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Facebook Businesses Privacy Security Social Networks The Internet

Facebook Hires Firm To Conduct Forensic Audit of Cambridge Analytica Data (cbsnews.com) 137

After it was revealed that political data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica, harvested personal data from more than 50 million Facebook users, the social media company has been scrutinized for not better protecting its users. Today, CBS News reports that Facebook has recently hired Stroz Friedberg, a digital forensics firm, to conduct an audit of Cambridge Analytica. According to a press release issued by Facebook on Monday, Cambridge Analytica has agreed to "comply and afford the firm complete access to their servers and systems." From the report: The social network said it asked Christopher Wylie and University of Cambridge professor Aleksandr Kogan to submit to an audit. Facebook says Kogan has verbally agreed to participate, but Wylie has declined. Wylie is a former employee of Cambridge Analytica who described the company's use of illicit data in interviews late last week. Cambridge Analytica, Kogan and Wylie were banned from Facebook on Friday. Cambridge Analytica did not immediately confirm that it had agreed to comply with the audit. The firm has denied the allegations that it improperly collected and used the data. A spokeswoman for Stroz Friedberg declined to comment on the firm's involvement with an audit.

"We are moving aggressively to determine the accuracy of these claims," Facebook officials said in a statement. "We remain committed to vigorously enforcing our policies to protect people's information. We also want to be clear that today when developers create apps that ask for certain information from people, we conduct a robust review to identify potential policy violations and to assess whether the app has a legitimate use for the data. We actually reject a significant number of apps through this process. This is part of a comprehensive internal and external review that we are conducting to determine the accuracy of the claims that the Facebook data in question still exists. If this data still exists, it would be a grave violation of Facebook's policies and an unacceptable violation of trust and the commitments these groups made."

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Facebook Hires Firm To Conduct Forensic Audit of Cambridge Analytica Data

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  • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:25PM (#56286797)

    "The Data Crunching Prowess of Barack Obama" - https://politics.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

    Carol Davidsen, former director of integration and media analytics for Obama for America:
    "“They [Facebook] came to office in the days following election recruiting & were very candid that they allowed us to do things they wouldn’t have allowed someone else to do because they were on our side,” Davidsen tweeted." https://ijr.com/2018/03/107708... [ijr.com]

    • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:32PM (#56286849)

      The Obama campaign invented the deep-dive into Facebook data for their 2008 and 2012 campaigns. They not only openly bragged about doing what CA did and far more, but somehow the media fawned all over him for it. Odd, that:

      https://www.cnn.com/2012/11/07... [cnn.com]

      https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

      http://swampland.time.com/2012... [time.com]

      https://www.technologyreview.c... [technologyreview.com]

      • Why would you describe this as 'odd'? Nothing 'odd' about it. Friends help each other.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Xarius ( 691264 )

        Jeez there's a lot of Whataboutism [wikipedia.org] on every single article on here these days. Is it new? Or am I just noticing it more?

        @Parent: How about you, instead, tell us what you actually think about the mass harvesting, potential abuse, and resale of people's personal information - how does it make you feel? Do you think it's a problem? If so, do you think there are any solutions?

        Me? It make me feel very uncomfortable, and I think we need legal mechanisms in place to take control over our data from these parties -

        • by Anonymous Coward

          A: We're punishing you

          B: That seems like a double standard, here's why.

          A: whataboutism!

        • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

          by GrimSavant ( 5251917 )
          Right wing authoritarianism is on the rise nowadays, and it seems to have taken root pretty strongly in the internets, or at the very least it has taken root very loudly. Principles don't really matter for that, what matters is particular people, and whether it's my guy doing something or if it is your guy. Tu quoque is what passes for a standard rhetorical technique.

          So for this subject, the underlying issue of whether or not Facebook hoovering up tons of personal data with poor controls on how that data
          • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday March 20, 2018 @06:53AM (#56289951)
            Wait, "right wing authoritarianism is on the rise", so government authority has to be expanded over social media? Which you don't expect Republicans to do??

            Do I need to point out how absurdly self-contradictory that is? Because I will.

            You said that the Right is both authoritarian, which you imply is bad, and not authoritarian enough, which you're also saying is bad. A double contradiction!

            That aside, do you know what Authoritarianism is?

