Politics

Advertisers Push Back at Social Media Firms over Antisemitism

Antisemitic content on Elon Musk’s X has soared since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7.Credit…Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Social media’s antisemitism problem

The rise in antisemitism since the outbreak of war in the Middle East has ignited a clash between Wall Street donors and universities, and divided some workplaces. Now, the pressure is building on social media platforms, particularly Elon Musk’s X and TikTok, with advertisers, celebrities and influencers pulling spending and confronting executives about the proliferation of hate speech.

The backlash against Musk is spreading. IBM pulled about $1 million in ad spending from X after Media Matters for America, a left-wing advocacy group, showed that ads were appearing “next to content that touts Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party.” Other big brands, including Apple and Oracle, were also appearing next to the content. And a major Tesla shareholder said Musk’s behavior was damaging the carmaker’s brand.

Musk’s own missives aren’t helping. He posted to X his support for white nationalist conspiracy theories that Jewish communities were spreading hatred. Musk was already embroiled in a fight with the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish advocacy group, that says the rise of antisemitic content has risen more sharply on X than on rival platforms.

The latest controversy will renew questions about the authority of X’s C.E.O., Linda Yaccarino. She said on Thursday that the company had “been extremely clear about our efforts to combat antisemitism and discrimination.” (That prompted some to ask if she had addressed the matter with Musk.)

Yaccarino was brought in to win back advertisers after Musk bought Twitter last year and culled many content moderators. “Linda was a good hire, and the right hire, as long as she has the freedom to do what’s necessary,” Martin Sorrell, the British advertising mogul who now leads S4 Capital, a digital marketing firm, told DealBook earlier this year.

TikTok is also feeling the pressure over antisemitic content. More than a dozen Jewish celebrities and creators, including the actors Sacha Baron Cohen, Debra Messing and Amy Schumer, confronted TikTok executives this week. They said the company wasn’t doing enough to stamp out hate speech. They pointed to comments like “Hitler was right” or “I hope you end up like Anne Frank” under videos that they and other Jewish users had posted.

Cohen, who has previously slammed social media groups as “the greatest propaganda machine in history,” said that what “is happening at TikTok is it is creating the biggest antisemitic movement since the Nazis.”

Videos praising Osama bin Laden are surging in popularity on the platform, too. A flood of posts discussing a letter by bin Laden that defended the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 — it also said Americans were “servants” to Jews — have gone viral.

The White House condemned the resurfacing of the letter, and some Republican lawmakers have renewed their calls to ban the app.

Alex Haurek, a spokesman for TikTok, said the company was “aggressively removing this content and investigating how it got onto our platform,” but added that there was no “magic button” to fix the problems.

HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING

Unionized autoworkers back new pay deals. Members of the U.A.W. ratified (or were close to ratifying) the agreements to raise wages and boost benefits at Detroit’s Big Three automakers. The closest vote was at General Motors, where 55 percent of the nearly 36,000 union members cast ballots approving the deal. In related industry news, Hyundai will become the first carmaker to sell vehicles on Amazon.

A House committee concludes that Representative George Santos broke the law. The House Ethics Committee said it had found “substantial evidence” that the Republican of New York used campaign funds for personal purposes, defrauded donors and filed false or incomplete campaign finance disclosures. The committee will refer its findings to the Justice Department.

Alibaba shares plunge after company shelves the spinoff of its cloud computing unit. The Chinese tech giant’s stock fell almost 10 percent in Hong Kong after it reversed the plans and paused the I.P.O. of its supermarket unit. The company said that U.S. restrictions on chips had added uncertainty to its cloud business. Instead, it will refocus on artificial intelligence to power growth.

President Biden tells executives “real differences” remain with China. Business leaders attending the APEC summit in San Francisco were hoping for a kind of détente in the trade wars between Beijing and Washington. Instead, Biden told them that the U.S. would continue to press China with “smart policies and strong diplomacy.” Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader gave business leaders little reassurance that the business climate in China would improve.

C.E.O.s see another kind of “-flation”

For more than a year, consumer watchdogs and progressive lawmakers have accused companies of “greedflation,” increasing prices amid decades-high inflation. But just ahead of the holiday shopping season, the opposite pricing dynamic has popped up in quarterly earnings calls.

“We may be managing through a period of deflation in the months to come,” Doug McMillon, Walmart’s C.E.O., told analysts on Thursday. Shoppers could see grocery prices come under pressure and fall, he added. A similar trend is playing out for motorists. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. crude oil benchmark, has fallen roughly 20 percent since September.

Consumers are pulling back. That has been one of the big themes from recent earnings calls. Executives at the country’s biggest retailers, including Macy’s, Target, Home Depot and Walmart, have painted a picture of shoppers squeezed by a variety of forces.

