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INTERNET PEOPLE

File: 1457659586550.jpg (182.26 KB, 750x451, 750:451, cruz-smirk.jpg)

aaa36e No.5331570

What is Cambridge Analytica?

Cruz app data collection helps campaign read minds of voters

http://archive.is/c5sSn

original link:

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/2db0fc93cf664a63909e26e708e91c67/cruz-app-data-collection-helps-campaign-read-minds-voters

Protecting the privacy of law-abiding citizens from the government is a pillar of Ted Cruz's Republican presidential candidacy, but his campaign is testing the limits of siphoning personal data from supporters.

His "Cruz Crew" mobile app is designed to gather detailed information from its users' phones — tracking their physical movements and mining the names and contact information for friends who might want nothing to do with his campaign.

That information and more is then fed into a vast database containing details about nearly every adult in the United States to build psychological profiles that target individual voters with uncanny accuracy. Cruz's sophisticated analytics operation was heralded as key to his victory in Iowa earlier this month — the first proof, his campaign said, that the system has the potential to power him to the nomination.

After finishing a distant third in New Hampshire, Cruz is looking to boost the turnout of likely supporters in South Carolina and in Southern states with primaries on March 1, where voters are more evangelical and conservative.

The son of mathematicians and data processing programmers, Cruz is keenly and personally interested in the work. "Analytics gives the campaign a roadmap for everything we do," said Chris Wilson, data and digital director. "He has an acute understanding of our work and continually pushes me on it."

Data-mining to help candidates win elections has been increasing among both Republicans and Democrats. Mobile apps by other presidential campaigns also collect some information about users. But The Associated Press found the Cruz campaign's app — downloaded to more than 61,000 devices so far — goes furthest to glean personal data.

aaa36e No.5331636

File: 1457659810026.jpg (2.02 MB, 3000x1800, 5:3, cruz-looks-weird.jpg)

>>5331570

The Cruz app prompts supporters to register using their Facebook logins, giving the campaign access to personal information such as name, age range, gender, location and photograph, plus lists of friends and relatives. Those without a Facebook account must either provide an email address or phone number to use the app.

By contrast, the app offered by GOP candidate Ben Carson's campaign asks supporters to surrender the same information as Cruz from their Facebook accounts, but also gives an option to use it without providing any personal information. Carson's app separately asks users to let the campaign track their movements and asks them to voluntarily supply their birthdate and gender — including options for "male," ''female" and "other."

Ohio Gov. John Kasich's campaign app doesn't request personal information from supporters, but it repeatedly nags users to let the campaign track their movements until they answer yes. Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders' app, "Field the Bern," requires supporters to sign in using their Facebook account or an email address, and it also repeatedly asks to let the campaign track their movements until they answer yes. The other 2016 presidential contenders, including Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, appear not to have officially sanctioned campaign apps in Apple and Android stores.

The Cruz app separately urges users to let it download their phone contacts, giving the campaign a trove of phone numbers and personal email addresses. The campaign says that by using its app, "You hereby give your express consent to access your contact list," but Wilson said the campaign will not do this to anyone who declines to allow it when the app requests permission.

Cruz's app also transmits to the campaign each user's physical location whenever the app is active, unless a user declines to allow it. The campaign said it does this "so that we can connect you to other Cruz Crew users based on your particular geographic location." The campaign tells users it can share all the personal information it collects with its consultants or other organizations, groups, causes, campaigns or political organizations with similar viewpoints or goals.

It also shares the material with analytics companies. Cruz's campaign combines the information with data from a group called Cambridge Analytica, which has been involved in his efforts since fall 2014. A Cambridge investor, Robert Mercer, has given more money than anyone else to outside groups supporting Cruz.


aaa36e No.5331674

File: 1457659960778.jpg (132.21 KB, 1440x907, 1440:907, CRUZ-243.jpg)

>>5331636

Cambridge has a massive 10 terabyte database — enough to fill more than 2,100 DVDs — that contains as many as 5,000 biographical details about the 240 million Americans of voting age. Cambridge considers its methodology highly secretive, but it may include such details as household income, employment status, credit history, party affiliation, church membership and spending habits. Cambridge uses powerful computers and proprietary algorithms to predict Americans' personality traits.

