You too are 100% wrong. If you work with them you do not have to cloak a thing. I have never cloaked a campaign on any site and am able to get things done.
Don't you think that they have to put up all of these TOS disclaimers to protect them against the irresponsible members of their open advertising platform. They do not have to enforce the rule. Have you ever seen a certain rebilling at home DVD campaign running in their most expensive slots.
I bet you don't think they allow promotional offers either per their TOS.
How much do you spend a day $50? What have you tried to work with them directly on to get approved?
I will fix your statement for you...
The ONLY THING I CAN TRY TO MAKE work on FB is ...
Don't you think that they have to put up all of these TOS disclaimers to protect them against the irresponsible members of their open advertising platform. They do not have to enforce the rule. Have you ever seen a certain rebilling at home DVD campaign running in their most expensive slots.
I bet you don't think they allow promotional offers either per their TOS.
How much do you spend a day $50? What have you tried to work with them directly on to get approved?
I will fix your statement for you...
The ONLY THING I CAN TRY TO MAKE work on FB is ...
It's a FACT that YOU NEED to cloak to make it work on fb.
Check this:
"Finally, no ad may be misleading about any offer that it makes. All health ads must include the name of the product or service advertised. Additionally, we're no longer accepting ads that offer a “free trial” requiring a paid monthly product subscription with a cancellation process, or ads for blogs or other sites that are actually a cover for any prohibited product."