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Home » Scam Ads Are Flooding Social Media. These Former Meta Staffers Have a Plan
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Scam Ads Are Flooding Social Media. These Former Meta Staffers Have a Plan

By News Room6 November 20253 Mins Read
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Scam Ads Are Flooding Social Media. These Former Meta Staffers Have a Plan
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When billionaire Dutch TV producer John de Mol sued Facebook in 2019 over its alleged failure to stop scammers from using his image in deceptive ads, the social media company sent Rob Leathern to Amsterdam to meet with Del Mol’s team and to speak with the media.

“The people who push these kinds of ads are persistent, they are well funded, and they are constantly evolving their deceptive tactics to get around our systems,” Leathern told Reuters at the time.

During his four years at the company now known as Meta, Leathern was in many ways the public face of its effort to fight scam ads. He led the business integrity unit tasked with preventing scammers and other bad actors from abusing Meta’s ad products. He regularly spoke to the media about scam ads. Leathern also oversaw transparency efforts like the Meta Ad Library, the industry’s first free and searchable repository of digital ads, and the launch of identity verification for political advertisers.

But since leaving Meta at the end of 2020, Leathern has watched as criminals deployed deepfakes and used artificial intelligence to craft more convincing scam ads. He said he became alarmed as major platforms failed to invest in teams and technology at the rate needed to fight such exploitative ads.

“The technology and the progress has stagnated the last five years,” Leathern said in an interview. “I also feel like we just don’t really know how bad it’s gotten or what the current state is. We don’t have objective ways of knowing.”

Leathern has teamed up with Rob Goldman, Meta’s former vice president of ads, to launch CollectiveMetrics.org, a nonprofit aimed at bringing more transparency to digital advertising in order to fight deceptive ads. The goal is to use data and analysis to measure things such as prevalence of online scam ads and to lift the veil on the opaque ad systems that generate hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue for companies like Meta.

Their effort comes as losses due to scams have skyrocketed around the world. The Global Anti-Scam Alliance, an organization that researches scam trends and includes leaders from Meta, Google, and other platforms on its advisory board, estimates that victims collectively lost at least a trillion dollars last year. Its 2025 Global State of Scams report found that 23 percent of people have lost money to a scam.

The report said that many victims fail to report scams due to feeling ashamed or because they don’t know who to tell. Of those who did report a scam, more than a third said that “no action was taken by the platform after reporting it.”

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