The Cruz campaign paid Cambridge $3.8 million in 2015, accounting for more than 8 percent of all its spending. Two outside groups supporting Cruz, including one directly funded by $11 million from Mercer, paid the firm $682,000 since December. Cambridge has five employees at Cruz headquarters in Houston and 70 others split between New York City and the Washington suburbs.

The power of Cruz's data-driven systems was on display in Iowa.

The GOP candidates held similar positions on issues such as abortion and gun control. Cambridge helped differentiate Cruz by identifying automated red light cameras as an issue of importance to Iowa residents upset with government intrusion. Potential voters living near the red light cameras were sent direct messages saying Cruz was against their use.

"Everything in this campaign is data-driven. I've never seen anything like it," said Jerry Sickles, a paid field representative in Hooksett, New Hampshire, who uses the Cruz Crew app. "We just know exactly who our voters are, and we will make sure they get out to vote."

Cruz, the junior senator from Texas, has been outspoken about protecting Americans' personal information from the government, including the National Security Agency. "Instead of a government that seizes your emails and your cellphones, imagine a federal government that protected the privacy rights of every American," he said when announcing his campaign.

Cruz campaign officials say it's different for the government versus a campaign to collect data. Sickle said Cruz is building on the use of big data pioneered by the successful Democratic campaigns of Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. "It's not like we're giving it to the NSA," Sickle said. A campaign spokeswoman, Alice Stewart, added: "Why wouldn't we want to use every tool available to us to win?"


aaa36e No.5331715

File: 1457660099835.jpg (49.42 KB, 750x350, 15:7, Cruz-350.jpg)

>>5331674

The scope of Cruz's system is formidable. Cambridge's database combines government and commercial data sets such as voter rolls and lists of people who liked certain Facebook posts, along with consumer data from grocery chains and other clients that can provide a voter's preferred brand of toothpaste or whether he clips coupons. In Iowa, where identifying evangelical voters was key to Cruz's victory strategy, Cambridge's employees scoured the Internet for such useful information as church membership rolls.

Cambridge CEO Alexander Nix said the company categorizes every American into one of five basic personality types derived from academic research and up to 50,000 questionnaires conducted each month.

"We've quantified the personalities of every adult American," Nix said. "We can reach out and target those different clusters with messages about the things they care about most, but that have been nuanced to resonate with their personality type."

For example, a Cruz campaign worker about to knock on the door of a house would access information about the household's members through the Cruz Crew app, receiving prepared scripts about what issues each person was likely to care about, modified to appeal to their personality.

Even within issues such as the right to bear arms, Nix said personality types will tailor the message. For voters who care about traditions or family, a message may resonate about guaranteeing the ability of a grandfather teaching shooting lessons. For someone identified as introverted, a better pitch might describe keeping guns for protection against crime.

Cambridge and the Cruz campaign stressed that anyone providing personal information through the app does so voluntarily. Data uses are outlined in legal disclosures available on the campaign's website.

Cambridge said it operates behind firewalls on its computer servers to secure its data and follows all applicable U.S. laws. Cambridge runs its operations out of the U.S.; they would be illegal in Europe under stricter privacy laws there.

In the hours before the Iowa vote, the campaign pushed urgent messages through its app to users who had Iowa contacts listed in their phones. The app displayed pre-written text messages the supporters were encouraged to forward to their Iowa acquaintances, urging them to caucus for Cruz.

The chief technologist at the privacy advocacy group Center for Democracy and Technology, Joe Hall, said politicians are unlikely to strengthen privacy protections as their campaigns become more and more reliant on mining personal data to squeeze out votes. "This is a form of political-voter surveillance," Hall said. "If people understood that this amount of fine-grained, sensitive data was being used by political campaigns, they would likely feel betrayed."


37fa5a No.5331780

>>5331570

Does he try to look like the guy from Clockwork Orange on purpose or what the hell?


