Nfld. & Labrador
The company says automated technology is used to to keep nudity off its apps, but ‘sometimes it doesn’t know a walla walla onion from a, well, you know.’
Sometimes the algorithm ‘doesn’t know a walla walla onion from a, well, you know,’ says Facebook
Alex Kennedy · CBC News ·
After a St. John’s seed company’s onions were deemed too sexy for Facebook, the social media giant says the advertisement has now been restored.
On Tuesday, Gaze Seed company manager Jackson McLean told CBC News the business was unable to advertise its walla walla onions on the site, after a photo of the product was deemed “an overtly sexual image.” by Facebook.
“I guess something about the two round shapes there could be misconstrued as boobs or something, nude in some way,” McLean said Monday. “I just thought it was funny.”
On Wednesday, Facebook issued a statement to CBC News saying the ad had been restored and that Gaze Seed Company is now able to use the photo on the site.
“We use automated technology to keep nudity off our apps,” wrote Meg Sinclair, Facebook Canada’s head of communications. “But sometimes it doesn’t know a walla walla onion from a, well, you know. We restored the ad and are sorry for the business’ trouble.”
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About the Author
Alex Kennedy works in St. John’s for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador.
With files from Alex Kennedy and Anthony Germain