🔥 🔥 Data warfare: The Cambridge Analytica files

This week looks at the explosive results from a whistle blower exposing the psychological warfare tools used by Cambridge Analytica.

The man who created Cambridge Analytica

Back in the early days of the Internet there was a web page with a red button. It did nothing but people would go there and just press it in the hope one day it would.

Today we have a different type of button. The privacy button. Trained from years of clicking “I accept” buttons, we now click OK to sharing our data with countless organisations without a second’s thought.

Everyone knew we were sharing our data with someone. But understanding which celebrity you look like or what personality you are like was too much of  a draw.

Now we can see the extent to which it was  abused.

The Guardian has released an astonishing article of how Facebook acted as a conduit to deliver a vast amount of data to an academic from the University of Cambridge, who then sold it on illegally to a company called Cambridge Analytica.

Go and read the story.

It connects the dots between Bannon, Trump, Brexit and Russia.

For those who didn’t go and read the story, one of the core people behind the launch of Cambridge Analytica, Christopher Wylie has turned whistle blower and is revealing the methods undertaken to undermine elections.

It details key theory, data collection and insight to deliver the desired effects we see but only barely understand today. 

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. 

Whilst the data is out of the bag, the extent to which populations have been compromised and the knowledge that this is happening will eventually result in a push back the other way. 

The push back on fake news and Facebook’s involvement had already started, but could this kick start an even stronger and broader push back?

Protecting the future

Most people in industry are worrying about GDPR – a new data law that aims to protect people’s data and privacy. It is modernising a law that stems back to a time before Google even existed, so it is much needed.

Let’s be clear though. 

Passing data from the Cambridge University academic to Cambridge Analytica was illegal under that old law. 

The new law makes the penalties much higher but does not make it any more illegal. 

The increased fines are forcing companies to be much more aware of data and who is responsible for it.

But trying to stop people clicking on buttons authorising the sharing of data is a waste of time. 

Facebook could be forced to take a privacy first approach. They would argue they already are but a quick look at the user experience says otherwise. 

When it comes to controlling how much data is shared with companies, the selection boxes are often lost underneath the text. 

More often though you do not even have the ability to restrict access (as in the above image) and there is little to no warning from Facebook when a company is pushing the boundaries and trying to get more than is appropriate.

The ultimate solution is to give ourselves control of our own personal data, so that we can recover data or force it to be anonymised. 

The world is not set up that way today but it could be.

Riaz Kanani

Founder of Radiate B2B, which helps companies target advertising at specific companies usually as part of an account based marketing programme.

I have spent almost two decades building startups or expanding fast growth companies in a variety of functions - from tech to operations to marketing, with a little corp dev on the side.

Always up for a discussion on building tech businesses and the latest tech trends. Tweet me.