            • Right-wing authoritarianism is an academic term, I didn't make it up, and perhaps the mods should look it up before they decide that I am misusing it. It refers to a psychological outlook, and the "right wing" portion of it does not refer to the typical right-wing versus left-wing political spectrum. Stalinism is arguably fueled by RWA, even though communism is the opposite of right-wing from a traditional political standpoint.

              I used the term right wing authoritarianism explicitly to differentiate it fro
              • I'm well aware of the nature and meaning of the term. Which is how I recognize the inapplicability to the American political right, which holds dear an ideology of limited government. Authoritarianism maximizes the authority (hence the name) of government, American Conservatism demands strict limits on government authority and Republicans generally believe the Federal government has already exceeded it's constitutional limits. It is, by definition, impossible for the American Right to be Authoritarian.

                W

                • The American Right contains libertarian elements, but they are no where near as libertarian as they believe they are, much less represent themselves as. Ron Paul was one of the best examples of right-wing libertarianism in America, and he was an also-ran that never went much of anywhere in the Republican party. The authoritarian parts of that coalition have grown in power and really are in the driver's seat with Trump, and they were most strongly represented in the "Religious Right". This may come across as
                  • By specifying "Right Wing", you are specifying a political context. Which is fine by me because I'm not interested in discussing the psychology of conformance, obedience, and group dynamics today. Nor am I at all interested in opinions of Trump.

                    In America, the Right and Left argue constantly over where authority over specific matters lies within the framework of the Constitution. Under Authoritarianism, there is no argument.

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          Jeez there's a lot of Whataboutism

          Not when it's the same subject, and you're pointing out double standards and hypocrisy. As is usually the case, the people breaking out the "W" word are the real tools in the conversation.

        • whataboutism is a bullshit argument. Always has been, always will be.

        • Me? It make me feel very uncomfortable, and I think we need legal mechanisms in place to take control over our data from these parties - even if we misguidedly gave some control away in the past, usually by having our trust betrayed or being bamboozled by small-print and legal linguistics.

          "misguidedly gave some control away in the past"?

          That's a nice rewriting of "actually bragged about our preferred politician's supposed tech savviness in doing this exact same thing."

    • by GrumpySteen ( 1250194 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:43PM (#56286955)

      Slightly different situation. Facebook sold data to the Obama campaign. Cambridge Analytica harvested data that they didn't pay Facebook for. Facebook wants their cut.

      • by Woldscum ( 1267136 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:55PM (#56287053)

        https://ijr.com/2018/03/107708... [ijr.com]

        "A former Obama campaign official is claiming that Facebook knowingly allowed them to mine massive amounts of Facebook data — more than they would’ve allowed someone else to do — because they were supportive of the campaign.
          In a Sunday tweet thread, Carol Davidsen, former director of integration and media analytics for Obama for America, said the 2012 campaign led Facebook to “suck out the whole social graph” and target potential voters. They would then use that data to do things like append their email lists."

        “They came to office in the days following election recruiting & were very candid that they allowed us to do things they wouldn’t have allowed someone else to do because they were on our side,” Davidsen tweeted."

        "Davidsen began the tweet thread with a link to a Time article outlining the Obama campaign's Facebook targeting campaign, which she said was codenamed “Project Taargus”

      • "It's just being smart." -- Trump
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Nope, you're a liar. Obama used readily available public data and analytics databases. Cambridge used an essentially fake app that was deployed to collect private data that was not otherwise publicly available, under the pretense of research. Over 99% of the people that hit 'no' to the question of whether or not they would like their data shared also had their data compromised, anyway. Then that data was given to the campaign. Lies all the way down. Probably not illegal, but to characterize blatant theft of

      • Backing up your post with link and quotes:

        So the firm [Cambridge Analytica] harvested private information from the Facebook profiles of more than 50 million users without their permission [nytimes.com], according to former Cambridge employees, associates and documents, making it one of the largest data leaks in the social network’s history.

        In the United States, Mr. Mercer’s daughter, Rebekah, a board member, Mr. Bannon and Mr. Nix received warnings from their lawyer that it was illegal to employ foreign
        • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

          Mr. Bannon and Mr. Nix received warnings from their lawyer that it was illegal to employ foreigners in political campaigns, according to company documents and former employees.

