
TL;DR
This study reveals significant racial discrimination in online ad delivery by Google AdSense, where names associated with Black individuals more frequently trigger arrest-related ads compared to white-associated names, indicating bias in targeted advertising.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of racial bias in online advertising based on racially associated first names, highlighting potential algorithmic discrimination in ad delivery systems.
Findings
Black-associated names more often triggered arrest ads
White-associated names more often triggered neutral ads
Racial bias observed across two different websites
Abstract
A Google search for a person's name, such as "Trevon Jones", may yield a personalized ad for public records about Trevon that may be neutral, such as "Looking for Trevon Jones?", or may be suggestive of an arrest record, such as "Trevon Jones, Arrested?". This writing investigates the delivery of these kinds of ads by Google AdSense using a sample of racially associated names and finds statistically significant discrimination in ad delivery based on searches of 2184 racially associated personal names across two websites. First names, assigned at birth to more black or white babies, are found predictive of race (88% black, 96% white), and those assigned primarily to black babies, such as DeShawn, Darnell and Jermaine, generated ads suggestive of an arrest in 81 to 86 percent of name searches on one website and 92 to 95 percent on the other, while those assigned at birth primarily to…
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