As the controversy over Cambridge
Analytics’ alleged misuse of Facebook data grows, other groups’ use of
the social network have also been thrust into the spotlight, including
President Barack Obama’s 2012 presidential election campaign.
Reports emerged over the weekend that data mining firm Cambridge
Analytica, which has ties to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential election
campaign, improperly used information from more than 50 million Facebook
accounts. Facebook has suspended the company from the social network.
The U.K. firm, which describes itself as “a data-driven communications
and marketing agency,” denies any wrongdoing.
The Washington Post reports that in 2007 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
invited developers to build businesses using Facebook data, effectively
letting them tap in to users’ lists of friends, ‘likes’ and interests.
At the company's 2010 developer conference, Zuckerberg took it a step
further, saying the company was loosening up the grip on storing user
data. "We’ve had this policy where you can’t store or cache data for any
longer than 24 hours, and we’re going to go ahead and get rid of that
policy," Zuckerberg said.
While the social network tightened its policy in 2015, the current
scandal has shone a light on how Facebook data has historically been
used.
On Twitter, Carol Davidsen, the former director of integration and media
analytics at Obama for America, explained how the 2012 campaign
harnessed Facebook’s Application Programming Interface (API) to access
the company’s "social graph” that maps users’ connections. This enabled
the campaign to access information on users’ friends when they used the
Facebook log-in button to access the campaign’s website, according to
the Washington Post.
18 Mar
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
Replying to @cld276
An example of how we used that data to append to our email lists.
pic.twitter.com/VHhSukvXDY
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
Facebook was surprised we were able to suck out the whole social graph,
but they didn’t stop us once they realized that was what we were doing.
11:02 PM - Mar 18, 2018
620
707 people are talking about this
Twitter Ads info and privacy
“Facebook was surprised we were able to suck out the whole social graph,
but they didn’t stop us once they realized that was what we were doing,”
Davidsen tweeted.
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
Replying to @cld276
An example of how we used that data to append to our email lists.
pic.twitter.com/VHhSukvXDY
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
Facebook was surprised we were able to suck out the whole social graph,
but they didn’t stop us once they realized that was what we were doing.
“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,” she added, in a
subsequent tweet.
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
An article written in 2012 about a project code named tärgus http://swampland.time.com/2012/11/20/friended-how-the-obama-campaign-connected-with-young-voters/
…
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
An example of how we used that data to append to our email lists.
pic.twitter.com/VHhSukvXDY
Davidsen also tweeted an example of how the campaign used the Facebook
data in its email lists.
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
Replying to @cld276
An example of how we used that data to append to our email lists.
pic.twitter.com/VHhSukvXDY
Carol Davidsen
✔
@cld276
I worked on all of the data integration projects at OFA. This was the
only one that felt creepy, even though we played by the rules, and
didn’t do anything I felt was ugly, with the data.
The data expert, who worked on the campaign from November 2011 to
November 2012, added that she felt uncomfortable about the project. “I
worked on all of the data integration projects at OFA. This was the only
one that felt creepy, even though we played by the rules, and didn’t do
anything I felt was ugly, with the data,” she tweeted.
Neither Facebook nor Davidsen have responded to a request for comment on
this story from Fox News.
The brouhaha over the Cambridge Analytica data scandal is intensifying.
Facebook announced Monday that it has hired a digital forensics firm to
conduct a comprehensive audit of the data miner.
Nonetheless, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg have
been slammed for their silence over the controversy.
There are also calls for tighter controls on the social network. “Recent
revelations about the abuse of Facebook's user data screams for
regulation,” said Marty P. Kamden, chief marketing officer of
cybersecurity firm NordVPN, in a statement emailed to Fox News.
Fox News has confirmed that Facebook officials will meet with aides from
the House Judiciary Committee as early as Wednesday to discuss the data
mining controversy.
NordVPN recommends that users revoke access to Facebook applications
that are no longer in use, as well as suspicious apps that offer users
to get “likes,” followers or view private accounts on Instagram, which
is owned by Facebook.
Fox News’ Chris Ciaccia, Chad Pergram and the Associated Press
contributed to this article.
Follow James Rogers on Twitter @jamesjrogers |
|