Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Facebook boots ’16 campaign data firm

- SARAH FRIER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ros Krasny of Bloomberg News.

Facebook Inc. suspended Cambridge Analytica, a data company that helped President Donald Trump win the 2016 presidenti­al election and which may have collected data from 50 million Facebook profiles without their owners’ permission.

The social-networking company said in a blog post Friday that Cambridge Analytica received some user data through an app developer on its social network, violating its policies. In 2015, Facebook said Cambridge Analytica certified that it had destroyed the informatio­n.

“Several days ago, we received reports that, contrary to the certificat­ions we were given, not all data was deleted,” Facebook said in a statement. Cambridge Analytica and parent Strategic Communicat­ion Laboratori­es have been suspended from the social network, “pending further informatio­n,” Facebook said.

Cambridge Analytica said in a Saturday statement that it did nothing illegal and is in touch with Facebook in order to resolve the matter as quickly as possible.

Originally funded by Robert Mercer, the conservati­ve political donor and former co-chief executive officer of Renaissanc­e Technologi­es, Cambridge uses data to reach voters with hyper-targeted messaging, including on Facebook and other online services. It was hired to help with voter outreach by the Trump campaign, whose former campaign manager, Steve Bannon, had been on the company’s board.

The company harvested private informatio­n from the Facebook profiles of more than 50 million users without permission, according to The New York Times, which cites interviews with former Cambridge employees, associates and documents. This allowed Cambridge to exploit the private social-media activity of these users in support of the Trump campaign.

“They want to fight a culture war in America,” Christophe­r Wylie, who helped found Cambridge and worked there until late 2014, said of the company’s leaders, according to the Times. “Cambridge Analytica was supposed to be the arsenal of weapons to fight that culture war.”

Referring to stories by the Times and the Guardian, Alex Stamos, Facebook’s head of security, wrote in a Twitter message that “it is incorrect to call this a ‘breach.’”

“We can condemn this behavior while being accurate in our descriptio­n of it,” he wrote, calling the actions “inappropri­ate” in another tweet.

U.S. Sen. Mark Warner, vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, said in an emailed statement that this is “more evidence that the online political advertisin­g market is essentiall­y the Wild West.” The Virginia Democrat has been critical of the technology companies for letting their networks be exploited by Russia during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, and has called on Congress to pass the Honest Ads Act, which would regulate online election ads.

“Left unregulate­d, this market will continue to be prone to deception and lacking transparen­cy,” he said.

Cambridge in its statement said it had hired U.S. project Global Science Research in 2014 for a U.S. project, but that it subsequent­ly became clear that the data from the group wasn’t obtained “in line with Facebook’s terms of service.”

“No data from GSR was used by Cambridge Analytica as part of the services it provided to the Donald Trump 2016 presidenti­al campaign,” it said.

Facebook wrote that Aleksandr Kogan, a professor at the University of Cambridge, built an app that used Facebook’s login tools to obtain informatio­n about Facebook users and their friends, which the company’s policies allow. Then, in violation of policies, he subsequent­ly shared that data with Cambridge Analytica. When Facebook found out in 2015, the parties involved told Facebook they destroyed the data. They didn’t.

Facebook in 2015 stopped allowing app developers to gather friend data.

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