How Big Data, Big
Marketing and Big Politics Turned 50 Million Americans into Lab Rats
By
Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport New York Editor
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While there may be
little here overtly criminal outside of the question of possibly having hacked
into Facebook, it immediately presented a fascinating look inside modern
politics—complete with Russian links.
The Times was working with the Observer of London and The Guardian, which presented a terrific insider’s view from Christopher Wylie, the company’s oddball founder. The detail and the sheer brashness of their work are telling.
The Times was working with the Observer of London and The Guardian, which presented a terrific insider’s view from Christopher Wylie, the company’s oddball founder. The detail and the sheer brashness of their work are telling.
Wylie went on
television in a mea culpa apology for work he did for
Cambridge Analytica. By the end of the day, a British television company
released “hidden” videos it had captured with Cambridge’s leaders offering to
sell its trickery to other political operations, including the one the TV
station was pretending it was.
A Canadian, Wylie was 24 when he thought up the company as a data analytics company that would polish its brazenness in the Brexit election in Britain before accepting a huge investment from Robert Mercer, the New York political conservative and turned the company’s attention to Stephen K. Bannon, who joined the company, and the Trump campaign.
Now legislators on both sides of the Atlantic want to know a lot more about how private Facebook information ended up in their hands, whether the result of a breach or actual participation by Facebook, and how Cambridge Analytica was able to politically weaponize the information to target would-be voters.
As The Guardian quotes
Wylie, in 2014, he went to work for Bannon, then the executive chairman of the
“alt-right” news network Breitbart,
“to bring big data and social media to an established military
methodology—information operations—then turn it on the U.S. electorate.”
It was Wylie who
oversaw that effort, and who, by his own description, was among a handful of
individuals who pursued threads that linked Brexit and Trump to Russians.
Wylie’s story also outlines how Cambridge Analytica had “reached out” to WikiLeaks to help distribute Hillary Clinton’s stolen emails in 2016. It also discusses that Cambridge’s British parent company, SCL, has agreements in place with the State Department to develop personality information.
Wylie’s story also outlines how Cambridge Analytica had “reached out” to WikiLeaks to help distribute Hillary Clinton’s stolen emails in 2016. It also discusses that Cambridge’s British parent company, SCL, has agreements in place with the State Department to develop personality information.
The effort by the
three newspapers relied on documents and inside witnesses to the effort. It is
likely to build a new path of investigation for Special Counsel Robert S.
Mueller III. Already, Congress members and Massachusetts’ attorney general are
calling for hearings with Facebook leader Mark Zuckerberg, whose lawyers say
Facebook never was hacked.
Again, let’s assert
that all of this is very detailed, with different levels of sourcing, in which
it is unclear what may have violated our communal sense of security as opposed
to what has crossed criminal lines. But that is exactly why these easy,
partisan calls either for immediate impeachment or to abandon the Mueller
investigation defy the levels of complexity in all of these investigations.
It was Wylie who “came
up with a plan to harvest the Facebook profiles of millions
of people in the U.S., and to use their private and personal information to
create sophisticated psychological and political profiles.
And then target them with political ads designed to work on their particular
psychological makeup. We ‘broke’ Facebook,
he says, adding that he did it on behalf of Steve Bannon.
Asked whether he
hacked Facebook, he said, “I’ll point out that I assumed it was entirely legal
and above board.” Indeed, as things turned out, Facebook invited them in under
a paid survey program, technically not a hack, but an unintended collection of
data, for sure.
In more formal
statements and inquiries, Facebook and Cambridge Analytica personnel have
denied hacking into Facebook and questioned whether Cambridge still has
Facebook data.
Cambridge Analytica’s CEO, Alexander Nix has said, “We do not work with Facebook data and we do not have Facebook data,” though that is at odds with other information and Wylie’s description.
Between June and August 2014, the profiles of more than 50 million Facebook users had been gathered. Wylie has a letter from Facebook’s own lawyers saying that Cambridge Analytica had acquired the data illegitimately. In any event, Facebook has known about this since 2015 and said nothing.
Cambridge Analytica’s CEO, Alexander Nix has said, “We do not work with Facebook data and we do not have Facebook data,” though that is at odds with other information and Wylie’s description.
Between June and August 2014, the profiles of more than 50 million Facebook users had been gathered. Wylie has a letter from Facebook’s own lawyers saying that Cambridge Analytica had acquired the data illegitimately. In any event, Facebook has known about this since 2015 and said nothing.
Among other things,
Cambridge Analytica had on staff a data miner named Aleksandr Kogan, Russian
born U.S. citizen.
According to Wylie, it was Kogan, a professor at Cambridge University in Britain and St. Petersburg State University in Russia, who had the skills in the Brexit situation to duplicate the information from a paid personality survey that allowed them to find information from “friends,” and turned into a collection that reached millions, giving Cambridge Analytica its own big data set.
Wylie’s account says Kogan obtained Facebook permission to draw on private information for research purposes only. Under British data protection laws, it’s illegal for personal data to be sold to a third party without consent.
According to Wylie, it was Kogan, a professor at Cambridge University in Britain and St. Petersburg State University in Russia, who had the skills in the Brexit situation to duplicate the information from a paid personality survey that allowed them to find information from “friends,” and turned into a collection that reached millions, giving Cambridge Analytica its own big data set.
Wylie’s account says Kogan obtained Facebook permission to draw on private information for research purposes only. Under British data protection laws, it’s illegal for personal data to be sold to a third party without consent.
“Facebook could see it
was happening,” says Wylie. “Their security protocols were triggered because
Kogan’s apps were pulling this enormous amount of data, but apparently Kogan
told them it was for academic use. So, they were like, ‘Fine.’ ”
Kogan maintains that
everything he did was legal and he had a “close working relationship” with
Facebook, which had granted him permission for his apps.
Cambridge Analytica
had its data. This was the foundation of everything it did next—how it
extracted psychological insights from the “seeders” and then built an algorithm
to profile millions more, reported The Guardian. Wylie said, “Everything was built
on the back of that data. The models, the algorithm. Everything. Why wouldn’t
you use it in your biggest campaign ever?”
Wylie said that
Cambridge Analytica pitched its services to other non-election businesses,
including Lukoil, Russia’s second-biggest oil producer, which had interest in
reaching international customers. It is reported that the Mueller investigation
is pursuing this connection as an example of trying to reach U.S. voters rather
than oil consumers. Like all big Russian companies, Lukoil has connections to
newly reelected Russian president Vladimir Putin.
There is no evidence
that Cambridge Analytica ever did any work for Lukoil. What these documents
show, though, is that in 2014 one of Russia’s biggest companies was fully
briefed on: Facebook, micro-targeting, data, election disruption, reported The
Guardian.
For its part, Facebook
has cut off Rogan, Wylie and others from Cambridge Analytica. But clearly, it
faces a future of questions about security, the use of private data in
political terms and its business model of selling advertising to targeted
audiences.
None of this sounds
like a specific U.S. crime (there may be civil penalties from outstanding
consent decrees involving privacy) by Facebook or Cambridge Analytica or even
the Trump campaign, but it is pretty interesting stuff about how rotten the
digital persuasion techniques have become and how they have become fundamental
to politics.
Tables Turned on
Cambridge Analytical
Senior executives at
Cambridge Analytica and its parent company, Strategic Communications
Laboratories, were secretly filmed by Britain’s
Channel 4 News suggesting they have used bribes and other shady
techniques to influence more than 200 elections across the globe.
In order to get the
footage, a Channel 4 News reporter “posed as a fixer for a wealthy client
hoping to get candidates elected in Sri Lanka.” In one clip, Cambridge
Analytica’s chief executive, Alexander Nix, appears to suggest to the
undercover reporter that he could “send some girls around to the candidate’s
house” as a means of getting dirt on the opponent.
In another, Nix suggests
covertly taping a bribery attempt and posting the video on the Internet.