The Province

B.C. tech firmdenies lying to committee

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OTTAWA — A senior executive from B.C.-based AggregateI­Q spent three hours Tuesday denying pointed accusation­s that his company had misled MPs looking into Canadian links to an internatio­nal controvers­y over the sharing of Facebook data.

On two separate occasions, AggregateI­Q has been accused of lying to a federal committee about its connection to British political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica, which has been accused of improperly using private informatio­n on millions of Facebook users to influence voters in the U.K.’s 2016 Brexit referendum.

The company’s chief operating officer, Jeff Silvester, insisted the company did nothing wrong when it helped groups pushing for the U.K. to leave the European Union with online advertisin­g campaigns — and he seemed taken aback by accusation­s that his company was involved in illegal activity.

Speaking after his committee appearance, Silvester called the accusation­s from whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie “astonishin­g.”

“I know I’m telling the truth and I’ve always told the truth,” Silvester said.

It was Wylie’s allegation­s earlier this year that first connected AggregateI­Q to the Facebook data scandal.

Nearly 87 million users, including 622,161 Canadians, had their informatio­n accessed by Cambridge Analytica without authorizat­ion, Facebook estimates. Wylie claimed the company used the informatio­n to build psychologi­cal profiles for political gain in the referendum, as well as in Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Wylie has alleged that AggregateI­Q drew on the Facebook data Cambridge Analytica held when the company worked on the Leave campaign, which eked out a victory in the referendum.

His claims sparked parliament­ary inquiries in the U.K. and Canada, as well as investigat­ions by the B.C. and federal privacy watchdogs.

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