Increasing Fairness in Targeted Advertising. The Risk of Gender Stereotyping by Job Ad Algorithms

Report (2021)
Contributor(s)

Nadine Birner – Editor

Shlomi Hod – Editor

Matthias C. Kettemann – Editor (Universität Hamburg)

Alexander Pirang – Editor

Friederike Stock – Editor

Research Group
Organisation & Governance
Copyright
© 2021 Ezgi Eren, Lukas Hondrich, Linus Huang, Basileal Imana, Matthias C. Kettemann, Joanne Kuai, Marcela Mattiuzzo, Alexander Pirang, Ana Pop Stefanija, Sylvi Rzepka, M.T. Sekwenz, Zora Siebert, Sarah Stapel, Franka Weckner
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4619894
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 Ezgi Eren, Lukas Hondrich, Linus Huang, Basileal Imana, Matthias C. Kettemann, Joanne Kuai, Marcela Mattiuzzo, Alexander Pirang, Ana Pop Stefanija, Sylvi Rzepka, M.T. Sekwenz, Zora Siebert, Sarah Stapel, Franka Weckner
Research Group
Organisation & Governance
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Who gets to see what on the internet? And who decides why? These are among the most crucial questions regarding online communication spaces – and they especially apply to job advertising online. Targeted advertising on online platforms offers advertisers the chance to deliver ads to carefully selected audiences. Yet, optimizing job ads for relevance also carries risks – from problematic gender stereotyping to potential algorithmic discrimination. The winter 2021 Clinic Increasing Fairness in Targeted Advertising: The Risk of Gender Stereotyping by Job Ad Algorithms examined the ethical implications of targeted advertising, with a view to developing feasible, fairness-oriented solutions. The virtual Clinic brought together twelve fellows from six continents and eight disciplines. During two intense weeks in February 2021, they participated in an interdisciplinary solution-oriented process facilitated by a project team at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society. The fellows also had the chance to learn from and engage with a number of leading experts on targeted advertising, who joined the Clinic for thought-provoking spark sessions. The objective of the Clinic was to produce actionable outputs that contribute to improving fairness in targeted job advertising. To this end, the fellows developed three sets of guidelines – this resulting document – that cover the whole targeted advertising spectrum. While the guidelines provide concrete recommendations for platform companies and online advertisers, they may also be of interest to policymakers.

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