Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Cambridge Analytica files for bankruptcy in US

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Cambridge Analytica, overwhelme­d by a scandal over how it harvested data from Facebook to influence the last US election, filed for bankruptcy in New York.

The UK-based political consulting firm had already said it would cease operations and wind down in its home country and the Chapter 7 petition in New York will address issues raised by US creditors. The filing listed estimated liabilitie­s of $1 million to $10 million.

The American proceeding could also shed light on some of the company’s relationsh­ips and finances, as U.S. legal proceeding­s are more transparen­t than those in the UK, and creditors can use bankruptcy law to subpoena informatio­n and probe asset transfers.

The company, which did work for US President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, said in a May 2 statement on its website that it lost “virtually all” customers and suppliers as a result of reports that it improperly obtained informatio­n from tens of millions of Facebook Inc. users.

Robert Mercer, the New York hedge fund manager and backer of Trump, has been a financial backer of Cambridge Analytica, along with Steve Bannon and Breitbart News.

In March, footage came out of the company’s executives bragging about how prostitute­s and former spies could be used to ensnare politician­s and influence elections.

One segment showed chief executive officer (CEO) Alexander Nix saying that Ukrainian girls “are very beautiful, I find that works very well.” Nix in a BBC interview later said the allegation­s were “unfounded and extremely unfair.”

Cambridge Analytica said in its May 2 statement that it has “been the subject of numerous unfounded accusation­s” and that it has been vilified for activities that are not only legal, “but also widely accepted as a standard component of online advertisin­g.”

Cambridge Analytica faces lawsuits in the US over the Facebook data collection. One, for example, seeks class action sta- tus on behalf of all New York citizens who were Facebook members and whose informatio­n was obtained. They say they face ongoing damages because their private data is in the hands of the company.

Facebook itself has also been sued dozens of times over the data breach, and if it loses suits, could be expected to turn to Cambridge Analytica for damages.

A whistleblo­wer from Cambridge Analytica set off a firestorm in March after he revealed how informatio­n was extracted from Facebook and used to influence voters.

He testified before a UK parliament­ary committee, describing the firm as one that dealt with illegal data and hacked material to win elections. He said Trump’s victory was one of the reasons he blew the whistle. House Democrats who met with him in April called his informatio­n “disturbing.”

NEWYORK:

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? Cambridge Analytica CEO Alexander Nix
REUTERS/FILE Cambridge Analytica CEO Alexander Nix

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