The Niagara Falls Review

Canadian helped firm — which eventually aided Trump — exploit Facebook data of millions

Canadian blows whistle on data mining firm affiliated with Trump, says he regrets role in ‘propaganda machine’

- RYAN NAKASHIMA AND ANICK JESDANUN

MENLO PARK, CALIF. — Facebook has a problem it just can’t kick. People keep exploiting it in ways that could sway elections, and in the worst cases even undermine democracy.

News reports that Facebook let the Trumpaffil­iated data mining firm Cambridge Analytica abscond with data from tens of millions of users mark the third time in roughly a year the company appears to have been outfoxed by crafty outsiders in this way.

Canadian Christophe­r Wylie, a former Cambridge Analytica employee, has emerged as a primary source for the Times report. Wylie, 28, got his start in politics with the Liberal Party of Canada.

A senior source with the party told the Canadian Press that Wylie last worked for the party less than a decade ago, before Justin Trudeau became leader, and was also previously involved in its youth commission.

Before the Cambridge imbroglio, there were Russian agents running election-related propaganda campaigns through targeted ads and fake political events. And before the Russians took centre stage, there were purveyors of fake news who spread false stories to rile up hyperparti­san audiences and profit from the resulting ad revenue.

In the previous cases, Facebook initially downplayed the risks posed by these activities. It only seriously grappled with fake news and Russian influence after sustained criticism from users, experts and politician­s. In the case of Cambridge, Facebook says the main problem involved the transfer of data to a third party — not its collection in the first place.

Each new issue has also raised the same enduring questions about Facebook’s conflictin­g priorities — to protect its users, but also to ensure that it can exploit their personal details to fuel its hugely lucrative, and precisely targeted, advertisin­g business.

Facebook may say its business model is to connect the world, but it’s really “to collect psychosoci­al data on users and sell that to advertiser­s,” said Mike Caulfield, a faculty trainer at Washington State University who directs a multi-university effort focused on digital literacy.

Late Friday, Facebook announced it was banning Cambridge, an outfit that helped Donald Trump win the White House, saying the company improperly obtained informatio­n from 270,000 people who downloaded a purported research app described as a personalit­y test. Facebook first learned of this breach of privacy more than two years ago, but hasn’t mentioned it publicly until now.

And the company may still be playing down its scope. Wylie, the former Cambridge employee who served as a key source for detailed investigat­ive reports published Saturday in The New York Times and The Guardian, said the firm was actually able to pull in data from roughly 50 million profiles by extending its tentacles to the unwitting friends of app users. (Facebook has since barred such secondhand data collection by apps.)

Wylie said he regrets the role he played in what he called “a full service propaganda machine.” Cambridge’s goal, he told the Guardian in a video interview, was to use the Facebook data to build detailed profiles that could be used to identify and then to target individual voters with personaliz­ed political messages calculated to sway their opinions.

“It was a grossly unethical experiment,” Wylie said. “Because you are playing with an entire country. The psychology of an entire country without their consent or awareness.”

The Guardian reported Sunday that Wylie worked as a teenager in the office of the Canada’s opposition leader, who was then Liberal leader Stéphane Dion, after leaving school in British Columbia at 16 without any qualificat­ions.

Wylie moved to England when he was 20 to study at the London School of Economics, the Guardian says. Later, when he was studying for a PhD in fashion forecastin­g, he was asked by Britain’s Liberal Democrats to help with their databases and voter targeting, according to the Guardian.

Cambridge has denied wrongdoing and calls Wylie a disgruntle­d former employee. It acknowledg­ed obtaining user data in violation of Facebook policies, but blamed a middleman contractor for the problem. The company said it never used the data and deleted it all once it learned of the infraction — an assertion contradict­ed by Wylie and now under investigat­ion by Facebook.

Jonathan Albright, research director at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University, said Facebook badly needs to embrace the transparen­cy it has essentiall­y forced on its users by sharing their habits, likes and dislikes with advertiser­s. Albright has previously noted cases in which Facebook deleted thousands of posts detailing Russian influence on its service and underrepor­ted the audience for Russian posts by failing to mention millions of followers on Instagram, which Facebook owns.

Facebook is “withholdin­g informatio­n to the point of negligence,” he said Saturday. “How many times can you keep doing that before it gets to the point where you’re not going to be able to wrangle your way out?”

The Cambridge imbroglio also revealed what appear to be loopholes in Facebook’s privacy assurances, particular­ly regarding third-party apps. Facebook appears to have no technical way to enforce privacy promises made by app developers, leaving users little choice but to simply trust them.

In fact, the enforcemen­t actions outlined in Facebook’s statement don’t address prevention at all — just ways to respond to violations after they’ve occurred.

On Saturday, Facebook continued to insist that the Cambridge data collection was not a “data breach” because “everyone involved gave their consent” to share their data. The purported research app followed Facebook’s existing privacy rules, no systems were surreptiti­ously infiltrate­d and no one stole passwords or sensitive informatio­n without permission. (To Facebook, the only real violation was the transfer of informatio­n collected for “research” to a third party such as Cambridge.)

Experts say that argument only makes sense if every user fully understand­s Facebook’s obscure privacy settings, which often default to maximum data sharing.

 ?? ANDREW TESTA NEW YORK TIMES ?? Christophe­r Wylie helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014. He says Cambridge Analytica harvested personal informatio­n from a huge swath of the electorate to develop techniques that were later used in the Trump campaign.
ANDREW TESTA NEW YORK TIMES Christophe­r Wylie helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014. He says Cambridge Analytica harvested personal informatio­n from a huge swath of the electorate to develop techniques that were later used in the Trump campaign.
 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People keep exploiting Facebook in ways that could sway elections and even undermine democracy.
ELISE AMENDOLA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People keep exploiting Facebook in ways that could sway elections and even undermine democracy.

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