The Citizen (KZN)

Facebook boffin dismissive

- London

– A researcher at the centre of a scandal over the alleged misuse of the data of nearly 100 million Facebook users said yesterday that the work he did was not useful for micro-targeted adverts.

Aleksandr Kogan, who worked for the University of Cambridge, is at the centre of a controvers­y over Cambridge Analytica’s use of millions of users’ data without their permission after it was hired by Donald Trump for his 2016 election campaign.

Kogan said that the dataset he compiled would be of little help for targeted advertisin­g, and that the data he obtained would not be useful for identifyin­g individual­s.

“I believe the project we did makes little to no sense if the goal is to run targeted ads on Facebook,” he said in written testimony to a parliament­ary committee.

“In fact, the platform’s tools provide companies a far more effective pathway to target people based on their personalit­ies than using scores from users from our work.”

Facebook has said that the personal informatio­n of about 87 million users may have been improperly shared with political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica, after Kogan created a personalit­y quiz app to collect the data.

Facebook and Cambridge Analytica have blamed Kogan for alleged data misuse, but he has said he was being made a scapegoat. Cambridge Analytica will later address Kogan’s remarks at a briefing.

Cambridge Analytica is also under scrutiny over campaignin­g for the 2016 referendum when Britons voted to leave the European Union.

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