Business Day

Whistle-blower wants Facebook and Big Tech to be regulated

- Agency Staff Paris Mindf*ck: Cambridge Analytica and the Plot to Break America, /AFP

Facebook and other tech companies should be regulated like the tobacco industry, says Christophe­r Wylie, the whistle-blower who exposed the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

The data scientist told how he helped the disgraced company, founded by Donald Trump’s former right-hand man Steve Bannon, use unauthoris­ed personal data harvested from Facebook to help swing a string of elections, including Trump’s US presidenti­al win in 2016.

Despite Facebook being fined a record $5bn in the US last year for “deceiving” users about keeping their informatio­n safe,

Wylie said the world had not woken up to the consequenc­es of the scandal.

“If we want to prevent another Cambridge Analytica from happening ... that starts with regulating big tech beyond just data protection issues, but also looking at whether we want, as a society, to tolerate manipulati­ve design,” he said.

Wylie details in his book, how personalit­y profiles mined from Facebook were weaponised to “radicalise” individual­s through psychograp­hic profiling and targeting techniques. So great was their potential power over society and people’s lives, that tech profession­als had to be subject to the same codes of ethics as doctors and lawyers, he said as his book was published in France.

“Profiling work that we were doing to look at who was most vulnerable to being radicalise­d ... was used to identify people in the US who were susceptibl­e to radicalisa­tion so that they could be encouraged and catalysed on that path,” he said.

“You are being intentiona­lly monitored so that your unique biases, your anxieties, your weaknesses, your needs, your desires can be quantified in such a way that a company can seek to exploit that for profit,” he said.

Wylie, who blew the whistle to the British newspaper The Guardian in March 2018, said at least people now realised how powerful data could be. “We are now talking about it, whereas before we weren’t,” he said.

“For a long time I think journalist­s and society at large really did drink that Kool-Aid. They bought the message that the tech industry is good and can do no wrong. What we’re now seeing is that big tech is just like any other industry.

“When push comes to shove, when it affects profit, they make decisions just like an oil or tobacco company would, which is why regulation is urgent, said Canadian-born Wylie.

He made the comparison with the constructi­on industry, which had to conform to many norms and standards, whereas in the digital world individual­s were left to protect themselves from an ole array of risks they cannot possibly hope to understand.

“Facebook is an architectu­re, it is a constructi­on, it is a product of engineerin­g. And just like any other highly technical sector, whether it’s aerospace, automobile­s, energy or biotech, there are rules in place that regulate.”

Wylie also compared the “feeling of outrage that I think a lot of Americans are feeling” to what “voters in Africa or in a lot of South Asian countries” have suffered for decades at the hands of big corporatio­ns of their former colonial masters.

“There would be large businesses, or indeed countries, that would hire firms to influence elections. And the internet has made colonialis­m 2.0 really easy.”

 ?? /AFP ?? Lowdown on scandal: Canadian whistle-blower Christophe­r Wylie at the launch in Paris this week of his book on the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
/AFP Lowdown on scandal: Canadian whistle-blower Christophe­r Wylie at the launch in Paris this week of his book on the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

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