Into the Unknown: Accounting for Missing Demographic Data when Mitigating Ad Delivery Skew
Isabel Corpus, Allison Koenecke

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel budget split intervention that accounts for unknown users to reduce demographic ad delivery skew, especially in public service advertising, without excluding users with unknown demographics.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for addressing ad delivery skew by incorporating unknown users into demographic targeting, balancing cost and fairness.
Findings
The intervention reduces gender-based ad delivery skew effectively.
It balances targeting granularity with cost considerations.
The approach is practical for resource-constrained public service campaigns.
Abstract
Online advertising platforms use algorithmic systems to power the process of matching ads to users, termed ad delivery. Prior audits have demonstrated that ad delivery can be skewed by demographic attributes, such that ads are systematically under-delivered to certain groups despite advertiser intent to reach groups proportionally. This under-delivery raises a serious concern in the context of ads promoting public services, which might prevent certain groups of individuals from accessing information about resources on the basis of their demographic identity. In the absence of platform-provided solutions to skewed ad delivery, advertisers can counteract skew by targeting demographic groups directly. However, direct targeting excludes users whose demographics the platform cannot infer ("unknown users") if advertising platforms do not provide a way to target unknown users directly, as is…
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