A technical glitch in Facebook’s advertising system led to customers being overcharged, sparking concerns about the company’s transparency in managing advertising budgets and campaign optimization.
Gizmodo reports that advertisers at Facebook (now known as Meta) were overcharged as a result of a technical error in the company’s advertising system, raising questions about how transparently the company manages advertising budgets and campaign optimization.
Some advertisers were charged more than double the amount agreed upon as a result of the bug, which primarily affected ad delivery on Facebook and, to a lesser extent, on Instagram. This resulted in losses of between hundreds of dollars and hundreds of thousands of dollars. The problem occurred just days after Mark Zuckerberg started his third round of layoffs in six months.
“A technical issue that has now been resolved caused ad delivery issues for some advertisers,” a Facebook spokesperson confirmed. Despite the company’s promise to follow its “normal refund process,” little information has been provided about the root cause of the problem.
Advertisers who were impacted by the bug have voiced their displeasure with Facebook and Zuckerberg’s silence. Many noticed a sharp increase in their charges that went beyond the caps imposed on their campaigns. Without any improvement in ad performance or campaign exposure, entire advertising budgets have, in some instances, been depleted in a matter of hours.
The company spokesperson explained that the problem “resulted in some miscalibration for advertising campaigns that were focused on optimizing for certain sales objectives. This caused faster campaign spending, resulting in more variable costs.”
Barry Holt, a well-known advertising expert who has overseen Facebook ad campaigns for more than ten years, drew attention to Zuckerberg’s problems with transparency. “Meta is extremely opaque, and it always has been,” Holt said. “All we get is a generic explanation that ‘we are aware of an issue.’ That’s better than nothing, but it’s not enough.”
Holt expressed concern for the tiny companies that depend on Facebook’s ad network and have slim profit margins. “We shouldn’t have to take action when Facebook has a bug. But for the small business who don’t have an ear at Facebook, there aren’t a lot of options,” he said. “Meta is just counting on advertisers to bend over and take it.”
Breitbart News previously reported that Facebook attempted to portray itself as a hero helping small business during its war of words with Apple.
The company claimed in a advertisement:
We’re standing up to Apple for small businesses everywhere
At Facebook, small business is at the core of our business. More than 10 million businesses use our advertising tools each month to find new customers, hire employees and engage with their communities.
Many in the small business community have shared concerns about Apple’s forced software update, which will limit businesses’ ability to run personalized ads and reach their customers effectively.
Forty-four percent of small to medium businesses started or increased their usage of personalized ads on social media during the pandemic, according to a new Deloitte study. Without personalized ads, Facebook data shows that the average small business advertiser stands to see a cut of over 60% in their sales for every dollar they spend.
Read more at Gizmodo here.
Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan