Medicine Hat News

Parties urged to disclose data-mining practices

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For years, Megan Boler’s research focused on the power of social media as a democratiz­ing force, giving voice to the voiceless and empowering everyday people to come together and participat­e more meaningful­ly in how they are governed.

But the University of Toronto social justice professor said that even in the heady days of the Arab Spring and Obama’s social mediaaided ascendency to the White House, there were slivers of concern about how the technology might be abused.

“I would have conversati­ons with colleagues who would say things like, ‘These are the halcyon days of the internet and we’re going to look back and wish we had those days back.’ “

That future appears to have arrived, as reports swirl about foreign interferen­ce in U.S. elections, the micro-targeting of social media users to sow division and mistrust and, most recently, a datamining firm facing allegation­s it scraped private informatio­n from tens of millions of Facebook users’ profiles for political gain.

“It’s a very sobering moment,” said Boler.

At the heart of the most recent fallout around Cambridge Analytica, the voter-profiling firm at the heart of the Facebook controvers­y, is a story about the increasing sophistica­tion and secrecy of the techniques political actors and parties have developed to harvest voters’ informatio­n in the quest for power and influence.

While some experts describe Cambridge Analytica as “a bad apple” in how it gathered its data, they say the predictive analytics the company employs are industry standard in politics.

Some experts single out political parties, saying more transparen­cy and oversight is needed to get a better understand­ing of their data practices, which remain closely guarded secrets.

Fenwick McKelvey, a Concordia University communicat­ions professor, said it’s unclear when parties first began paying attention to social media data. It was the marketing industry that first paved the path when it pounced on the abundance of informatio­n being freely disclosed by social media users as a way to target advertisem­ents and drive sales.

“Cambridge Analytica has turned public attention to what had been a long-standing blind spot in Canadian politics,” he said.

“The ways that routine practices of data collection, advertisin­g and voter profiling can be used by bad actors is a reminder that all parties need to stand up and be more accountabl­e about their data practices.”

McKelvey pointed out that now-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau enlisted the help of the U.S.-based campaign software company NGP VAN for his leadership bid and the subsequent federal election race.

NGP VAN is the same outfit Barack Obama relied on during his presidenti­al bids. The company website advertises its ability to link emails in a voter database to nearly 100 different social networking sites, including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

A major concern is that the algorithm that decides who sees what ad is hidden, McKelvey said, and the public simply has no way to know about the potential of so-called dark targeting — whether some ads are being used to suppress voting.

Political campaigns have been getting more targeted for years as big data becomes increasing­ly available and the raw power of data analytics and computing continues to grow, said Alfred Hermida, a digital media scholar at the University of British Columbia.

Hermida said the move is fuelled in part by what he calls a Silicon Valley approach — that whatever the world’s problems, technology is the answer. It’s a perspectiv­e that ignores the fact that technology is a tool that can be used for both good and bad, he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO JONATHAN HAYWARD ?? Experts are calling for transparen­cy and oversight around how political parties mining data. A woman uses her computer keyboard to type while surfing the internet in North Vancouver, B.C., in December 2012.
CP PHOTO JONATHAN HAYWARD Experts are calling for transparen­cy and oversight around how political parties mining data. A woman uses her computer keyboard to type while surfing the internet in North Vancouver, B.C., in December 2012.

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