Kuwait Times

Fix Facebook, whether it wants to or not: Whistleblo­wer

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BRUXELLES: Eight months after revealing the links between Facebook and Cambridge Analytica (CA), whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie is pushing for the internet giant to be regulated — whether it wants to or not.

He is scathing about Facebook’s “man-child” chief executive Mark Zuckerberg and the arrogance of the company he runs. “Facebook knew about what happened with Cambridge Analytica, well before the Trump election, well before Brexit, it did nothing about it,” Wylie told AFP.

“They knew about Russian disinforma­tion campaigns on their platform, but to preserve the integrity of their reputation, they place their company above their country.”

Last March, Wylie revealed that data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica took millions of Facebook users’ data to build psychologi­cal profiles of users. He knew because he had worked as the company’s research director.

Targeted political campaign messages were used both in the US presidenti­al election and in the run-up to Britain’s 2016 Brexit vote, he said. Zuckerberg, in a statement issued in March, acknowledg­ed the data breach but said it had happened without Facebook’s knowledge or consent. They had acted to ensure it never happened again, he added.

It is a bewilderin­gly complex story. But the important thing, said Wylie, was to stay focused on the key facts. “You’ve got a company like CA whose staff were working in Russia, whose contractor­s are indicted by Mueller and whose clients were meeting with (the) Russian embassy — so Russia’s everywhere in this.”

US Special Counsel Robert Mueller is investigat­ing alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign. But Wylie’s real anger is directed at Facebook and Zuckerberg.

“One of the problems is that they have unfortunat­ely a share structure which enables a ‘man-child’ to run a company like an authoritar­ian dictator and no one else can do anything about it,” he said.

‘Arrogance’

Facebook acknowledg­ed on Tuesday that its engineers had flagged suspicious Russian activity as early as 2014 — long before it became public. But Zuckerberg still refused to turn up to hearings held by the British Parliament this week attended by lawmakers from nine different countries.

Instead, vice president Richard Allan had to field questions on allegation­s that the company had been exploited to manipulate major election results.

For Wylie, Zuckerberg’s no-show in London spoke volumes. “He has built a platform that has created substantiv­e risk to our society and to our democracy and he doesn’t even have one hour to give...,” he said.

Facebook is now being investigat­ed by several US federal agencies. In Britain, it is appealing a £500,000 ($637,000) fine handed down by the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office for serious breaches of the data protection laws over the Cambridge Analytica revelation­s. And earlier this month, it has had to battle the fall-out from a New York Times report that it used a public relations firm to discredit its critics, including billionair­e philanthro­pist George Soros. Facebook’s outgoing communicat­ions chief Elliot Schrage took the blame. —AFP

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