45df72 No.5331991

All campaigns do this faggot


bf14b1 No.5332089

>>5331780

He has an almost 'uncanny valley' look to his face. It's like looking at one of those robots that always have dead eyes.


aaa36e No.5332900

File: 1457663493778.jpg (109.28 KB, 800x565, 160:113, Cruz_Clockwork.jpg)


aaa36e No.5332974

>>5332089

there's this neurologist who analyzed Cruz's face and he didn't like what he saw:

>>5330659

>>5330659


000000 No.5333918

>Thread

Archived.

https://archive.is/3kDMF


aaa36e No.5334144

>>5333918

So the problem with Archive.is not archiving 8Chan threads is fixed?

anyway, the article was already archived here:

http://archive.is/c5sSn


aaa36e No.5340967

http://archive.is/bhx40

original link:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-politics/wp/2016/02/05/ron-paul-warns-republicans-not-to-vote-for-ted-cruz/

"It was very brief," said a Rand Paul supporter named Brandon Ross, "something to the effect of, 'Since Ted Cruz has proven that he's a defender of the Constitution, can he count on your vote on Tuesday?' Something like that. I responded that I didn't think that was proven at all, thanked her for the call, and disconnected… how Cruz's Super PAC got my name and that number so quickly? I don't know. But it's definitely creepy."


59ffa8 No.5341103

File: 1457719392907.png (52.25 KB, 600x600, 1:1, trump.png)

>>5332900

>Круз

>Крыса


8ade6d No.5341176

and what would be the identikit of a potential cruz voter?


5d02d5 No.5342517

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, appear not to have officially sanctioned campaign apps in Apple and Android stores.

Any politician with an (((app))) should be disqualified.


2d035c No.5342972

why dont trump use something like this if its so good?


aaa36e No.5343545

>>5342972

Because he doesn't have to fine tune his flattery to every type of voter imagineable? He has a general message that resonates with a lot of people.

Cruz speaks and acts like a dishonest preacher so that's why he needs this hi-tech data-mining to try to court specific voters in hopes that their support will spread to other voters later.


aaa36e No.5358142

File: 1457809426067-0.png (971.34 KB, 1370x1252, 685:626, DanGabriel1.png)

File: 1457809426068-1.png (309.99 KB, 636x1221, 212:407, Dan-Gabriel-tweet-2b.png)

File: 1457809426069-2.jpg (31.47 KB, 439x512, 439:512, danpgabriel_13.jpg)

Reminder that Ted Cruz employs a so-called volunteer named Dan Gabriel, a CIA agent specialized in propaganda who founded a company named Applied Memetics LLC.

Dan Gabriel was likely the one who came up with the dirty tricks used by Cruz against Carson in Iowa. [2nd picture]

Ex-CIA Agent & Cruz Supporter Who Runs Professional Shilling Company Allegedly Spread Lie About Carson Dropping Out & Tried To Frame Trump

http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=53968

And I remember a few weeks ago I'm not sure when exactly I think it was in January there was a thread on /pol/ clearly made by a butthurt Applied Memetics shill, he kept posting the Vote Trump Get Clinton meme over and over with a photo of a baby with Trump's head. Maybe it was Dan Gabriel himself ?


54b8f4 No.5381615

File: 1457924842787.jpg (147.63 KB, 1264x750, 632:375, 1449708681475.jpg)

bamp


735c14 No.5381790

>>5342972

I don't think it is good though - all it seems to be doing is reinforcing loyalty to Cruz among existing and probable Cruz voters. It's not improving his crossover appeal to Trump/Rubio/Kasich supporters or Democrats that might be inclined to vote Republican

Also >>5343545

A politician that promises everything to every man like Cruz will end up delivering nothing


7fd60f No.5381870

>>5381790

>A politician that promises everything to every man like Cruz will end up delivering nothing

Rubio actually had one of the best comebacks to Cruz on abolishing the IRS: "Well, who's gonna collect your VAT tax?" I don't understand how anyone can hear "abolish the IRS" and not stop and say "wut"


aaa36e No.5400433

File: 1458048179897.jpg (848.45 KB, 2400x3600, 2:3, Robert-Mercer-1.jpg)

I have to say after reading this article that Robert Mercer doesn't sound like a bad guy, quite the contrary - he's against Agenda 21, against the Anthropogenic Global Warming propaganda, against the Fed, for a return to the Gold standard. It's just unfortunate that he chose to bet on Ted Cruz.

