The Guardian (USA)

The Observer view on the informatio­n commission­er's Cambridge Analytica investigat­ion

- Observer editorial

The 2018 Observerin­vestigatio­n into a hitherto obscure political consultanc­y sparked the most serious crisis yet to disrupt the world’s secretive social media giants and shed terrifying light on how their collection of our data reshaped political campaignin­g.

Today, Cambridge Analytica is a household name. But renewed controvers­y about the activities of the now defunct company demonstrat­es how our media and legislatur­es are still struggling to digest the full implicatio­ns of the scandal.

Last week, Britain’s informatio­n commission­er, Elizabeth Denham, announced she had wrapped up a long investigat­ion into the use of personal data in political campaignin­g in a letter to parliament that warned of “systemic vulnerabil­ities in our democratic systems”. The letter confirmed that Cambridge Analytica had exploited Facebook data and said that, as investigat­ors closed in on the company, it drew up plans to take its data offshore to avoid scrutiny.

The commission­er summed up how reporting on this topic, led by Pulitzer-nominated Carole Cadwalladr in the Observer, transforme­d the way that people around the world understood the value of their personal data and their relationsh­ips with social media giants. “How people’s informatio­n was being used became a dinner table topic, prompting undercover news reports, a TV dramatisat­ion and a Netflix documentar­y,” said Denham.

Denham underlined that the investigat­ion led to fines on Vote Leave,

Leave.EU and Facebook, with the latter “given the maximum financial penalty we could levy”. Cambridge Analytica has since collapsed; if it hadn’t, it would probably have attracted further regulatory action, she added.

The investigat­ion and its findings might have been expected to prompt alarm and a debate about protecting our data and our democracy. Instead, comment over the past week has largely dismissed its findings or misread them. Several focused on CA’s purchase and use of commercial­ly available personal data and software, as if that negated the exploitati­on of Facebook users’ private profiles. But the company was always open about using commercial software and data; that was combined with informatio­n scraped from Facebook to give it an unmatched ability to profile US voters.

One report claimed that the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office (ICO) had “[dispelled] many of the accusation­s put forward by whistleblo­wers and digital rights campaigner­s”, listing concerns about Russian interferen­ce in Brexit and interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election. Yet the ICO confirmed that CA and its partner companies held on to parts of the Facebook data until at least 2017 and used it for political campaignin­g. “It is suspected” that those campaigns included the 2016 US presidenti­al election, the ICO’s letter notes.

A devastatin­g Channel 4 report claimed recently that Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign worked with a team from Cambridge Analytica and used data to target black voters for suppressio­n through ads on Facebook.

On Russian meddling, the ICO said that possible evidence it had found of “Russia-located activity” fell beyond its remit and had been referred to the National Crime Agency for further investigat­ion. Beyond that, it noted no “additional evidence of Russian involvemen­t” in material on the CA servers it seized; it stretches credulity to present that as a full investigat­ion into potential Russian influence on Brexit.

Other reports focused on the ICO’s confirmati­on of its earlier conclusion that CA was not actively involved in the Brexit referendum, while inexplicab­ly ignoring its findings about the Canadian data company AggregateI­Q (AIQ), which did work on the winning Vote Leave campaign and was described by whistleblo­wers as an unofficial “department” of the scandal-hit firm.

The ICO said there was a range of evidence demonstrat­ing a “very close relationsh­ip” with Cambridge Analytica’s parent company, SCL, which included paying some of AIQ’s Facebook invoices, but didn’t untangle it further. AIQ denies having a relationsh­ip that went beyond that between a software developer and its client.

Media reporting, including the Observer’s, has always focused on AIQ. It was Cambridge Analytica employees, and figures from the unofficial Leave.EU campaign, who claimed in the aftermath of the vote that the company played a large role, before later backpedall­ing.

Critics of Cadwalladr’s reporting argue that “Cambridge Analytica’s main data-related crime was oversellin­g its own capabiliti­es rather than actually hacking democracy”. Others have resorted to trolling and personal attacks, often laced with misogyny. Yet her exposure of Cambridge Analytica prompted political and judicial inquiries on both sides of the Atlantic and permanentl­y altered public understand­ing of data abuse. It paved the way for sweeping changes to how social media companies regulate political campaigns and advertisin­g.

The ICO report confirmed massive mishandlin­g of private data and its exploitati­on for political campaignin­g. The Observer is proud of its role in the exposure of these abuses.

 ?? Photograph: Christophe­r Thomond/The Observer ?? Informatio­n commission­er Elizabeth Denham: ‘How people’s informatio­n was being used became a dinner table topic.’
Photograph: Christophe­r Thomond/The Observer Informatio­n commission­er Elizabeth Denham: ‘How people’s informatio­n was being used became a dinner table topic.’

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