Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Expert says Brexit campaign used data mined from Facebook

Vote Leave denies ties to data firm

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LONDON — The computer expert who alleges a trove of Facebook data was improperly used to help now-President Donald Trump’s White House bid said Tuesday that he strongly believes the informatio­n was also used by the Brexit movement that persuaded Britain to quit the European Union.

In a 3½-hour hearing, Christophe­r Wylie told the House of Commons media committee that he believes the breach exceeded the 50 million Facebook users reported earlier — though he didn’t give an exact figure. And he said the data compiled by the political consulting business Cambridge Analytica was available to other firms with links to it.

“All kinds of people had access to the data,” said Mr. Wylie, who helped develop Cambridge Analytica’s methods for using the informatio­n to target and persuade voters. “It was everywhere.”

Among the companies that had access to the data was AggregateI­Q, a Canadian political consultant that did work for Vote Leave, the official campaign backing Britain’s withdrawal from the EU, Mr. Wylie said.

Mr. Wylie described Cambridge Analytica as just one arm of a global company, SCL Group, that gets most of its income from military contracts but is also a political gun-for-hire, often in countries where democratic institutio­ns are weak. He suggested the company combines computer algorithms and dirty tricks to help candidates win regardless of the cost.

The 28-year-old Canadian with a swath of pink hair says he helped set up Cambridge Analytica in 2013. He left the next year.

Mr. Wylie has previously alleged that Cambridge Analytica used personal data improperly collected from Facebook users to help Mr. Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Cambridge Analytica says none of the Facebook data was used in its work on the Trump campaign. It denies any wrongdoing.

Cambridge Analytica’s acting CEO, Alexander Tayler, said in a statement that Mr. Wylie was a part-time contractor who “has no direct knowledge of our work or practices” since he left the company.

Mr. Wylie said he “absolutely” believes AggregateI­Q drew on Cambridge Analytica’s databases for its work on the Brexit campaign. In the closely fought referendum in 2016, 51.9 percent of voters backed Britain’s departure from the EU.

“I think it is incredibly reasonable to say that AIQ played a very significan­t role in Leave winning,” Mr. Wylie said.

He testified that AggregateI­Q was formed when Cambridge Analytica sought to expand but Canadians he wanted to bring into the business didn’t want to relocate to Britain. The two firms shared underlying technology and worked so closely together that Cambridge Analytica staff often referred to the Canadian firm as a “department,” he said.

Because of the links between the two companies, Vote Leave got the “the next best thing” to Cambridge Analytica when it hired AggregateI­Q, “a company that can do virtually everything that [Cambridge Analytica] can do but with a different billing name,” Mr. Wylie said.

Mr. Wylie also has told Britain’s Observer newspaper that he was instrument­al in the foundation of AggregateI­Q, when he was the research director of SCL, the parent company of Cambridge Anayltica.

AggregateI­Q, based in Victoria, British Columbia, issued a statement saying it has never been part of Cambridge Analytica or SCL.

“AggregateI­Q works in full compliance within all legal and regulatory requiremen­ts in all jurisdicti­ons where it operates,” the company said. “All work AggregateI­Q does for each client is kept separate from every other client.”

 ??  ?? Whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie, who alleges the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaks at a lawyer’s office Monday in London.
Whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie, who alleges the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaks at a lawyer’s office Monday in London.

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