          You can't be serious. You mean like how Hillary's campaign hired that British spy to compose a dossier?

      • Seems to me that Facebook approved a researcher's harvesting of massive amounts of data through their API (the core of their business model), and said data was then resold.

        That's how Facebook works, but now that it helped elect someone they didn't like it's a problem?

        To my knowledge, it is not illegal for a campaign to hire foreign-based consultants.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      How predictable that the first part would be a copy/paste what-about-ism.

      If you have evidence that Obama's campaign did something wrong, post it. Tell the ICO, maybe they will look for those documents when they raid Cambridge tomorrow.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Woldscum ( 1267136 )

        https://ijr.com/2018/03/107708... [ijr.com]

        Ex-Obama Campaign Director Drops Bombshell Claim on Facebook: 'They Were on Our Side'

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The important part that Trump's favourite media outlet left out is that she says they didn't break the rules. Cambridge appear to have broken at least UK law, possibly US law.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      But he did it for the right reasons which was to inform the public. Trump used this information to order people to vote for him, and they did. Obama informed. Trump ordered.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      When one side of US politics enjoys working deep in social media its all cyber trendy and all very legal.
    • "The Data Crunching Prowess of Barack Obama" - https://politics.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

      Carol Davidsen, former director of integration and media analytics for Obama for America: "“They [Facebook] came to office in the days following election recruiting & were very candid that they allowed us to do things they wouldn’t have allowed someone else to do because they were on our side,” Davidsen tweeted." https://ijr.com/2018/03/107708... [ijr.com]

      Indeed. All things are good when done by Democrats, and all things are evil when done by Republicans.

      If you disagree, you are guilty of whataboutism. And also probably racism, somehow. I'll figure out how later.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:40PM (#56286933) Journal

    ...when I first heard this story, it was that Facebook sold an analytics firm a shit-ton of data on their users. You can argue all day long whether FB's gathering was moral or no, but the sale seemed straightforward.

    Now this has morphed into "..it was revealed that political data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica, harvested personal data from more than 50 million Facebook users,..." . ...which has an entirely more malignant sound. Coincidence?

    So - did CA "harvest" this data in any sort of illegitimate way, or does that have more to do with the person/party they did it FOR than anything?

    • FB had better stat recasting this as abuse, not as a sale gone in a way they didn't expect, IE better for the buyer.

      Which they will, and are, since they, FB, are caught selling access to data to people they are not supposed to be helping at all. Shame on them, shame!

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @05:50PM (#56287449) Homepage Journal

      The created a Facebook app. It looked innocent, one of those stupid personality tests. But in the ToS that no-one read it said it would grab your private data AND the private data of your friends.

      That last bit is definitely illegal. You can't agree to give up personal data on behalf of your friends. About 300k people took the test, 50m people's data was stolen.

      • The created a Facebook app. It looked innocent, one of those stupid personality tests. But in the ToS that no-one read it said it would grab your private data AND the private data of your friends.

        That last bit is definitely illegal. You can't agree to give up personal data on behalf of your friends. About 300k people took the test, 50m people's data was stolen.

        How is it illegal? Cite the law, please.

        How, exactly, did it grab that data? Did it reach out to people's PC's and grab it? Or did they buy it from Facebook?

        What setting to NOT share that kind of data was ignored? A setting in CA? Or a setting in Facebook?

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Data Protection Act. EU rules on personal data are much stricter. The ICO is applying for a warrant to raid them today.

      • "They", as in Cambridge Analytica, did not create the app or use it to gather any data. Kogan did that, with Facebook's approval and using the tools provided by Facebook. Cambridge got the data from Kogan.

        I believe the only real issue is that Kogan may have violated terms by selling data that was for non-commercial use.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          There are also the tapes C4 released, where they talk about setting up political rivals with honeypots and the like.

          • Yes, but not in relation to this incident. They may be bad actors, but they don't seem to have done anything illegal under US law in this case.
            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              They are a British company. They very likely broke British law.

              Having said that, isn't foreign interference in US elections illegal?

      • But in the ToS that no-one read it said it would grab your private data AND the private data of your friends.

        That last bit is definitely illegal.

