Do online ads suggestive of arrest records appear more often with searches of black-sounding names than white-sounding names? What is a black-sounding name or white-sounding name, anyway? How do you design technology to reason about societal consequences like structural racism? Let's take a scientific dive into online ad delivery to find answers.
"Have you ever been arrested?" Imagine this question appearing whenever someone enters your name in a search engine. Perhaps you are in competition for an award or a new job, or maybe you are in a position of trust, such as a professor or a volunteer. Perhaps you are dating or engaged in any one of hundreds of circumstances for which someone wants to learn more about you online. Appearing alongside your accomplishments is an advertisement implying you may have a criminal record, whether you actually have one or not. Worse, the ads may not appear for your competitors.
Employers frequently ask whether applicants have ever been arrested or charged with a crime, but if an employer disqualifies a job applicant based solely upon information indicating an arrest record, the company may face legal consequences. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is the federal agency charged with enforcing Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, a law that applies to most employers, prohibiting employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, and extended to those having criminal records.5,11 Title VII does not prohibit employers from obtaining criminal background information, but a blanket policy of excluding applicants based solely upon information indicating an arrest record can result in a charge of discrimination.
To make a determination, the EEOC uses an adverse impact test that measures whether certain practices, intentional or not, have a disproportionate effect on a group of people whose defining characteristics are covered by Title VII. To decide, you calculate the percentage of people affected in each group and then divide the smaller value by the larger to get the ratio and compare the result to 80. If the ratio is less than 80, then the EEOC considers the effect disproportionate and may hold the employer responsible for discrimination.6
What about online ads suggesting someone with your name has an arrest record? Title VII only applies if you have an arrest record and can prove the employer inappropriately used the ads.
Are the ads commercial free speecha constitutional right to display the ad associated with your name? The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution protects advertising, but the U.S. Supreme Court set out a test for assessing restrictions on commercial speech, which begins by determining whether the speech is misleading.3 Are online ads suggesting the existence of an arrest record misleading if no one by that name has an arrest record?
Assume the ads are free speech: what happens when these ads appear more often for one racial group than another? Not everyone is being equally affected by free speech. Is that free speech or racial discrimination?
Racism, as defined by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, is "any attitude, action, or institutional structure which subordinates a person or group because of their color."16 Racial discrimination results when a person or group of people is treated differently based on their racial origins, according to the Panel on Methods for Assessing Discrimination of the National Research Council.12 Power is a necessary precondition, for it depends on the ability to give or withhold benefits, facilities, services, and opportunities from someone who should be entitled to them and is denied on the basis of race. Institutional or structural racism, as defined in The Social Work Dictionary, is a system of procedures/patterns whose effect is to foster discriminatory outcomes or give preferences to members of one group over another.1
These considerations frame the relevant socio-legal landscape. Now we turn to whether online ads suggestive of arrest records appear more often for one racial group than another among a sample of racially associated names, and if so, how technology can solve the problem.
What is the suspected pattern of ad delivery? Here is an overview using real-world examples.
Earlier this year, a Google search for Latanya Farrell, Latanya Sweeney, and Latanya Lockett yielded ads and criminal reports like those shown in Figure 1. The ads appeared on Google.com (Figure 1a, 1c) and on a news website, Reuters.com, to which Google supplies ads (Figure 1c), All the ads in question linked to instantcheckmate.com (Figure 1b, 1d). The first ad implied Latanya Farrell might have been arrested. Was she? Clicking on the link and paying the requisite fee revealed the company had no arrest record for her or Latanya Sweeney, but there is a record for Latanya Lockett.
In comparison, searches for Kristen Haring, Kristen Sparrow, and Kristen Lindquist did not yield any instantcheckmate.com ads, even though the company's database reported having records for all three names and arrest records for Sparrow and Lindquist.
Searches for Jill Foley, Jill Schneider, and Jill James displayed instantcheckmate.com ads with neutral copy; the word arrest did not appear in the ads even though arrest records for all three names appeared in the company's database. Figure 2 shows ads appearing on Google.com and Reuters.com and criminal reports from instantcheckmate.com for the first two names.
