Ads next to Nazi posts: IBM stops all advertising on Musk Platform X

Ads next to Nazi posts
IBM stops all advertising on Musk Platform X

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Anyone who scrolls on X will no longer see advertising from IBM in the future. The computer giant is suspending its ads after it was revealed they were appearing next to Nazi posts. Meanwhile, Musk, the platform’s owner, spreads a post with an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory.

Computer giant IBM has stopped all advertising on Elon Musk’s online platform X (formerly Twitter) after its ads were discovered next to Nazi posts. IBM does not tolerate hate speech and is investigating the “absolutely unacceptable situation,” a spokesman said on Thursday.

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A few hours earlier, the organization had Media Matters showed how advertisements from IBM, Apple and the software company Oracle, among others, appeared on X alongside posts with positive statements about Adolf Hitler and the ideology of the National Socialists. This is far from the first time something like this has happened.

Companies have little influence over exactly which posts their advertising is placed next to. The ads are shown more with reference to age target groups, specific areas or user interests. In order to avoid a negative environment for their brands, advertising customers are primarily dependent on X consistently keeping hate speech off the platform.

Musk approves post with anti-Semitic conspiracy

Since Musk bought Twitter a year ago, many companies have had concerns about exactly this and are staying away from the platform or limiting their spending. Musk has said several times that advertising revenue is only about half as high as it was during the Twitter era. X boss Linda Yaccarino, appointed by Musk, promised advertisers a safe environment.

Musk represents political views of the American right and accused the former Twitter leadership of suppressing them. He promised more freedom of speech – all statements that did not violate the law would be allowed. At the same time, his dismissal actions greatly affected the Twitter teams that were supposed to ensure the deletion of hate speech.

The X owner himself caused a new controversy: he endorsed a post that spread an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory. It said, among other things, that “hatred against whites” was being spread by the Jews. Musk wrote under the post on Wednesday that it contained the “actual truth.” Musk later added that he was referring to “some groups” such as the Jewish organization Anti-Defamation League (ADL) that spread “effectively anti-white racism and anti-Asian racism.” In further statements, Musk reiterated that, in his view, there is a problem with racism against white people.

ADL boss Jonathan Greenblatt wrote on Musk has more than 160 million followers on X. After earlier criticism, he emphasized that he had no anti-Semitic views. Yaccarino wrote on X on Thursday that discrimination from all sides must stop.

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