        That's just part of FaceBook's API. Is FaceBook's API that allows a user to grant access to their friends list illegal?

        You can't agree to give up personal data on behalf of your friends.

        Here's what the Obama campaign did in 2012: [theguardian.com]

        Every time an individual volunteers to help out – for instance by offering to host a fundraising party for the president – he or she will be asked to log onto the re-election website with their Facebook credentials. That in turn will engage Facebook Connect, the digital interface that shares a user's personal information with a third party.

        Consciously or otherwise, the individual volunteer will be injecting all the information they store publicly on their Facebook page – home location, date of birth, interests and, crucially, network of friends – directly into the central Obama database.

        "If you log in with Facebook, now the campaign has connected you with all your relationships," a digital campaign organiser who has worked on behalf of Obama says.

        The only thing I can see that CA did differently than the Obama campaign is that they (allegedly) told FB it was for "research" but in fact used it for commercial purposes. So if you're mad at CA for violating FB's TOS and want to make sure Zuck gets his cheddar, then okay, that's fair. But if it's all just "conservative politicians are using soc

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Here's what's happening. The Russia narrative fell apart. Even with Democrats screeching about it 24/7 for months, it's obvious that Trump isn't going to be ensnared in that and nobody right of Bernie Sanders believes it. So the next thing was some porn star that Trump apparently had sex with. Oh, wow, *nobody* knew he was a womanizer. Right. Of course, the left lost all their credibility on this being a big deal 20 years ago.

      So this is the latest. Some company tied to Trump stole a bunch of data fro

      • The Russia narrative fell apart.

        Lol, over 100 charges so far. I don't think "falling apart" means what you think it means.

        The full list [vox.com] of known indictments and plea deals in Mueller’s probe

        1) George Papadopoulos, former Trump campaign foreign policy adviser, pleaded guilty in October to making false statements to the FBI.

        2) Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser, pleaded guilty in December to making false statements to the FBI.

        3) Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chair, was indicted in

        • 1. Get back with me when Trump is convicted
          2. It'd be interesting to set Mueller loose on Clinton's campaign staff, wouldn't it?

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          Lol, over 100 charges so far.

          None of which have anything to do with Russia changing the results on voting machines or colluding with Trump.

          I don't think "falling apart" means what you think it means.

          Oh, but it does. See above. The rest of your post is a classic Gish Gallop: [medium.com]

          The term Gish gallop refers to a fallacious debate tactic in which one barrages one's opposition with a deluge of individually weak arguments which take far too long to debunk individually in a way that sustains the audience's inter

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

              Something nobody has accused the Russians of.

              Of course they have. [nytimes.com]

              It's very easy to pretend that there's no scandal if you pretend the scandal is something other than what it is.

              1) There is no scandal

              2) Russiagaters keep moving the goalposts. First it was hacking the DNC servers, then it was hacking electric grids, then it was spreading "discord" amongst Black Lives Matter activists. That minorities live in a murderous police state was a big shocker to them until Russia said it was happening.

              The Mueller

      • We have always been at war with Eastasia.

        It has been pretty well established that the Russians waged a psychological warfare campaign in the 2016 election, and it looks like they were reaching out to elements of the Trump campaign at least both through Papadapolous and the Trump Tower meeting about "adoptions", aka the Magnitsky Act and the sanctions surrounding that. I suppose you can bullshit if you want about that, but there have been many indictments and even several guilty pleas around with these iss
        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          It has been pretty well established that the Russians waged a psychological warfare campaign in the 2016 election

          As well established as the ideas that:

          • Moon landings were faked
          • Clinton's ordered a hit on Vince Foster
          • Obama is a Kenyan-born muslim
          • The CIA puts mind-controlling drugs in jet fuel

          And so on. Russiagaters have exactly the same amount of evidence as all those other whackjob conspiracy theorists: none.

          It hasn't been made clear yet what Trump's role himself in all of this is, but his behavior has been

          • Next you'll tell me the mafia isn't real. Or that Paul Manafort is a figment of my imagination.

            List crazy conspiracy theories all you want, but you're just flashing shiny objects to distract from what's actually happening. Maybe in Russia you can get indictments with no evidence at all, but it typically doesn't work quite that way in the US federal legal system, at least as long as democracy isn't torn down. There's evidence both in the indictments and found by the news media, as well as forensic analysis
            • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

              Next you'll tell me the mafia isn't real. Or that Paul Manafort is a figment of my imagination.