Finally, we considered a proxy for race associated with these names. Figure 3 shows racial distinction in Google image search results for Latanya, Latisha, Kristen, and Jill, respectively. The faces associated with Latanya and Latisha tend to be black, while white faces dominate the images of Kristen and Jill.
These handpicked examples describe the suspected pattern: ads suggesting arrest tend to appear with names associated with blacks, and neutral or no ads appear with names associated with whites, regardless of whether the company placing the ad has an arrest record associated with the name.
Who generates the ad's text? Who decides when and where an ad will appear? What is the relationship among Google, a news website such as Reuters, and Instant Checkmate in the previous examples? An overview of Google AdSense, the program that delivered the ads, provides the answers.
In printed newspapers, everyone who reads the publication sees the same ad in the same space. Online ads can be tailored to the reader's search criteria, interests, geographical location, and so on. Any two readers (or even the same reader returning to the same website) might view different ads.
Google AdSense is the largest provider of dynamic online advertisements, placing ads for millions of sponsors on millions of websites.9 In the first quarter of 2011, Google earned $2.43 billion through Google AdSense.10 Several different advertising arrangements exist, but for simplicity this article describes only those features of Google AdSense specific to the Instant Checkmate ads in question.
When a reader enters search criteria in an enrolled website, Google AdSense embeds into the Web page of results ads believed to be relevant to the search. Figures 1 and 2 show ads delivered by Google AdSense in response to various firstname lastname searches.
An advertiser provides Google with search criteria, copies of possible ads to deliver, and a bid to pay if a reader clicks the delivered ad. (For convenience, this article conflates Google AdSense with the related Google Ad-words.) Google operates a real-time auction across bids for the same search criteria based on a "quality score" for each bid. A quality score includes many factors such as the past performance of the ad and characteristics of the company's website.10 The ad having the highest quality score appears first, the second-highest second, and so on, and Google may elect not to show any ad if it considers the bid too low or if showing the ad exceeds a threshold (For example, a maximum account total for the advertiser). The Instant Checkmate ads in figures 1 and 2 often appeared first among ads, implying Instant Checkmate ads had the highest quality scores.
A website owner wanting to "host" online ads enrolls in AdSense and modifies the website to send a user's search criteria to Google and to display returning ads under a banner "Ads by Google" among search results. For example, Reuters.com hosts AdSense, and entering Latanya Sweeney in the search bar generated a new Web page with ads under the banner "Ads by Google" (Figure 1c).
There is no cost for displaying an ad, but if the user actually clicks on the ad, the advertiser pays the auction price. This may be as little as a few pennies, and the amount is split between Google and the host. Clicking the Latanya Sweeney ad on Reuters.com (Figure 1c) would cause Instant Checkmate to pay its auction amount to Google, and Google would split the amount with Reuters.
What search criteria did Instant Checkmate specify? Will ads be delivered for made-up names? Ads displayed on Google.com allow users to learn why a specific ad appeared. Clicking the circled "i" in the ad banner (for example, Figure 1c) leads to a Web page explaining the ads. Doing so for ads in figures 1 and 2 reveals that the ads appeared because the search criteria matched the exact first- and last-name combination searched.
So, the search criteria must consist of both first and last names; and the names should belong to real people because a company presumably bids on records it sells.
The next steps describe the systematic construction of a list of racially associated first and last names for real people to use as search criteria. Neither Instant Checkmate nor Google are presumed to have used such a list. Rather, the list provides a qualified sample of names to use in testing ad-delivery systems.
Black-identifying and white-identifying first names occur with sufficiently higher frequency in one race than the other.
In 2003 Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) conducted an experiment in which they provided resumes to job posts that were virtually identical, except some of the resumes had black-identifying names and others had white-identifying names. Results showed white names received 50% more interviews.2
The study used names given to black and white babies in Massachusetts between 1974 and 1979, defining black-identifying and white-identifying names as those that have the highest ratio of frequency in one racial group to frequency in the other racial group.
