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Boris and Cambridge Analytica

(209 Posts)
jura2 Fri 26-Jul-19 14:18:05

he was asked in the HoC yesterday 'why did you visit Cambridge Analytica in 2016?' and his reply was 'I don't know' and sat down.

Can he just be let off answering such a massively important question. His answer was hugely rude, dismissive and arrogant - but surely, and much more importantly, refusing to answer for his actions. We all now know the rôle Cambridge Analytica played in the campaign - and he has even appointed Cummings as Chief Advisor.

This is seriously concerning. What is the HoC's rules re different MPs asking the same question? It needs asking, every day, every session- until he gives an answer.

GrannyGravy13 Fri 26-Jul-19 16:39:56

Not on Facebook/instagram/snapchat, I have twitter but my privacy settings are “closed”.

My vote was totally my own, after long family discussions!!!

However I love Cambridge, fabulous shops, restaurants and architecture.

lemongrove Fri 26-Jul-19 16:35:28

I have taken a moment to think about it......and it’s rubbish.

lemongrove Fri 26-Jul-19 16:33:38

Ah, that explains why The Charge Of Light Brigade is being used by GGM3 ( on a different thread )
I wondered where it had popped up from.?

jura2 Fri 26-Jul-19 16:33:02

I am perfectly aware - but it was hilarious t read... Thanks. Great day here.

From a friend 'With their tactics aimed specifically at behaviour change, YOUR big data was used against you to CHANGE YOUR BEHAVIOUR to ensure you voted to leave the EU.

This means that if you voted to leave, that may NOT have been your intention until your behaviour was changed using "weapons grade" comms.

Take a moment. Think about that.,

lemongrove Fri 26-Jul-19 16:31:52

Surpassing jura

MawBroonsback Fri 26-Jul-19 16:31:36

Oh Jura read your English Lit
"The Charge of the Light Brigade"
Nothing to do with politically left
Not having a good day are you? smile

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 16:31:34

For anyone to dismiss the concerns about Cambridge Analytica as "collective hysteria" is somewhat alarming.

lemongrove Fri 26-Jul-19 16:30:01

I always read it as ‘search engine’ but thought you may be a sir rather than a madam.?SirChenjin

Boris Johnson is certainly a hot topic at the mo.....perhaps it will settle down soon Maw
#wontholdmybreath

jura2 Fri 26-Jul-19 16:29:37

Witches of Salem and collective hysteria now- you are outpassing yourself today.

MawBroonsback Fri 26-Jul-19 16:28:48

"Collective hysteria" apologies for my idiosyncratic phone

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 16:28:22

Granny - He's hardly the new kid on the block though, is he. I think by now most of us have decided whether we enjoy his approach to politics or think he's a buffoon and one of the last people to be leading the UK at a time like this. His time as PM is irrelevant.

jura2 Fri 26-Jul-19 16:27:54

Maw- there is a very good reason why Boris is at the forefront now. Just ignore if you don't want to take part. As fr Boris being on the 'left of us' well, I just had to laugh, oh lol!

And you are doing exactly what he did- deflect and not answer. And this is exactly why his reply, in the House of Commons, as Prime Minister - was so indicative of the man, and the rôle he and Cummings, and probably others, played in the Leave Campaign and Cambridge Analytica.

1000s of people today received un-solicited e-mails- from Boris- asking for support. No not just Tory members either. And Cummings is right behind it. It is of serious concern when a PM was involved in very dodgy campaigning and intends to do the same, with the same methods- even when they have been found out and Fraud proven.

MawBroonsback Fri 26-Jul-19 16:26:04

Oh Varian I have a lot of respect for your intellect and frequently agree with your posts -no irony intended- but I retain a healthy (I hope) scepticism about how my Internet usage (GN mostly!) Could go influence either Trump's presidential. campaign, the referendum or the last GE .
I cannot get worked up about whether or not Boris visited them let alone bother to start a thread.
I do worry about the GN collectovve hysteria on some issues --not sure what it represents but the Witches of Salem is at the back.of my mind.

GrannyGravy13 Fri 26-Jul-19 16:23:23

MawBroonsback I was referring to all the “anti Boris” threads/posts and like you say the “usual suspects”.

Far too many for a man who has been PM for 48 hours.........he has definitely got people “rattled”!

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 16:22:28

I think I need to think of it as 'searching gin' from now on - which is now making me very thirsty for that pink gin in the fridge grin

Sorry - back to Boris!