              Or you could stop waiving those hands for five seconds and post some evidence. If, say, I'm arguing with an Obamabot who insists 44 had the greatest intentions but was held back by a Republican Congress, I will bury his dumb ass with facts and citations on how the worst policies from the Obama Administration came from Obama himself, not Republicans.

              If you Russiagaters weren't completely full of it, you would come

  • by Orne ( 144925 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @04:51PM (#56287019) Homepage

    “This was unequivocally not a data breach,” tweeted Andrew Bosworth, a Facebook executive. “No systems were infiltrated, no passwords or information were stolen or hacked.”

    So, what really happened is that a bunch of people installed a bunch of Facebook apps, and the users authorized their personal data to be used by the app. What happened after that was standard Facebook Business Model stuff, they sell your eyeballs to advertisers [consumerist.com] and take a 30% share of sales [facebook.com]. It's how all social media stays in business, by passively collecting data about you, where you eat, your income levels, what you buy, etc. All in the name of "targeted advertising", which we as users frankly embrace. We love seeing ads for things that may interest us, companies like the opportunity of us buying stuff, FB loves collecting data and giving it to the govern.... I mean collecting data.

    So, if we the public are clicking Accept every time we want to do a survey, or use a service, or install an app.... the horse is out of the barn. Then we get to Cambridge Analytica, who is accused of using personality quiz apps to gather information.. yeah, which is pretty much the whole purpose of those little quizzes to find your interests. The user answers a bazillion personal questions, and it spits out "Your Medieval Name Would Be Patsy", but what do you think happens to all that data after you click Commit? They aren't even building a profile of you, because Facebook already did that work by getting you to fill it out yourself. CA figured out, like Obama did in 2012. What do you think "big data" is really all about? Joining all these little data sets, like purchased this here, travelled there, likes flying, hates TSA, lives here, people that live here tend to earn this much, people that travel there and live here tend to vote this way, so hook them up with some targeted political ads and bam, you've increased your probability of an election win.

    • by sphealey ( 2855 )

      A couple of points: (1) did Cambridge Analytical or a partner/contractor use a degree-of-network harvesting license that had been provided for academic research only, then transfer the data collected to a for-profit political consulting firm/division? A lot of conflicting information on this question and key parties including Cambridge University have now clammed up (2) if Facebook user A accepts an app Facebook argues she/he has accepted harvesting of their personal data as consideration for the use of

    • “This was unequivocally not a data breach,” tweeted Andrew Bosworth, a Facebook executive. “No systems were infiltrated, no passwords or information were stolen or hacked.”

      So, what really happened is that a bunch of people installed a bunch of Facebook apps, and the users authorized their personal data to be used by the app. What happened after that was standard Facebook Business Model stuff, they sell your eyeballs to advertisers [consumerist.com] and take a 30% share of sales [facebook.com]. It's how all social media stays in business, by passively collecting data about you, where you eat, your income levels, what you buy, etc. All in the name of "targeted advertising", which we as users frankly embrace. We love seeing ads for things that may interest us, companies like the opportunity of us buying stuff, FB loves collecting data and giving it to the govern.... I mean collecting data.

      The difference here is that even with that authorization there were things that Kogan (who collected that data) and CA were not allowed to do with that data. And even after Kogan and CA claimed to have destroyed the data they were still misusing that data.

      I agree it's a very difficult policy to enforce, and if you're in the habit of clicking agree some of those 3rd parties are probably violating it, but it doesn't change the fact that Kogan and CA are one of those scummy 3rd parties misusing your data.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      If it was just the person who used the app it would be okay, at least legally. But it's their friends as well. Friends who didn't agree to anything.

      • They agreed when they signed up for Facebook.
        Facebook collected the data. Facebook claims ownership over all data you send to the.
        Facebook ignored their user's privacy settings. Facebook sold that data.

        At worst, CA is guilty of violating a Facebook ToS regarding the use of that data.

