Facebook has been hit with a lawsuit accusing it of bilking advertisers by inflating the number of people its ads could reach, reports MediaPost.
"Based on publicly available research and plaintiffs’ own analysis, Facebook overstates the potential reach of its advertisements," business owner Danielle Singer alleges in a class-action complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.
Danielle Singer |
She alleges that Facebook induced advertisers like herself to purchase ads -- and to pay higher prices for them -- by "vastly" inflating the number of active users the ads could reach. The complaint claims that Facebook violated a California business law.
The complaint draws on reports by outside groups, including the industry organization Video Advertising Bureau, as well as a survey commissioned by the plaintiffs. The Video Advertising Bureau reported last year that Facebook's estimates of audience reach in every U.S. state were higher than the states' populations according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Singer specifically refers to Chicago in the complaint. She alleges that Facebook claimed in 2017 that its ads could potentially 1.9 million people in Chicago between the ages 18 and 34, but that Census data showed a population of only 808,785 people in that age range in Chicago.
Singer adds that a survey she commissioned shows that 59% of 18- to-34 year-olds in Chicago have Facebook accounts. The upshot, she alleges, is that Facebook ads potentially reach only 500,000 18-34 year-olds in Chicago.
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