Cambridge University Researcher Lays Out Links With Facebook

Cambridge University Researcher Lays Out Links With Facebook
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Aleksandr Kogan, the researcher who shared Facebook user data with Cambridge Analytica, has said that a supply of anonymized user information he received from the social network came with no contract and no obligation to destroy it, according to Bloomberg.

"It was just ‘here’s an email, here’s a data set’," Kogan told U.K lawmakers as part of a U.K. inquiry into fake news. He said that in 2013 the social network provided him and his research students with anonymized user data, and that his eventual research he conducted was not particularly accurate. "The data we collected as a lab was never sold," he said. "That would be a very serious break of ethics. That data never left my servers and was exclusively used by my PhD students.

He said that only when he was approached by Cambridge Analytica parent company SCL did he create a commercial entity to collect new data. Along with Joseph Chancellor, a fellow researcher who now works at Facebook, Kogan formed a company at Cambridge that built the personality survey app that gathered the data eventually sold to Cambridge Analytica.

Kogan is the latest character in the Cambridge Analytica saga to give evidence to lawmakers around the world. During his U.S. congressional testimony earlier this month, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said his company was questioning “whether there was something bad going on at Cambridge University overall that will require a stronger reaction from us.“ He said that the social-media giant had now discovered “a whole program“ associated with the school, in which people built apps that vacuumed up the data of its users and their friends.

The university refuted the accusations and said its researchers "have been publishing such research since 2013 in peer-reviewed scientific journals and these studies have been reported widely in international media.“ It also said that Facebook had contact with the researchers themselves in 2013.