Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Facebook, Twitter Criticised By Bereaved Mother Over Baby Ads

IANS, 13 Dec, 2018 10:14 PM

    A mother who gave birth to a stillborn child has written an open letter to social networking sites to not target bereaved mothers with insensitive ads and promotions, the media reported.


    Gillian Brockell, working as a video editor in the opinions section at The Washington Post, lost her baby at 30 weeks' gestation.


    On December 11, Brockell wrote to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Experian, to rethink how they target ads after she was inundated with baby-related promotions, the BBC reported on Wednesday.


    According to her, if these companies were smart enough to deduce she had been pregnant, they should have also realised that her baby had died.


    "Did you not see the three days of silence, uncommon for a high-frequency user like me?" she wrote in a two-page letter on Twitter that has so far garnered over 60,000 likes, 25,000 retweets and 2,30,000 comments.


    "And then the announcement with keywords like 'heartbroken' and 'problem' and 'stillborn' and the 200 teardrop emoticons from my friends? Is that not something you could track?"


    On December 1, Brockell announced that her baby, Sohan Singh Gulshan, with partner Bobby, would be stillborn and she was in the process of delivering him.


    She noted that the technology companies should have picked up on this or other online activity resulting from her son's death.


    Instead, the companies remained focused on her earlier pregnancy-related posts and actions, Brockell was quoted as saying.


    Brockell added that when she tried to actively discourage the technology companies from showing her the pregnancy-related promotions, they misinterpreted her response.


    Brockell wrote: "When we... click 'I don't want to see this ad', and even answer your 'Why?' with the cruel-but-true 'It's not relevant to me', do you know what your algorithm decides?


    "It decides you've given birth, assumes a happy result, and deluges you with ads for the best nursing bras... tricks to get the baby to sleep through the night... and the best strollers to grow with your baby.


    "And then, after all that, Experian swoops in with the lowest tracking blow of them all: a spam email encouraging me to 'finish registering your baby' (I never 'started' but sure) to track his credit throughout the life he will never lead," Brockell rued.


    Facebook's advertising chief Rob Goldman apologised for Brockell's experience, the BBC said.


    However, Goldman noted that the platform's settings included an option to block ads about topics the user might find painful, including parenting.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Human Resources Advisor Says Employers Should Ensure Staff Unplugs On Vacation

    Human Resources Advisor Says Employers Should Ensure Staff Unplugs On Vacation
    TORONTO — It appears a majority of working Canadians don't mind handling work-related matters on their own time — except during vacations, according an online survey published Thursday.

    Human Resources Advisor Says Employers Should Ensure Staff Unplugs On Vacation

    Why Some People Don't Choose Equally Good Looking Mates?

    Why Some People Don't Choose Equally Good Looking Mates?
    Partners who become romantically involved soon after meeting tend to be more similar in physical attractiveness than friends-first couples or partners who get together after knowing each other for a while, says a study.

    Why Some People Don't Choose Equally Good Looking Mates?

    Young Women Watching Porn More Than Ever

    Young Women Watching Porn More Than Ever
    While the core audience for porn is predominantly male, there has been a surge in women porn viewers among the millennial generation (those born after 1980), an interesting study has revealed.

    Young Women Watching Porn More Than Ever

    Report Says Too Many Die Of Cardiac Arrest, Urges Steps To Teach Good Samaritans How To Help

    Report Says Too Many Die Of Cardiac Arrest, Urges Steps To Teach Good Samaritans How To Help
    Every year, about 395,000 people suffer cardiac arrest in their homes or other non-hospital settings — and less than 6 per cent of them survive, the Institute of Medicine estimated Tuesday.

    Report Says Too Many Die Of Cardiac Arrest, Urges Steps To Teach Good Samaritans How To Help

    O Say Can You Breathe? Feds Warn Of Air Pollution Hazard From Watching July 4 Fireworks

    O Say Can You Breathe? Feds Warn Of Air Pollution Hazard From Watching July 4 Fireworks
    NEW YORK — July Fourth fireworks fill the skies across the nation with more than sparkling bursts of colour. They spew pollution, too.

    O Say Can You Breathe? Feds Warn Of Air Pollution Hazard From Watching July 4 Fireworks

    Can Kids Bully Parents? Book Takes On What Happens When They Go Beyond 'Bossy' Or 'Spirited'

    Can Kids Bully Parents? Book Takes On What Happens When They Go Beyond 'Bossy' Or 'Spirited'
    NEW YORK — There's a difference in parenting between a little backtalk and kids actually bullying their grown-ups.

    Can Kids Bully Parents? Book Takes On What Happens When They Go Beyond 'Bossy' Or 'Spirited'