In the popular book Freakonomics, Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner report the top 20 whitest- and blackest-identifying girl and boy names. The list comes from earlier work by Levitt and Roland Fryer, which shows a pattern change in the way blacks named their children starting in the 1970s.7 It was compiled from names given to black and white children recorded in California birth records from 19612000 (more than 16 million births).
To test ad delivery, I combined the lists from these prior studies and added two black female names, Latanya and Latisha. Table 1 lists the names used here, consisting of eight for each of the categories: white female, black female, white male, and black male from the Bertrand and Mullainathan study (first row in Table 1); and the first eight names for each category from the Fryer and Levitt work (second row in Table 1). Emily, a white female name, Ebony, a black female name, and Darnell, a black male name, appear in both rows. The third row includes the observation shown in Figure 3. Removing duplicates leaves a total of 63 distinct first names.
Web searches provide a means of locating and harvesting a real person's first and last name (full name) by sampling names of professionals appearing on the Web; and sampling names of people active on social media sites and blogs (netizens).
Professionals often have their own Web pages that list positions and describe prior accomplishments. Several professions have degree designations (for example, Ph.D., M.D., J.D., or MBA) associated with people in that profession. A Google search for a first name and a degree designation can yield lists of people having that first name and degree.
The next step is to visit the Web page associated with each full name, and if an image is discernible, record whether the person appears black, white, or other.
Here are two examples from my test. A Google search for Ebony PhD revealed links for real people having Ebony as a first namespecifically, Ebony Bookman, Ebony Glover, Ebony Baylor, and Ebony Utley. I harvested the full names appearing on the first three pages of search results, using searches with other degree designations to find at least 10 full names for Ebony. Clicking on the link associated with Ebony Glover displayed an image.8 The Ebony Glover in this study appeared black.
Similarly, search results for Jill PhD listed professionals whose first name is Jill. Visiting links yielded Web pages with more information about each person. For example, Jill Schneider's Web page had an image showing that she is white.14
PeekYou searches were used to harvest a sample of full names of netizens having racially associated first names. The website peekyou.com compiles online and offline information on individualsthereby connecting residential information with Facebook and Twitter users, bloggers, and othersthen assigns its own rating to reflect the size of each person's online footprint. Search results from peekyou.com list people having the highest score first, and include an image of the person.
A PeekYou search of Ebony listed Ebony Small, Ebony Cams, Ebony King, Ebony Springer, and Ebony Tan. A PeekYou search for Jill listed Jill Christopher, Jill Spivack, Jill English, Jill Pantozzi, and Jill Dobson. After harvesting these and other full names, I reported the race of the person if discernible.
Armed with the approach just described, I harvested 2,184 racially associated full names of people with an online presence from September 24 through October 22, 2012. Most images associated with black-identifying names were of black people (88%), and an even greater percentage of images associated with white-identifying names were of white people (96%).15
Google searches of first names and degree designations were not as productive as first name lookups on PeekYou. On Google, white male names, Cody, Connor, Tanner, and Wyatt retrieved results with those as last names rather than first names; the black male name, Kenya, was confused with the country; and black names Aaliyah, Deja, Diamond, Hakim, Malik, Marquis, Nia, Precious, and Rasheed retrieved fewer than 10 full names. Only Diamond posed a problem with PeekYou searches, seemingly confused with other online entities. Diamond was therefore excluded from further consideration.
Some black first names had perfect predictions (100%): Aaliyah, DeAndre, Imani, Jermaine, Lakisha, Latoya, Malik, Tamika, and Trevon. The worst predictors of blacks were Jamal (48%) and Leroy (50%). Among white first names, 12 of 31 names made perfect predictions: Brad, Brett, Cody, Dustin, Greg, Jill, Katelyn, Katie, Kristen, Matthew, Tanner, and Wyatt; the worst predictors of whites were Jay (78%) and Brendan (83%). These findings strongly support the use of these names as racial indicators in this study.
Sixty-two full names appeared in the list twice even though the people were not necessarily the same. No name appeared more than twice. Overall, Google and PeekYou searches tended to yield different names.
