Times Colonist

> The billionair­e bankroller,

U.S. computer mogul Robert Mercer got his big break from Canadian bilinguali­sm

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — The controvers­y over Facebook data gathering has a Canadian backstory far older than the adventures of the young whistleblo­wer from Victoria who worked for the contentiou­s firm Cambridge Analytica.

This story involves the firm’s billionair­e bankroller.

Robert Mercer is the 71-yearold funder of an assortment of right-wing causes, ranging from Cambridge Analytica to Breitbart News to Republican campaigns. The story of his wealth includes a breakthrou­gh in the 1980s and Canadian bilinguali­sm.

Back then, Mercer was a talented mid-career computer programmer at IBM. He’d grown up in New Mexico with an interest in computers, and as there were no courses in the field in the 1960s at his college, he sought experience writing programs for a mainframe in the weapons lab at the Kirtland Air Force Base.

There, he said in a 2013 lecture, he learned he loved everything about computers. But he also learned he did not love big government. He described that summer as a formative experience on his political path. Frustrated with a clunky program that calculated the effect of fusion bombs, he recalled rewriting the program to make it 100 times faster.

“Then a strange thing happened,” Mercer said in a 2014 speech.

“Instead of running the old computatio­ns in one-100th of the time, the powers that be at the lab ran computatio­ns that were 100 times bigger. I took this as an indication: that one of the most important goals of government-financed research is not so much to get answers as it is to consume the computer budget.

“Which has left me ever since with a jaundiced view of government-financed research.”

He graduated college in 1972 and took a job at IBM. There, he helped develop the field of computer-generated translatio­n. He explained in a paper co-written with colleagues that computer-translatio­n efforts are almost as old as the modern computer itself.

In the 1940s, fellow travellers had sought to have machines translate language. But they stumbled into two main obstacles: the weak processing power of older computers and the shortage of translated text in digital format for programmer­s to study.

Advances in computing gradually solved the first problem.

The second problem was solved by a tip in the 1980s about where to score massive amounts of translated text, which would allow the programmer­s to detect patterns in data and develop algorithms based on that.

That news came from older IBM colleague John Cocke.

“John was on a plane and … he struck up a conversati­on with the guy next to him and then suggested they have a drink together,” Mercer’s colleague, Peter Brown, recalled at the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods on Natural Language Processing.

“Before he knew it, the guy was telling John about the proceeding­s of the Canadian House of Parliament which were — and probably still are — kept in computer-readable form in French and in English.”

Canadian government employees had already done the work.

They had translated millions of words spoken in Canada’s Parliament from English to French, and vice-versa, at a reliable quality, with literal and figurative meanings of phrases swapped between languages, all of it was in the public domain, available for use by researcher­s.

“That’s what I liked about the Canadian Hansard’s data,” Mercer told the 2013 conference.

“I think that’s what appealed to John about it as well.”

Mercer and his colleagues scooped up about 100 million words’ worth of data. That’s how one of the landmark research papers in the field of computer translatio­n wound up including the words “Bobby Orr” and “fuddle-duddle,” the insult phrase made famous by former prime minister Pierre Trudeau.

One of their papers said the algorithm reduced the work flow of a translator by 60 per cent, requiring 776 keyboard strokes to repair mistakes within a certain sample, versus 1,916 keystrokes to start from scratch.

When it granted Mercer its lifetime achievemen­t award decades later, the Associatio­n for Computatio­nal Linguistic­s noted the thousands of research papers that cite his work, and credited him with technologi­es we now use every day.

“[Their approaches] now dominate the field of machine translatio­n,” the ACL said, “and provide the underpinni­ng of many of the tools that people now regularly use, such as speech recognizer­s on mobile phones, context sensitive spelling correction, and web-based machine translatio­n systems.”

His research led to tremendous wealth.

It turns out that his ability to detect patterns in linguistic translatio­n was useful in stock trading. In 1993, Mercer and Brown got recruitmen­t letters from the hedge fund Renaissanc­e Technologi­es.

They initially tossed the letters, but later had a change of heart, as Mercer struggled with college tuition bills for his daughters. They accepted a 50 per cent pay raise, changed jobs, and eventually recruited other members of their old IBM team.

The finance work is a little more hush-hush, but Brown described it as based on their previous research: “From building speech-recognitio­n systems and translatio­n systems … we definitely used that skill set.”

Mercer and Brown wound up running the fund after its founder retired.

In recent years, he has become famous for his political investment­s: the research group that looked into Hillary Clinton’s alleged conflicts of interest and bankrolled the book Clinton Cash, the Government Accountabi­lity Institute; Breitbart; and the campaign of Donald Trump.

He founded Cambridge Analytica; teamed up with young researcher Christophe­r Wylie of Victoria, and spent millions to amass voter data, including from Facebook users.

 ?? AP ?? U.S. President-elect Donald Trump arrives for a party at the New York home of Robert Mercer, one of his biggest campaign donors, in 2016. Mercer’s wealth is rooted in language-translatio­n computer programmin­g based on reams of Canadian parliament­ary...
AP U.S. President-elect Donald Trump arrives for a party at the New York home of Robert Mercer, one of his biggest campaign donors, in 2016. Mercer’s wealth is rooted in language-translatio­n computer programmin­g based on reams of Canadian parliament­ary...

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