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        Place too many restrictions on how big brand social media can collect on their users then social media will have to find another way to offer a "free" service.
        The users data and the ads pay the bills. That allows the social media brand to grow.
        Social media is not free. Something has to be sold to make a profit.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'll just leave this here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpbeOCKZFfQ

  • A private firm used computers and access to social networks to learn about people's opinions on various political matters. What's the crime in that?.. Why would this even be unethical, much less illegal?

    Maybe, this violated Facebook's TOS — but that's the most, that can even be alleged here... If that...

    • by sphealey ( 2855 )

      We'll see. Or probably we won't, since violations of US election law are no longer prosecuted, but in any case it looks a bit darker:

      - - https://www.wired.com/story/ca... [wired.com]
      In a series of undercover videos filmed over the last year, Britain's Channel 4 News caught executives at Cambridge Analytica appear to say they could extort politicians, send women to entrap them, and help proliferate propaganda to help their clients. The sting operation was conducted as part of an ongoing investigation into Cambridge An

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Monday March 19, 2018 @06:07PM (#56287587) Homepage
      In terms of illegal activity that seems to be all that can be claimed, and it's a civil issue at that. So far, anyway. Facebook appears to have gone into full-on panic mode all of a sudden which makes me think there's a lot more to this than has been made public yet. Or they just really, really, fear the regulation that seems like it's almost inevitable at this point, at least in the EU, and I dare say Trump will tweet out the US' position soon enough. IIRC, Zuck's a Democrat and Trump's not that fond of Democrats *or* Silicon Valley execs, so place your bets...

      Supposedly Facebook's CSO, Alex Stamos, who actually wanted Facebook to look into the Russian misinformation campaign during the US elections, is leaving Facebook after clashes with other senior management, most notably Sheryl Sandberg. Even more potentially damning is that according to Carole Cadwalladr [twitter.com] Facebook staff were in Cambridge Analytica's London offices "securing data" when agents of the UK's ICO turned up to do the same. Whether this occured before Cambridge Analytica became the subject of a formal request for a seach warrant [bbc.co.uk] is a little unclear though. I think this is starting to look like it's might have got some real legs to it, so I'm going to stock up on the popcorn and see how deep the rabbit hole goes.

      Facebook and Cambridge Analytica can at least count their blessings on one thing though; they managed to have all this blow up in their faces *before* the GDPR kicked in.
    • Boo boy Nix (the CEO of CA) got stung by undercover news agents saying he plants video surveillance on Ukrainian hookers or sends in wealthy developers with bribes too good to be true, and gets komoromat on them [channel4.com]. Tomorrow, they are airing how they secretly taped thier operations in the USA. It's not clear if the British government will shut down the broadcast due to its sensitive nature. I'd list the stated crimes but slashdot has a viewable limit.
    • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

      A private firm used computers and access to social networks to learn about people's opinions on various political matters. What's the crime in that?.. Why would this even be unethical, much less illegal?

      It's not - but it's everything that Russiagaters have been whining about for over a year and a half. A foreign company openly bragging about changing American elections - but the company is based in the U.K., not Russia, so the media and Stepford Democrats DGAF.

  • how awful social media is and just quit using it?

    The first time I saw someone post a picture of one of my inebriated classmates I realized facebook's potential for destruction and deleted my 2 month old account.

    I advise everyone to do the same.

    Pull the plug.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      I don't use Facebook either, and I've never created an account. But I don't fool myself into believing that this means they don't have a dossier on me, or that the way they store those isn't as accounts on their system...possibly with a flag saying "non-user".

      • I hear you, but it's better to make them have to dig for info on me and doubt its veracity than to give them all the info voluntarily. They exist to sell me to anyone with a big enough budget to screw me and others. The really big budgets buy millions of records and win elections. The low budgets send me postcards in the mail advertising a new local tattoo parlor.

        I think if you're going to have a facebook or other social media account you should do everything you can to give them false data to compete wi

  • by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Tuesday March 20, 2018 @12:44AM (#56289221)

    This a company that has bragged about subverting American elections [youtube.com] - but they're based in the U.K., so don't expect to see Democrats or Rachael Maddow freaking out about them 24/7 for the next two years or more.

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday March 20, 2018 @07:24AM (#56290043)
    Facebook sells data to people who want to target their marketing campaigns. Pretty sure Cambridge used the data exactly as Facebook intended our data to be used.

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