With this list of names suggestive of race, I was ready to test which ads appear when these names are searched. To do this, I examined ads delivered on two sites, Google.com and Reuters.com, in response to searches of each full name, once at each site. The browser's cache and cookies were cleared before each search, and copies of Web pages received were preserved. Figures 1, 2, 5, and 6 provide examples.
Of the more than 2,000 names searched, 78% had at least one ad for public records about the person being searched.
From September 24 through October 23, 2012, I searched 2,184 full names on Google.com and Reuters.com. The searches took place at different times of day, different days of the week, with different IP and machine addresses operating in different parts of the United States using different browsers. I manually searched 1,373 of the names and used automated means17 for the remaining 812 names. Here are nine observations.
More than 400 Instant Checkmate ads appeared on Google, and 90% of these were suggestive of arrest, regardless of race. Still, a greater percentage of Instant Checkmate ads suggestive of arrest displayed for black-associated first names than for whites. Of the 366 ads that appeared for black-identifying names, 92% were suggestive of arrest. Far fewer ads displayed for white-identifying names (66 total), but 80% were suggestive of arrest. This difference in the ratios 92 and 80 is statistically significant, with less than a 1% probability that the data can be explained by chance (chi-square test: X2(1)=7.71, p < 0.01). The EEOC's adverse impact test for measuring discrimination is 40%, so if this were employment, a charge of discrimination might result. (The adverse impact test gives 100-92=8 and 100-80=20; dividing 8 by 20 equals 40.)
A greater percentage of Instant Checkmate ads having the word arrest in ad text appeared for black-identifying first names than for white-identifying first names within professional and netizen subsets, too. On Reuters.com, which hosts Google AdSense ads, a black-identifying name was 25% more likely to generate an ad suggestive of an arrest record.
These findings reject the hypothesis that no difference exists in the delivery of ads suggestive of an arrest record based on searches of racially associated names.
The people behind the names used in this study are diverse. Political figures included Maryland State Representatives Aisha Braveboy (arrest ad) and Jay Jacobs (neutral ad); Jill Biden (neutral ad), wife of U.S. Vice President Joe Biden; and Claire McCaskill, whose campaign ad for the U.S. Senate in Missouri appeared alongside an Instant Checkmate ad using the word arrest (Figure 5). Names mined from academic websites included graduate students, staff, and accomplished academics, such as Amy Gutmann, president of the University of Pennsylvania. Dustin Hoffman (arrest ad) was among names of celebrities used. A smorgasbord of athletes appeared, from local to national fame (assorted neutral and arrest ads). The youngest person whose name was used in the study was a missing 11-year-old black girl.
More than 1,100 of the names harvested for this study were from PeekYou, with scores estimating the name's overall presence on the Web. As expected, celebrities get the highest scores of 10s and 9s. Only four names used here had a PeekYou score of 10, and 12 had a score of 9, including Dustin Hoffman. Only two ads appeared for these high-scoring names; an abundance of ads appeared across the remaining spectrum of PeekYou scores. We might presume that the bid price needed to display an ad is greater for more popular names with higher PeekYou scores. Knowing that very few high-scoring people were in the study and that ads appeared across the full spectrum of PeekYou scores reduces concern about variations in bid prices.
Different Instant Checkmate ads sometimes appeared for the same person. About 200 names had Instant Checkmate ads on both Reuters.com and Google.com, but only 42 of these names received the same ad. The other 82% of names received different ads across the two sites. At most, three distinct ads appeared across Reuters.com and Google.com for the same name. Figure 6 shows the assortment of ads appearing for Latisha Smith. Having different possible ad texts for a name reminds us that while Instant Checkmate provided the ad texts, Google's technology selected among the possible texts in deciding which to display. Figure 6 shows ads both suggestive of arrest and not, though more ads appear suggestive of arrest than not.
Why is this discrimination occurring? Is Instant Checkmate, Google, or society to blame? We do not yet know. Google understands that an advertiser may not know which ad copy will work best, so the advertiser may provide multiple templates for the same search string, and the "Google algorithm" learns over time which ad text gets the most clicks from viewers. It does this by assigning weights (or probabilities) based on the click history of each ad. At first, all possible ad texts are weighted the same and are equally likely to produce a click. Over time, as people tend to click one ad copy over others, the weights change, so the ad text getting the most clicks eventually displays more frequently.
