These "embeds" offer free technical assistance and make sure the ads the nominees run on the platform get approved. They train politicians' staff on how to navigate Facebook's ad platform and even make suggestions on how to craft the perfect message to catch voters' attention. This decision was clearly made in response to the Cambridge Analytica fiasco the social network has been grappling with for quite a while now.

Facebook provided Trump's camp with assistance during his campaign, and according to the president's digital media director Brad Parscale, it was crucial to his victory. The social network said it offered the same deal to Hillary Clinton, but her camp refused the help. Facebook's link to the president drew criticism after it was revealed that Cambridge Analytica, which worked on the Trump campaign, used people's data taken from the platform without permission.

The company will now take a more detached approach, but it won't be cutting out candidates' camps completely -- it can't lose their business, after all. It will concentrate on beefing up its politics portal with all the information political organizations need. However, they can still contact the company directly to receive basic training on how to use its ads platform and to ask for assistance in getting their ads approved.