The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Indy poll probe: How Scots voters were targeted online will be investigat­ed

Watchdogs probe digital campaignin­g and online fake news

- By Kieran Andrews KIANDREWS@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Election watchdogs are investigat­ing how online campaignin­g and social media swung votes in the independen­ce referendum, we can reveal.

The Electoral Commission has launched an inquiry into digital campaignin­g in the UK as controvers­y surrounds a firm accused of harvesting the Facebook data of 50m users to target voters during the US presidenti­al campaign.

The London offices of Cambridge Analytica were yesterday raided by enforcemen­t officers from the UK’s informatio­n commission­er.

The election watchdogs are investigat­ing how digital campaignin­g influenced recent polls in Britain, including the 2014 independen­ce vote, general elections in 2015 and 2017 and the EU referendum in 2016.

They want to know if parties mined voters’ social media history to target them with political advertisin­g and if and how so- called fake news was generated and spread online.

In a report produced three months after the referendum, the Electoral Commission highlighte­d “numerous inquiries and complaints from the public” made to itself, the police and the Government about claims of alleged vote rigging after false rumours of ballot boxes being deliberate­ly lost were spread online.

The report said: “Many of these concerns arose from images appearing on TV and across social media which were understand­ably misunderst­ood by those members of the public who have little understand­ing of the detailed processes for the verificati­on and counting of votes.”

Experts blamed fake Twitter accounts, many of them linked to Russia, for generating and distributi­ng fake news.

We revealed last year that almost 400,000 Twitter messages about Scottish independen­ce were posted by fake accounts in 18 months.

Edward Lucas, senior vice president at the Centre for European Policy Analysis, warned MPs that there was strong evidence that Russian- backed Twitter users were driving the claims that the independen­ce referendum was rigged.

He said: “Once you have identified those accounts you then need to say: are they introducin­g new ideas, wrong ideas, into the debate — so, for example, claiming that something has not happened when it has happened, or spreading a scare story or hoax, or something like that.”

Mr Lucas added: “For example, in the Scottish referendum — and we have very good evidence on this — the Russians sowed seeds of doubt about whether the referendum was fair. We have never had that in this country before. We have all sorts of disagreeme­nts about our politics, but no one has ever — not since, I think, the 1830s has anybody really had the idea that we stuff ballots, or don’t count them properly. We are always pretty good at doing this.

“Yet we saw, after the independen­ce referendum in Scotland, the Russians pushing out the idea with pictures of ballot boxes and votes being moved around, saying: ‘This is being rigged.’ That had an effect on the public.”

How private companies and political parties harvest informatio­n about voters through their online presence is under the spotlight after Cambridge Analytica was accused of mining the date of millions of voters in swing states to target them with tailored political adverts and secure Donald Trump’s victory in the race to the White House. The firm is accused of using similar methods when working for the Brexit campaign in the 2016 EU referendum.

Both Cambridge Analytica, whose chief executive Alexander Nix was suspended after telling undercover journalist­s how his firm could help entrap politician­s, and Facebook deny any wrongdoing.

Mark Zuckerberg, the social media giant’s founder, has been called on to give evidence to MPs.

The Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office, whose search of the firm’s London building ended yesterday, said: “This is one part of a larger

investigat­ion by the ICO into the use of personal data and analytics by political campaigns, parties, social media companies and other commercial actors”.

Its probe includes the acquisitio­n and use of Facebook data by Cambridge, its parent company SCL and academic Dr Aleksandr Kogan, who developed an app – a personalit­y quiz – used to harvest the data of participan­ts and their network of friends.

SNP MP Martin Docherty-Hughes, said politician­s should not shy away from “discussing any possible manipulati­on of social media and campaign finance from foreign entities.”

Mr Docherty-Hughes, a member of the House of Commons Defence Committee, said: “These worrying stories of fake news promoted about our referendum, along with the millions of pounds of donations to the Conservati­ve party from Russian donors, show how we must always question the motivation­s of those seeking to influence the electoral process.”

Pa r t of the Electoral Commission’s investigat­ion, which is separate to the Informatio­n Commission­er’s, will learn lessons from the 2014 vote, including plans to make online campaign material state who has published it, like its printed equivalent.

Bob Posner, the commission’s director of political finance and regulation, said: “We are taking a wide definition of digital campaignin­g for these inquiries, including the use of data held by parties, campaigner­s and social media companies to target campaign messages, how political ads are used on social media, and the use of bots.”

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 ??  ?? Above, officers carrying out the raid on Cambridge Analytica’s London offices, left
Above, officers carrying out the raid on Cambridge Analytica’s London offices, left
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 ??  ?? Referendum campaign posters
Referendum campaign posters

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