Susan Canavari: You know, we do feel like as an advertiser, it's incredibly important to our brand health that our advertising and all of our content is in contextual places that is far away from hate and fake news as possible so internally, over the last several months, we have processes in place to ensure that
none of our advertiser and our content is near fake news or hate.
None of the advertisers or banks I work with get to review or edit any of our content, and unless specifically noted, none of our posts are sponsored or endorsed by any other entity.
None of the advertisers for which we provide testimonials or comments on this site pay us commissions, referral fees, or any other fees.
Not exact matches
An
advertiser can come to us and say, «Hey, I'd like to reach women within this age range» and if we understand who is in that then we can show that ad but
none of that information goes to the
advertiser.
None of that would be possible without hundreds
of millions
of users willingly sharing enough details about themselves to be categorized by
advertisers.
The company also pointed out that
none of these accounts were registered
advertisers on the site.
Twitter said it took action on the accounts over violation
of the site's rules, and added that
none of them were registered
advertisers on the platform.
The company also said
none of the accounts were registered
advertisers on the site.
Twitter also insisted that
none of these accounts were registered
advertisers on the site.