Did Instant Checkmate provide ad templates suggestive of arrest disproportionately to black-identifying names? Or did Instant Checkmate provide roughly the same templates evenly across racially associated names but users clicked ads suggestive of arrest more often for black-identifying names? As mentioned earlier, during a conference call with the founders of Instant Checkmate and their lawyer, the company's representatives asserted that Instant Checkmate gave the same ad text to Google for groups of last names (not first names) in its database; they expressed no other criteria for name and ad selection.
This study is a start, but more research is needed. To preserve research opportunities, I captured additional results for 50 hits on 2,184 names across 30 Web sites serving Google Ads to learn the underlying distributions of ad occurrences per name. While analyzing the data may prove illuminating, in the end the basic message presented in this study does not change: there is discrimination in delivery of these ads.
How can technology solve this problem? One answer is to change the quality scores of ads to discount for unwanted bias. The idea is to measure real-time bias in an ad's delivery and then adjust the weight of the ad accordingly at auction. The general term for Google's technology is ad exchange. This approach generalizes to other ad exchanges (not just Google's); integrates seamlessly into the way ad exchanges operate, allowing minimal modifications to harmonize ad deliveries with societal norms; and, works regardless of the cause of the discriminationadvertiser bias in placing ads or society bias in selecting ads.
Discrimination, however, is at the heart of online advertising. Differential delivery is the very idea behind it. For example, if young women with children tend to purchase baby products and retired men with bass boats tend to purchase fishing supplies, and you know the viewer is one of these two types, then it is more efficient to offer ads for baby products to the young mother and fishing rods to the fisherman, not the other way around.
Discrimination is at the heart of online advertising. Differential delivery is the very idea behind it.
On the other hand, not all discrimination is desirable. Societies have identified groups of people to protect from specific forms of discrimination. Delivering ads suggestive of arrest much more often for searches of black-identifying names than for white-identifying names is an example of unwanted discrimination, according to American social and legal norms. This is especially true because the ads appear regardless of whether actual arrest records exist for the names in the company's database.
The good news is that we can use the mechanics and legal criteria described earlier to build technology that distinguishes between desirable and undesirable discrimination in ad delivery. Here I detail the four key components:
In this study the groups are black and white, and the sentiments are negative and neutral. Table 2 shows a summary chart. Of the 488 ads that appeared for the black group, 291 (or 60%) had negative sentiment. Of the 638 ads displayed for the white group, 308 (or 48%) had negative sentiment. The difference is statistically significant (X2(1)=14.32, p < 0.001) and has an adverse impact measure of (40/52), or 77%.
An easy way of incorporating this analysis into an ad exchange is to decide which bias test is critical (for example, statistical significance or adverse impact test) and then factor the test result into the quality score for the ad at auction. For example, if we were to modify the ad exchange not to display any ad having an adverse impact score of less than 80, which is the EEOC standard, then arrest ads for blacks would sometimes appear, but would not be overly disproportionate to whites, regardless of advertiser or click bias.
Though this study served as an example throughout, the approach generalizes to many other forms of discrimination and combats other ways ad exchanges may foster discrimination.
Suppose female names tend to get neutral ads such as "Buy now," while male names tend to get positive ads such as "Buy now. 50% off!" Or suppose black names tend to get neutral ads such as "Looking for Ebony Jones," while white names tend to get positive ads such as "Meredith Jones. Fantastic!" Then the same analysis would suppress some occurrences of the positive ads so as not to foster a discriminatory effect.
This approach does not stop the appearance of negative ads for a store placed by a disgruntled customer or ads placed by competitors on brand names of the competition, unless these are deemed to be protected groups.
Nonprotected marketing discrimination can continue even to protected groups. For example, suppose search terms associated with blacks tend to get neutral ads for some music artists, while those associated with whites tend to get neutral ads for other music artists. All ads would appear regardless of the disproportionate distribution because the ads are not subject to suppression.
