John Frank and Mark Matthews of the Denver Post break yet another big story about manipulation of Colorado elections by outside actors, plying novel–and as it turns out, improper–social media engagement tactics to “microtarget” Colorado voters in what appears to have been a preview of Donald Trump’s unprecedented manipulation of social media to win the presidency in 2016.
Take a deep breath and keep reading, this is a big deal:
The political firm that obtained private data on millions of Facebook users worked in Colorado to help Republicans win a crucial majority in the state Senate.
Cambridge Analytica used its data to create “psychographic” profiles that allowed Republican operatives to target specific Colorado voters in battleground state Senate districts in 2014.
The company — now under investigation in two countries — touted its work with the Senate Majority Fund in 2014 as key to Republicans winning a one-vote majority in the state chamber for the first time in a decade. “These victories ultimately gave the GOP control over the Colorado state Senate,” the Cambridge Analytica website once touted. [Pols emphasis]
That’s a bold claim, and we’re obviously very interested in seeing the details behind it. Cambridge Analytica is under fire for having allegedly gone distantly beyond Facebook’s policies governing data aggregation on site users to build these so-called “psychographic profiles” of American voters–profiles that allowed the Trump campaign to identify and deploy precise messaging to individuals to persuade them to first support the Trump campaign, and then get out the vote. Or, failing that, to demotivate voters who could not be won over and persuade them to opt out of voting.
And apparently, our state was a practice run.
Given the extremely small margin by which Colorado Republicans won the Senate in 2014, fewer than 1,000 votes in a single suburban senate district, the work that Cambridge takes credit for in the story above could easily have made the difference. And everything that has happened since GOP won the Senate majority in 2014, to include the present impasse over sexual harassment under GOP leadership in the Colorado Senate, can be fairly considered the fruits of Cambridge Analytica’s work too.
Which means they have a lot to answer for even before we even start talking about Trump.
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After reading the original Guardian piece, I am not surprised by this revelation.
I did not know that any of them was sophisticated enough to read and understand anyof this type of data.
I thought our state Republican party was bought and paid for by Anshutz, Maffei, Mizel and Malone. Who knew the Mercers were so involved?
Kremlin Barbie…
Holy updates, Batman.
I feel very comforted to know that a fascist billionaire is working so hard behind the curtain to guide the humble citizens of America to serve the will of Koch.
Mercer upon the souls of those that follow the path of Moderatus.
Mercer upon us all. Koch be willing!
Those that follow the path of Moderatus…..
That sounds like the parallel universe version of the followers of Surak.
Or Sybok, who was duped into following a false god
Heh.
Well that could be interesting depending on how specific those mailers got for candidates. SMF is a 527, prohibited from spending on candidates.
I don't believe that's true for non-federal candidates.
A 527 is a Federal entity. The IRS doesn't care whether the candidate is for president or dog-catcher.
Colorado Supreme Court upholds “magic words” test for political spending by 527s
So, not no direct spending on candidates, but direct advocacy may limit the 527's ability to raise money.
So, raise as much as you want, as long as you don't use the "magic words" when advocating for a candidate.
The ads used candidate names apparently. Oops.
From elsewhere on the innertoobz:
Good for you,, Zappy, an intelligent comment with facts that actually advance the dialogue.
But no linky…so close.
I'm just going to leave this here.
http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2018/03/21/liberal-media-didn-t-think-data-mining-was-so-bad-when-obama-s-campaign-did-it.html
Oh did you read the Fox News article about the California teacher that fired his gun in the classroom and injured students?
Had Moddy commented yet on PA-18? I'll just leave that question there.
1) did they consume friend lists, or friend profiles? What the blurb you wrote indicates is the former; what CA did is the latter – much more intrusive.
2) did they get the data through a 3rd party? That's resale, which Facebook almost certainly prohibits in its TOS, and which is how CA got its data.
3) Brad Parscale, who ran Trump's digital campaign, had Facebook employees camped in his office helping. It's not as though Obama's team had a more helpful relationship.
Speaking of Faux News…
Lt. Col. Ralph Peters says he's 'ashamed' of Fox News and leaves his role as analyst