The Standard (St. Catharines)

Company linked to Facebook data scandal defends its work

Aggregate IQ doesn’t harvest data, founders tell MPs

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OTTAWA — The co-founders of a Canadian company at the centre of the internatio­nal scandal over the alleged inappropri­ate use of Facebook data are defending their work in support of political campaigns around the globe.

Speaking to a parliament­ary committee, Jeff Silvester of the B.C.-based political advertisin­g firm AggregateI­Q says the company helps its customers craft their messages for online political ads and how to effectivel­y make use of data for their campaigns.

But Silvester, the firm’s chief operating officer, insists AggregateI­Q does not harvest data and only uses what it is provided — nor does it undertake any kind of voter profiling, including psychograp­hic profiling.

He says the company’s work differs little from what political campaigns in Canada do to promote a candidate or a party, such as putting up lawn signs, sending volunteers to knock on doors and making phone calls.

The Victoria firm has been suspended by Facebook and is under investigat­ion by privacy commission­ers in Ottawa, B.C. and the United Kingdom for its role in a controvers­y that allegedly involved a breach of millions of users’ private informatio­n to help the “Leave” side win the U.K.’s 2016 Brexit referendum.

AggregateI­Q has also been linked to Cambridge Analytica, the political consultanc­y firm accused of improperly accessing the private Facebook data to help the Leave campaign in Brexit as well as Donald Trump’s winning 2016 U.S. presidenti­al bid.

In his testimony Tuesday, Silvester said AggregateI­Q has always complied with laws in Canada and abroad. He also disputed allegation­s raised by Canadian data expert and whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie, saying AggregateI­Q has never been part of Cambridge Analytica nor its parent company, SCL.

“We are not data harvesters by any stretch of the imaginatio­n and, certainly, we don’t do psychograp­hic profiling or profiling of any other type,” he told the committee on access to informatio­n, privacy and ethics, which is holding hearings this month on the data breach involving Facebook and Cambridge Analytica.

“We’re not psychologi­sts, we’re tech guys.”

Efforts by volunteers and political candidates themselves to persuade voters are no different from the work of AggregateI­Q, he added.

“The ads that we show — it’s the digital equivalent of an ad on someone’s lawn or on a street corner,” he said.

“You choose where you want it go, you put your message on there and people drive by and see it. And it’s the same for the internet and same with going door to door and the same with making phone calls.”

Facebook estimates the personal informatio­n of 622,161 users in Canada — and nearly 87 million worldwide — was improperly accessed by Cambridge Analytica.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Zackary Massingham, right, and Jeff Silvester of AggregateI­Q appear at the parliament­ary privacy and ethics committee in Ottawa on Tuesday.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Zackary Massingham, right, and Jeff Silvester of AggregateI­Q appear at the parliament­ary privacy and ethics committee in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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