But now I'm beginning to think that Mercer told Breitbart.com that he wasn't taking a side in the Cruz Vs Trump fight. If he had known Donald Trump would have been in the race two years ago he probably wouldn't have financed Cruz's campaign.

What Kind of Man Spends Millions to Elect Ted Cruz?

http://archive.is/0fspz

http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/features/2016-01-20/what-kind-of-man-spends-millions-to-elect-ted-cruz-

"Mercer is the co-chief executive officer of one of the country’s largest and most secretive hedge funds, Renaissance Technologies, but people who’ve spent time with him say he hasn’t shown any interest in advancing its agenda in Washington. They say he disdains the establishment wing of the Republican Party, which he sees as too cozy with Big Business and Wall Street. Unlike many of his peers in New York financial circles, he doesn’t shrink from the culture wars. He’s supported a campaign for the death penalty in Nebraska and funded ads in New York critical of the so-called ground-zero mosque. He and Rebekah have also directed money to an anti-abortion group and a Christian college, though people who know the father and daughter say they don’t talk about religion.

(…)

“He’s a very independent thinker,” says Sean Fieler, a conservative donor in New Jersey who’s worked with Mercer on advocating a return to the gold standard. “He’s a guy with his own ideas, and very developed ideas, and I wouldn’t want to speak on his behalf.”

Four people who’ve discussed the matter with him say Mercer is preoccupied with the country’s monetary and banking systems, which he sees as hopelessly compromised by government meddling. He was the main financial backer of the Jackson Hole Summit, a conference that took place in Wyoming last August to advocate for the gold standard, two of these people said. His name wasn’t anywhere on the agenda. According to video shot at the event, he sat with Rebekah toward the back of the audience, an unobtrusive, silver-haired gentleman with dark brows, wire-rimmed glasses, a navy suit, and a red tie. At dinner that night, he sat at a table while other guests chattered around him, softly whistling to himself.

(…)

According to Neugebauer, Cruz laid the groundwork for his run in February 2014, at a private meeting on the deck of the Palm Beach home of prominent donors Lee and Allie Hanley. Joining the Hanleys around a table in the Florida sun were Cruz and his wife, Heidi; his strategist, Jason Johnson; Neugebauer; and Robert and Rebekah Mercer. The topic was Cruz’s chances in the election. A pair of researchers hired by Mercer and Hanley presented some intriguing findings. The country was ready for a Mr. Smith Goes to Washington figure—they used the phrase “Trump-like,” Neugebauer says—meaning that an outsider candidate should have a good shot in 2016. The elder Mercer, as usual, sat silently in his suit and tie as the group spent seven hours discussing how a race might play out. "

(…)

"Mercer is also a passionate critic of a central element of the modern financial system known as fractional reserve banking, these people said. Essentially, it’s the practice of banks lending out their depositors’ money to others. Banks have been doing this for hundreds of years, but a few out-of-the-mainstream economists consider it a form of fraud—akin to conjuring currency out of thin air. According to one associate, a thinker said to be influential with Mercer is Murray Rothbard, the late economist who called the modern banking system “a shell game, a Ponzi scheme.” It’s unclear how Mercer’s views on the banking system square with his hedge fund activities; it emerged in the Senate tax investigation that Renaissance, to boost returns, sometimes sought leverage of as much as 20 times the value of its assets from giant banks such as Barclays. " (…)

It's a long article but it's worth reading.


3041de No.5407138

>>5331570

>Analytics gives the campaign a roadmap for everything we do,

This is what's wrong with democracy. Pandering to ignorant majorities. By contrast, someone like Trump makes decisions because he wants to make America great again, not because he wants to gain favor with as many people as possible.


aaa36e No.5428879

>>5358142

Any news on Dan Gabriel?


aaa36e No.5451143

Pre-emptive bump. I may have something about Dan Gabriel later


aaa36e No.5474102

this is Dan Gabriel's twitter account by the way

https://twitter.com/danpgabriel


43f3c1 No.5478027

>>5358142

>second pic

I kek'd tbh

How do I get a job trolling people?


19a577 No.5483125

>>5331991

hello cruzbot.




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