The Hamilton Spectator

Canadian Facebook whistle-blower: I did no voter targeting

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OTTAWA — The Canadian data expert whose allegation­s set off an internatio­nal uproar about the inappropri­ate use of private Facebook data says there was nothing at all nefarious about his work in early 2016 for the federal Liberal caucus research bureau.

Testifying before a parliament­ary committee, Chris Wylie says his work for the bureau had nothing to do with the micro-targeting and psychoanal­ysis of voters — and was strictly about providing communicat­ions services in support of caucus members of the incoming government.

Wylie came forward in March with accusation­s that political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica improperly harvested private data from tens of millions of Facebook users to build psychologi­cal profiles in hope of making political gains. The whistle-blower has said his former firm used the informatio­n to help seal 2016 victories for Donald Trump’s U.S. presidenti­al campaign and in the U.K.’s Brexit referendum.

Following Canada’s 2015 federal election, Wylie was awarded a $100,000 contract to do a pilot project with the Liberal caucus research bureau, and also worked in the offices of former federal Liberal leaders Stephane Dion and Michael Ignatieff about a decade ago.

Wylie says the work wasn’t particular­ly groundbrea­king — and insists he’s never done any psychograp­hic targeting for any of Canada’s Liberal parties.

“Let me be just super clear — any insinuatio­n that I have done that is just untrue,” said Wylie, who described some of his services as improving caucus and constituen­t communicat­ions, as well as analysis of what the public was discussing on social media.

“I have not worked on psychometr­ic-based targeting for the Liberal party or any Liberal entity.” Wylie also told the committee that in general, when it comes to politics, the use of data or psychology should not always be viewed as “nefarious.”

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