TRUMP CONSULTANTS HARVESTED DATA FROM 50 MILLION FACEBOOK USERS: REPORTS
Data analytics firm
Cambridge Analytica harvested private information from more than 50 million
Facebook users in developing techniques to support President Donald Trump’s
2016 election campaign, the New York Times and London’s Observer reported on
Saturday.
The newspapers,
which cited former Cambridge Analytica employees, associates and documents,
said the data breach was one of the largest in the history of Facebook Inc.
Facebook on Friday
said it was suspending Cambridge Analytica after finding data privacy policies
had been violated.
The Observer said
Cambridge Analytica used the data, taken without authorization in early 2014,
to build a software program to predict and influence choices at the ballot box.
The paper quoted
Cambridge Analytica whistleblower Christopher Wylie, who worked with an
academic at Cambridge University to obtain the data, as saying the system could
profile individual voters to target them with personalized political
advertisements.
The more than 50
million profiles represented around a third of active North American Facebook
users, and nearly a quarter of potential U.S. voters, at the time, the paper
said.
“We exploited
Facebook to harvest millions of people’s profiles. And built models to exploit
what we knew about them and target their inner demons. That was the basis that
the entire company was built on,” the Observer quoted Wylie as saying.
The New York Times
said interviews with a half-dozen former Cambridge Analytica employees and
contractors, and a review of the firm’s emails and documents, revealed it not
only relied on the private Facebook data but still possesses most or all of it.
The Observer said
the data was collected through an app called this is your digital life, built by
academic Aleksandr Kogan, separately from his work at Cambridge University.
Through Kogan’s
company Global Science Research (GSR), in collaboration with Cambridge
Analytica, hundreds of thousands of users were paid to take a personality test
and agreed to have their data collected for academic use, the Observer said.
However, the app
also collected the information of the test-takers’ Facebook friends, leading to
the accumulation of a data pool tens of millions-strong, the paper said. It
said Facebook’s “platform policy” allowed only collection of friends data to
improve user experience in the app and barred it from being sold on or used for
advertising.
Facebook said in a
statement on Friday it had suspended Cambridge Analytica and its parent group
Strategic Communication Laboratories (SCL) after receiving reports they did not
delete information about Facebook users that had been inappropriately shared.
Strategic
Communication Laboratories and the Trump campaign were not immediately
available for comment. Facebook did not mention the Trump campaign or any other
campaigns in its statement, which was attributed to the social network’s deputy
general counsel, Paul Grewal. They did not immediately comment on the Times and
Observer stories.
“We will take legal
action if necessary to hold them responsible and accountable for any unlawful
behavior,” Facebook said, adding that it was continuing to investigate the
claims. Cambridge Analytica worked for the failed presidential campaign of U.S.
Senator Ted Cruz and then for Trump’s presidential campaign. On its website, it
says it “provided the Donald J. Trump for President campaign with the expertise
and insights that helped win the White House.”
Brad Parscale, who
ran Trump’s digital ad operation in 2016 and is his 2020 re-election campaign
manager, declined to comment on Friday.
In past interviews
with Reuters, Parscale has said Cambridge Analytica played a minor role as a
contractor in the 2016 Trump campaign, and that the campaign used voter data
from a Republican-affiliated organization rather than Cambridge Analytica.
UNUSUAL STEP
Facebook’s Grewal
said the company was taking the unusual step of announcing the suspension
“given the public prominence” of Cambridge Analytica and its parent
organization.
The suspension means
Cambridge Analytica and SCL cannot buy ads on the world’s largest social media
network or administer pages belonging to clients, Andrew Bosworth, a Facebook
vice president, said in a Twitter post.
Trump’s campaign
hired Cambridge Analytica in June 2016 and paid it more than $6.2 million,
according to Federal Election Commission records.
Cambridge Analytica
says it uses “behavioral microtargeting,” or combining analysis of people’s
personalities with demographics, to predict and influence mass behavior. It
says it has data on 220 million Americans, two-thirds of the U.S. population.
It has worked on
other campaigns in the United States and other countries, and it is funded by
Robert Mercer, a prominent supporter of politically conservative groups.
Facebook in its
statement described a rocky relationship with Cambridge Analytica and two
individuals going back to 2015.
That year, Facebook
said, it learned that Kogan, the Cambridge University professor, lied to the
company and violated its policies by sharing data that he acquired with a
so-called “research app” that used Facebook’s login system.
Kogan was not
immediately available for comment.
The app was
downloaded by about 270,000 people. Facebook said Kogan gained access to
profile and other information "in a legitimate way" but "he did
not subsequently abide by our rules" when he passed the data to
SCL/Cambridge Analytica and Wylie of Eunoia Technologies. bit.ly/2FZU1Ir Eunoia
did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Facebook said it cut
ties to Kogan’s app when it learned of the violation in 2015, and asked for
certification from Kogan and all parties he had given data to that the
information had been destroyed.
Although all
certified they had destroyed the data, Facebook said it received reports in the
past several days that “not all data was deleted,” prompting the suspension
announced on Friday.
SOURCE: REUTERS
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