The news: Meta’s internal documents show it knowingly earned up to 10% of its annual revenues in 2024—around $16 billion—from scam and banned product ads, per Reuters.
- Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, reportedly served 15 billion high-risk scam ads daily, often letting them run unless 95% fraud certainty was detected.
- For less-certain violations, Meta instead charged higher ad rates to “deter” offenders, effectively still profiting from potential fraud. Users who clicked scam ads were shown even more, amplified by Meta’s ad-personalization algorithm, per Reuters.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) are investigating Meta’s role in financial scams, per Reuters, and more oversight could follow.
Why it’s worth watching: Scam ads at this scale distort the ad economy. When fraudulent advertisers flood Meta’s system with billions of daily impressions, they inflate competition for placement, drive up CPMs, and erode trust.
- Every fake crypto pitch or counterfeit product placement siphons visibility and budget away from legitimate brands.
- Meta’s internal documents suggest the company may have had little incentive to act aggressively: Policing scams risked billions in ad revenues and investor confidence.
- By treating bad actors as revenue sources instead of liabilities, Meta effectively blurred the line between moderation and monetization.
Trust issues could lead to fallout: Advertisers could be competing in a tainted marketplace where integrity and ROI are compromised. Each deceptive campaign chips away at the credibility of Meta’s ad tools and the brands that rely on them.
Advertisers could shift spending toward platforms with stronger verification and transparency standards, forcing Meta to prove it can balance growth with responsibility.
A wake-up call for brands: If a major player like Meta Platforms can allow billions of scam ads to run, advertisers can’t assume all ad environments are safe simply because they’re deemed premium.
Brands should audit ad placements to see if scam ads dilute their impact. Seek platforms guaranteeing ad integrity, and require clear enforcement and accountability from ad platforms.
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