As a final example, this approach allows everyone to be negatively impacted as long as the impact is approximately the same. Suppose all ads for public records on all names, regardless of race, were equally suggestive of arrest and had almost the same number of impressions; then no ads suggestive of arrest would be suppressed.
Computer scientist Cynthia Dwork and her colleagues have been working on algorithms that assure racial fairness.4 Their general notion is to ensure similar groups receive similar ads in proportions consistent with the population. Utility is the critical concern with this direction because not all forms of discrimination are bad, and unusual and outlier ads could be unnecessarily suppressed. Still, their research direction looks promising.
In conclusion, this study demonstrates that technology can foster discriminatory outcomes, but it also shows that technology can thwart unwanted discrimination.
The author thanks Ben Edelman, Claudine Gay, Gary King, Annie Lewis, and weekly Topics in Privacy participants (David Abrams, Micah Altman, Merce Crosas, Bob Gelman, Harry Lewis, Joe Pato, and Salil Vadhan) for discussions; Adam Tanner for first suspecting a pattern; Diane Lopez and Matthew Fox in Harvard's Office of the General Counsel for making publication possible in the face of legal threats; and Sean Hooley for editorial suggestions. Data from this study is available at foreverdata.org and the IQSS Dataverse Network. Supported in part by NSF grant CNS-1237235 and a gift from Google, Inc.
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1. Barker R. The Social Work Dictionary (5th ed.). NASW Press, Washington, DC,ss, 2003.
2. Bertrand, M. and Mullainathan, S. Are Emily and Greg more employable than Lakisha and Jarnal? A field experiment on labor market discrimination. NBER Working Paper No. 9873, 2003; http://www.nber.org/papers/w9873.
3. Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp, v. Public Service Commission of New York. Supreme Court of the United States, 447 U.S. 557, 1980.
4. Dwork, C., Hardt, M., et al. 2011. Fairness through awareness. arXiv:1104.3913; http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.3913.
5. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Consideration of arrest and conviction records in employment decisions under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Washington, DC, 915.002, 2012. http://www.eeoc.gov/laws/guidance/arrest_conviction.cfm.
6. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Uniform guidelines on employee selection procedures. Washington, DC, 1978.
7. Fryer, R. and Levitt, S. The causes and consequences of distinctively black names. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 59, 3 (2004); http://pricetheory.uchicago.edu/levitt/Papers/FryerLevitt2004.pdf.
8. Glover, E.; http://www.physiology.emory.edu/FIRST/ebony2.htm (archived at http://foreverdata.org/onlineads).
9. Google AdSense; http://google.com/adsense.
10. Google. Google announces first quarter 2011 financial results; http://investor.google.com/earnings/2011/Q1_google_earnings.html.
11. Harris, P. and Keller, K. Ex-offenders need not apply: The criminal background check in hiring decisions. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 21, 1 (2005), 630.
12. Panel on Methods for Assessing Discrimination, National Research Council. Measuring racial discrimination. National Academy Press, Washington, DC, 2004.
13. Pang, B. and Lee, L. A sentimental education: sentiment analysis using subjectivity summarization based on minimum cuts. Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics (2004).
14. Schneider, J. http://www.lehigh.edu/bio/jill.html (Archived at http://foreverdata.org/onlineads).
15. Sweeney, L. Discrimination in online ad delivery (2013). (For details, see full technical report at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2208240. Data, including Web pages and ads, archived at http://foreverdata.org/onlineads).
16. U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Racism in America and how to combat it. Washington, DC, 1970.
17. WebShot Command Line Server Edition. Version 1.9.1.1; http://www.websitescreenshots.com/.
Figure 1. Ads from a Google search of three different names beginning with first name "Latanya."
Figure 2. Ad from a search of three different names beginning with the first name "Jill."
Figure 3. Image search results for first names Latanya, Latisha, Kirsten, and Jill.
Figure 4. Template for ads for public records on Reuters for frequencies less than 10. Full list is available.15
Figure 5. Senator Claire McCaskill's campaign ad appeared next to an ad using the word "arrest."
Table 1. Black-identifying names and white-identifying first names.
Table 2. Negative and neutral sentiments of black and white groups.
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