Gulf News

How Facebook data helped Trump

His campaign knew more than perhaps anyone has ever known about Facebook users

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It was one of hundreds of cute questionna­ires that were shared widely on Facebook and other social media, like “Which Pokemon Are You?” and “What Are Your Most Used Words?”

This one, an app called “thisismydi­gitallife”, was a personalit­y quiz, asking questions about how outgoing a person is, how vengeful one can be, whether one finishes projects, worries a lot, likes art, or is talkative.

About 320,000 people took the quiz, designed by a man named Alexsandr Kogan.

Kogan was contracted to do it by a company called Cambridge Analytica, founded by US Republican supporters including Steve Bannon, who would become the strategist for Donald Trump.

Because Kogan’s app was circulated via Facebook, it reaped far more than just the informatio­n on those who took the test. At the time, in 2015, such apps could scrape up all the personal details of not only the quiz-taker, but all their Facebook friends.

That ultimately became a horde of data on some 50 million Facebook users — their personal informatio­n, their likes, their places, their pictures, and their networks.

Psychometr­ic profiling

Marketers use such informatio­n to pitch cars, clothes, and vacations with targeted ads. It was used in earlier elections by candidates to identify potential supporters. But for Kogan and Cambridge it was a much bigger goldmine. They used it for psychologi­cal profiling of US voters, creating a powerful database that helped carry Trump to victory in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The data let the Trump campaign know more than perhaps anyone has ever known about Facebook users, creating targeted ads and messaging that could play on their individual biases, fears and loves — effectivel­y creating a bond between them and the candidate.

The project was based on the work of a former Cambridge scientist, Michal Kosinski, who studies people based on what informatio­n they generate online. Kosinski and fellow researcher David Stillwell had for several years tapped into Facebook for psychometr­ic profiling using their own personalit­y test app, “myPersonal­ity”.

The app accumulate­d six million test results. In 2015 they published a study: Computer-based personalit­y Judgments are more accurate than those made by humans.

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