Urmstongran Fri 26-Jul-19 16:21:21

So glad I’ve never used any Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and WhatsApp varian
My voting preferences are mine alone, not influenced by outside bots nor being harvested to further misuse.
?
I suppose that why in my digital virginity I was always cross to be told the referendum was illegal.

I had no part in that!

varian Fri 26-Jul-19 16:17:38

What if someone said to you the apps you use daily including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and WhatsApp are all "crime scenes"? Those are the words the makers of a new Netflix documentary called The Great Hack use to describe social media.

The film is about one of the biggest scandals in recent times, when information from millions of Facebook profiles was handed over to a company called Cambridge Analytica.

The firm used information on what people liked, who they interacted with or what they posted about to tailor adverts to their social media feed for political campaigns. Those included Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign and the Leave.EU campaign.

"Data has now become the world's most valuable asset, more than oil," Jehane Noujaim, one of the directors of The Great Hack, tells Radio 1 Newsbeat. "There is a fight going on for your personal data, which is now being weaponised in order to manipulate you into voting the way those people who have bought your data want you to."

Jehane says we are "living in the Matrix" and says she and her co-director Karim Amer want the film to help us all understand how our information is being used and to get everyone talking about it.

The filmmakers followed three people who played significant roles in the scandal. One of them is Brittany Kaiser, who worked for Cambridge Analytica and then exposed what was happening at the company. Brittany Kaiser worked for Cambridge Analytica and took part in the Netflix documentary. "She began her career as an idealistic intern in the Barack Obama campaign, seeing the ascent of these technologies and tools being used," explains Karim.

He says Brittany and her colleagues "invented how social media would be used in politics. Then we see the same person working at Cambridge Analytica, at the centre of Brexit, at the centre of the Trump campaign." Through her and the other contributors, they were able to unpack how we have got to a place where technology is having such a huge impact on our lives.

"These things began as spaces to share our likes, music preferences, selfies," says Karim. "So the question is, if Facebook is a crime scene, how do we get justice?"

He believes the idea that crimes are only committed in the physical world is now completely redundant. Karim says we should think of our personal data as "a virtual voodoo doll" that is "reflective of your emotional pulse. Every moment of the day and every different day it is adjusting to who you are and what the algorithm thinks you want. The reason why that voodoo doll is effective is because you are constantly giving your digital footprints away."

Facebook was this week fined a record $5bn (£4bn) over the Cambridge Analytica scandal

Despite their comments about social media, neither Jehane or Karim think we should quit it completely. "It's about consent," says Karim, who thinks people "really don't understand" what data they are giving up. "We are being tricked," he says. These apps are being designed to survey you constantly - your every movement - and sell your location and your details to the highest bidder."

The Great Hack is on Netflix UK and Ireland now.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/newsbeat-49085306

Urmstongran Fri 26-Jul-19 16:17:19

Oh god - the latter, right from the start! Which is why I loved it.

Oh dear.
??

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 16:13:12

Thanks Urm smile

Putting down the Boris bashing stick for a moment to indulge myself a bit and digress completely, can I ask you - do you read it as search engine or searching gin? It's meant to be the former but other posters have said they thought it's the latter and actually, I think I prefer that one! Esp given the week I've had at work and the school holidays...

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 16:10:17

There are 50 active threads at the moment - as far as I can see 4 are about Boris. Given the very divisive nature and questionnable abilities of the person who has been voted in as PM to lead us through one of the most turbulent periods in recent UK history I don't think 4 equals the Valley of Death. The situation as it stands at Westminster might do, but not 4 posts on GN.

Urmstongran Fri 26-Jul-19 16:07:43

No SirChenjin (love the name BTW it still makes me smile - very witty) we aren’t on here to add to the OP debate. We’re just politely asking for more amalgamation to other threads regarding Boris!

MawBroonsback Fri 26-Jul-19 16:00:51

Not protesting too much - just "Boris to right of us Boris to left of us :and the usual suspects "volleyed and thundered"
GN should not be like the Valley of Death.

Drum1234 Fri 26-Jul-19 15:55:45

Well, some of us think that having a despicable, lying, cheating, self entitled, narcissist as our PM worth a few threads. If you don't, read the others.

SirChenjin Fri 26-Jul-19 15:48:29

And yet you all take the time to post...!

Just ignore them if you don't like them? There's plenty more on a range of different subjects to choose from. There's a great one going at the moment on the very important topic of dogs in John Lewis, for example wink

Anniebach Fri 26-Jul-19 15:41:58

He could have said ‘I was there but I don’t know if I was involved ‘ , it worked for the leader of the opposition.