if they manage to post a discriminating ad from an iPad?

  • Facebook isn't a Real Estate listing service. They're a social media and advertising platform. I would expect that they rely on advertisers to know and follow their industry's rules, and simply hadn't considered that their platform could be used to advertise Real Estate in a way that violates the FHA. I doubt the FHA was even on their radar. Why would it be?

    Suing Facebook over this just seems silly. For one, can anyone show that this actually happened outside the ProPublica report? Did anyone bring

  • That's what you get for trying to take the easy way out! Now he'll have to tell all those (insert relevant racist slurs here) that "he'll call them" or that "it's already taken", just like everyone else!

    On a less cynical note, you can't fight racism that way. I'd rather want to know beforehand that some landlord is a racist bastard, it saves me time, he won't let to me anyway and I sure as fuck don't want to rent from him!

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

Working...