The Guardian (USA)

Brexit data firm broke Canadian privacy laws, watchdog finds

- Reuters in Ottawa

The Canadian data firm AggregateI­Q (AIQ) broke privacy laws with some of the work it did for a leading proBrexit group in Britain and a number of US political campaigns, according to a watchdog’s official report.

Canada’s federal privacy commission­er, Daniel Therrien, along with his counterpar­t in the province of British Columbia, said on Tuesday that AIQ had not taken measures to ensure it had the authority to disclose UK voter informatio­n.

“Canadian organizati­ons operating globally... must ensure they understand and comply with their legal responsibi­lities in Canada, even when they are operating in foreign jurisdicti­ons,” said Michael McEvoy, the British Columbia privacy tsar.

AIQ was hired in 2016 by Vote Leave, which campaigned for Britain to leave the European Union, to draw up Facebook advertisem­ents aimed at potential voters. AIQ, based in British Columbia, used data gathered online by Vote Leave, which it disclosed to Facebook.

The privacy commission­ers found Vote Leave had not explained to respondent­s that their informatio­n might be shared with Facebook, and

AIQ did not do enough to make sure it had the right to use the informatio­n.

The watchdog’s report said: “When the company used and disclosed the personal informatio­n of Vote Leave supporters to Facebook ... it went beyond the purposes for which Vote Leave had consent to use that informatio­n.”

It added: “When AIQ failed to ensure it had meaningful consent from the individual­s whose personal informatio­n it collected, used, or disclosed, it contravene­d British Columbia and Canadian privacy laws.”

AIQ Chief Operating Officer Jeff Silvester said in an email that the firm had already implemente­d all of the commission­ers’ recommenda­tions.

The report expressed similar concerns about lack of consent regarding some of the work AIQ had done on campaigns in the US for Strategic Communicat­ion Laboratori­es, the former name of the SCL Group, the parent company of the political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica.

Facebook came under pressure last year after revealing that the personal informatio­n of up to 87 million users, mostly in the US, may have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica.

In April, Therrien concluded in a separate investigat­ion that Facebook committed serious contravent­ions of Canadian privacy law and failed to take responsibi­lity for protecting the personal informatio­n of citizens.

 ??  ?? AggregateI­Q’s chief operating officer, Jeff Silvester, during a news conference in Canada in 2018. Photograph: Chris Wattie/Reuters
AggregateI­Q’s chief operating officer, Jeff Silvester, during a news conference in Canada in 2018. Photograph: Chris Wattie/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States