“Overall, consumers are still spending, but pressures like higher interest rates, the resumption of student loan repayments, increased credit card debt and reduced savings rates have left them with less discretionary income, forcing them to make trade-offs,” Brian Cornell, Target’s chief executive, told analysts this week.

That could put pressure on pricing trends. Consumers are becoming less optimistic, economic data shows, and companies appear to be getting the message. Corporate chiefs have noticed that shoppers are increasingly putting away their wallets until they see discounts, sales or other promotions. And one phrase that’s beginning to disappear from analysts’ calls is “higher prices.”

The shift in spending could be good news for inflation hawks. The Fed started raising borrowing costs 20 months ago in an effort to wrestle down rising prices. This week’s Consumer Price Index showed further progress in slowing inflation, but it remains well above the Fed’s 2 percent target.

The White House could be watching, too. Voters have given Bidenomics, as the president’s economic record is known, low marks. Inflation, which hovered around a 40-year-high for several months last year, is one of their big grievances.


“I can tell you as I sit here today that I have no idea what I’m going to do.”

— U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, who is overseeing the government’s antitrust case against Google over its dominance in search. Mehta brought the evidentiary portion of the trial to a close on Thursday after 10 weeks of testimony.


Formula 1 is awash in Saudi money.Credit…Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Formula 1 comes to Sin City

Race fans are converging on Las Vegas this weekend for the first Formula 1 Grand Prix in the city since 1982. The action centers on a $250 million track built alongside the famous Strip.

Despite sluggish ticket sales and vacant hotel rooms in Las Vegas, the sport is awash in money, writes Vivienne Walt for DealBook. Since Liberty Media bought Formula 1 for about $4.6 billion in 2017, revenue has roughly doubled, and is expected to hit $3.6 billion this year.

Valuations are soaring. Consider these moves:

  • In June, RedBird Capital and Otro Capital, along with the actor Ryan Reynolds and the golfer Rory McIlroy, took a stake in France’s Alpine Racing team, valuing it at roughly $900 million.

  • On Thursday, Aston Martin F1 sold off a piece to Arctos Partners, the private equity firm, an investment that values the team at roughly $1 billion.

  • Sponsorships have doubled, with millions paid by Google, Dell and Cisco.

Saudi Arabia has gone all-in, too. The kingdom’s motor sport governing body struck a 10-year Formula 1 deal in 2020, worth roughly $900 million. Organizers brought the first race to Jeddah two years ago, complete with dancers in skintight bodysuits and a Justin Bieber concert. (The oil-rich nation’s sovereign investment fund was said to be considering a $20 billion bid for Formula 1 earlier this year.)

By muscling into the racing sector, Saudi Arabia hasn’t dodged accusations of sportswashing. But its presence hasn’t been nearly as controversial as its courtship of the PGA Tour, which has set off a Senate inquiry and has divided the pro golf world.

The flood of money has surprised some longtime watchers of auto racing. Many credit Netflix’s popular “Drive to Survive” series, depicting real-life drama on the F1 circuit. “The series has exploded interest in the sport,” Tom Rubython, editor of BusinessF1 Magazine, a British trade publication, told DealBook.

Elsewhere, Brad Pitt is shooting a movie about an F1 driver that’s due out on Apple TV in 2025. And on Thursday, Disney — which owns ESPN, the U.S. broadcaster of F1 races — released “Brawn,” a four-part documentary presented by Keanu Reeves, about an underdog F1 team that wins big.

But what happens in Vegas may point to the sport’s potential — and its limitations. One issue: Grand Prix F1 races feature 20 drivers with little suspense about who will win; Max Verstappen has already clinched this year’s competition. Rubython wonders how many new fans F1 will attract. The Netflix series, he said, “is far more popular than the actual racing.”

THE SPEED READ

Deals

  • Deal makers are focusing on London in the hunt for cheap M.&.A. targets. (Bloomberg)

  • Masanori Mochida, president of Goldman Sachs’s Japan business and one of the region’s best known deal makers, has resigned (FT)

Policy

  • Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, believes Europe needs its own version of the S.E.C. and a unified stock exchange. (FT)

  • Regulators have reportedly warned Wells Fargo that it’s not doing enough to police customer’s financial crimes. (WSJ)

  • Employees at Pushkin Industries have unionized following the most recent wave of layoffs at the podcast producer co-founded by Malcolm Gladwell. (Bloomberg)

Best of the rest

  • “Taylor Swift References Are Showing Up in Wall Street Research” (Bloomberg)

  • A podcast recommendation: “The Pirate of Prague,” hosted by Joe Nocera, the longtime DealBook contributor, and Peter Elkind, the investigative journalist. (podnews)

  • James Comey, the former F.B.I. director, is writing a murder mystery based on a hedge fund — “it sounds a lot like Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater” (NYPost)

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