Cambridge
Analytica has been ordered to turn over information it has on US citizen David
Carroll by the UK's data protection watchdog.
The data
demand stems from legal action by Prof Carroll, who wants to know what
information the firm holds on him.
The company
is at the centre of a row over the way it grabbed data on millions of Facebook
users.
Cambridge
Analytica could face a steep fine if it does not comply before a 30-day
deadline expires.
Political
views
Prof Carroll
- an associate professor at Parsons School of Design in New York - was prompted
to find out what information it had gathered about him when it emerged that
Cambridge Analytica had built up profiles of 240 million Americans.
He sent a
data request to Cambridge Analytica. In March last year, he got back
information that showed how it had scored him on a small set of political
categories, including gun control and national security.
Prof Carroll
then launched legal action to find out more, as he believed the information
sent to him was incomplete. Cambridge Analytica had previously boasted that
every voter profile it generated used 4,000 to 5,000 data points.
As the
company named as Cambridge Analytica's data controller, SCL Elections, was
based in the UK, Prof Carroll launched legal action at the High Court in London
and also filed a complaint with the UK Information Commissioner's Office.
"This
should solve a lot of mysteries about what the company did with data and where
it got it from," he told the Guardian newspaper.
The High
Court case is due to be heard in the next few months.
In a letter
sent to the firm, the Information Commissioner said it wanted to know where the
data on Mr Carroll came from and what had been done with it.
"The
company has consistently refused to co-operate with our investigation into this
case and has refused to answer our specific enquiries in relation to the
complainant's personal data," Information Commissioner Elizabeth Denham
said in a statement.
Cambridge
Analytica, which has repeatedly said it did nothing wrong in the way it
processed data, is under fire for allegedly using the personal information of
millions of Facebook users for political campaigning, without their consent or
knowledge.
Neither
Cambridge Analytica nor SCL Elections have responded to a request for comment
on the ICO demand.
Last week,
bankruptcy proceedings were started for Cambridge Analytica and SCL Elections.
In a statement, the blame for the closure was put on a "siege of media
coverage" that had hit the two companies in the wake of the Facebook
data-harvesting scandal.
0 comments
Post a Comment