Facebook Receives a Maximum Fine From ICO for Analytica's Leak
By SaveDelete

Who would’ve thought that the British data analytics firm “Cambridge Analytica” helping Donald Trump win the US presidency in 2016 had anything to do with the misuse of private data? Well, after a thorough investigation, the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) did.
Everything started back in March 2018, when the ICO launched an investigation on Cambridge Analytica. It took only a couple of months for ICO experts to discover the malicious pattern of private data misuse.
The aftermath? Facebook has been fined £500,000 ($664,000) for breaking the strict laws and regulations on data sharing (Data Protection Act). The ICO has concluded that Facebook is to be held responsible for revealing personal data of some 87 million users.
Political consultancy firm Cambridge Analytica gathered the data. But, more importantly, it was put to use, thus violating the number of data privacy policies.
The ICO investigation followed up what the whistleblower, Chris Wyle, had discovered only to confirm that there was a malicious pattern. The further investigation revealed the actions that lead to Analytica’s leak.
It all started with a benign personality test app created by a researcher Michal Kosinski. After seeing the potential of the app, Aleksandr Kogan, the professor at Cambridge University, approached Kosinski and asked him for the Facebook users’ data the app had collected that far. Kosinski refuted Kogan's request, and that's where Cambridge Analytica decided to come in.
In fact, Cambridge Analytica paid Kogan over $800,000 to create a similar app. This new app became an absolute hit on the Facebook platform. It attracted over 320,000 users. The app gathered users’ data in two instances. When users started the app, it requested permission to collect:
- Public profile data, including name and gender
- Photographs in which the users were tagged
- Birthdate
- Pages users had liked
- Current city
- Posts on the users’ timeline
- Pages users had liked
- Newsfeed posts
- Friend lists
- Email addresses