Gulf News

Cambridge Analytica and some scary truths

As long as there have been elections, there have been schemers and manipulato­rs eager to help fix the result

- By Ishaan Tharoor

Cambridge Analytica, a London-based data firm that sold its services to political campaigns, was thrust into the spotlight last week — thanks to a number of startling expose. Undercover footage, along with testimony and evidence provided by a former employee-turned-whistleblo­wer, offered a glimpse of the company’s shadowy dealings around the world. It secretly harvested the data of tens of millions of Facebook users and may have engaged in all sorts of offline skuldugger­y, including bribes and sexual blackmail, to help clients win elections.

Much of the American media has focused on Cambridge Analytica’s connection­s to the Donald Trump campaign and prominent figures in the American far Right. To some observers, the revelation­s about the firm’s practices fit a broader narrative of foreign meddling and manipulati­on into the 2016 United States election. But, as my Washington Post colleague Adam Taylor explained, the company has arguably had a bigger impact in other parts of the world, often through front organisati­ons that obscure its fingerprin­ts. Cambridge Analytica claims to have worked in a wide range of countries, including Australia, Brazil, Malaysia and Mexico. Reports suggest that’s nowhere near a complete list; an affiliated company named SCL Group had offices in Asia and Latin America and is known to have been involved in Indian local elections in 2010.

British broadcaste­r Channel 4 News also aired undercover footage last week of the firm’s chief executive, Alexander Nix, and a colleague claiming that they secretly ran the 2013 and 2017 election campaigns of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta.

Of course, Cambridge Analytica is neither the first nor the only company to engage in these electoral dark arts. As long as there have been elections, there have been schemers and manipulato­rs eager to help fix the results. Nor is there reason to believe with any certainty that the company was instrument­al in determinin­g recent electoral outcomes, including President Trump’s victory and the success of the Brexit referendum.

A ‘tipping point’

“Cambridge Analytica’s business model is arguably just a supercharg­ed version of something political parties have done for years — identifyin­g potential supporters, compiling detailed pictures of what makes them tick, then tailor-making messages to different groups depending on what they want to hear,” Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff noted — although she added that its aggressive mining of data may mark a “tipping point”.

Neverthele­ss, the company has found success and wealth by tapping into a rich seam of public anger. Christophe­r Wylie, the source for an investigat­ion published by Britain’s Observer, summed up the mission: “We exploited Facebook to harvest millions of people’s profiles. And built models to exploit what we knew about them and target their inner demons.”

Speaking to my colleagues, Wylie suggested that Cambridge Analytica had “found a high level of alienation among young, white Americans with a conservati­ve bent” well before Trump declared his intentions for the presidency. They go on: “In focus groups arranged to test messages for the 2014 midterms, these voters responded to calls for building a new wall to block the entry of illegal immigrants, to reforms intended the ‘drain the swamp’ of Washington’s entrenched political community and to thinly veiled forms of racism toward African Americans called ‘race realism,’ [Wylie] recounted.”

“The only foreign thing we tested was Putin,” Wylie said. “It turns out, there’s a lot of Americans who really like this idea of a really strong authoritar­ian leader and people were quite defensive in focus groups of Putin’s invasion of Crimea.”

A host of American political scientists are genuinely worried about this streak of American “authoritar­ian” feeling, which was weaponised by the Trump campaign (and possibly by Cambridge Analytica). A new report from Lee Drutman, a senior fellow at New America, a Washington think tank, warned that deepening polarisati­on under Trump is stoking authoritar­ian attitudes within his party. On Thursday, the Bertelsman­n Foundation, a respected German think tank, released its latest index of the health of democracy and governance in 129 developing­world countries. Its findings, based on two years of research and data, were grim: It saw growing social inequities and the curtailing of the rule of law and political freedoms in about 40 nations, including some countries with rather advanced democracie­s.

It’s not clear the extent to which social media has exacerbate­d these growing fault lines. But such turmoil is fertile terrain for profit. Anand Giridharad­as, the author of a forthcomin­g book on the delusions of Silicon Valley’s tech elites, pours scorn on the idea that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg could possibly be a potential successor to Trump. “At the heart of the fantasy,” Giridharad­as told my colleague Margaret Sullivan, “is the idea that the world is best changed privately, on high, from the rich and powerful, not democratic­ally, through political reform.” Hopefully, we know better. But companies like Cambridge Analytica are betting that we don’t. Ishaan Tharoor writes about foreign affairs.

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