USA TODAY International Edition

Obama team: We didn’t break Facebook rules

- Fredreka Schouten

WASHINGTON – President Obama’s top campaign aide on Tuesday rejected comparison­s between Obama’s extensive use of Facebook data to turn out voters in the 2012 election and the actions of Cambridge Analytica, a data and political intelligen­ce firm ejected last week by Facebook in a growing controvers­y over social-media privacy.

“Cambridge Analytica obtained their data fraudulent­ly, laundered through a researcher who paid people to install an app,” Jim Messina, Obama’s campaign manager wrote on Twitter.

By contrast, Obama campaign officials say they did not collect informatio­n without users’ consent or in violation of the rules Facebook had in place at the time.

“The ’12 campaign told voters what they were sharing and for what purpose,” Messina wrote.

The revelation that Cambridge Analytica, a firm tied to President Trump’s campaign, harvested private informatio­n of tens of millions users without their permission has thrown a spotlight on how social-network controls access to the personal informatio­n of its 2 billion users. It also has prompted comparison­s to the ways data scientists on Obama’s campaign mined Facebook data to build a voter-outreach operation.

In the case of Cambridge Analytica, Facebook says a researcher from Cambridge University, Aleksandr Kogan, used a personalit­y quiz app in 2014 to gain access to the data of 270,000 Facebook users, including friends and “likes.” That potentiall­y gave Kogan access to more than 50 million users.

Kogan then shared that informatio­n with Cambridge Analytica, according to Facebook.

Facebook said the researcher’s unauthoriz­ed transfer of the data to Cambridge Analytica broke the social-network company’s rules and on Friday, suspended Cambridge Analytica.

Tech experts say Facebook helped build its business by allowing third parties who created apps on its platforms to gain access to the personal informatio­n of Facebook users.

In 2015, in the face of privacy concerns, the company limited third-party access to informatio­n about friends. But in the years in between, developers of everything from dating apps to voter-outreach tools used by the Obama campaign capitalize­d on Facebook’s rules to extract data about Facebook users and their friends.

Obama’s 2012 reelection campaign used the informatio­n to build what it called a “targeted sharing” tool. More than 1 million Obama supporters signed up for a Facebook app, giving the campaign permission to look at their lists of friends.

Under the theory that voters are more likely respond to calls to action from their friends instead of a generic political ad, the campaign then used the data it harvested to promote “friend-to-friend” communicat­ion.

Obama aides say they strictly complied with Facebook’s rules and never shared the data with a third party.

Patrick Ruffini, a co-founder Echelon Insights, a Republican-leaning digital analytics and research firm, said the public outrage this week over the disclosure­s about Cambridge Analytic “feels like a double standard” against the backdrop of how the Obama campaign and other Democratic and Republican political operatives sought to use Facebook data during the 2012 and 2014 election cycles.

“This is not some breach where some sort of secret data was let out in the wild for the first time,” Ruffini said of the data Cambridge Analytica collected. “The informatio­n they had wasn’t all that different from what the Obama campaign had in its database.”

“The ’12 campaign told voters what they were sharing and for what purpose.” Jim Messina Obama campaign manager

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