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He taught himself to code at age 19.<ref name="Whistleblower" /> | He taught himself to code at age 19.<ref name="Whistleblower" /> | ||
In 2010, at the age of 20, he began studying law at the ],<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|title=Christopher Wylie|url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/christopher-wylie/|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en}}</ref> |
In 2010, at the age of 20, he began studying law at the ], graduating with a ] in 2013,<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|title=Christopher Wylie|url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/christopher-wylie/|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=News highlights|url=https://www.alumni.lse.ac.uk/s/1623/interior-hybrid.aspx?sid=1623&gid=1&calcid=5378&calpgid=2288&pgid=252&ecid=8223&crid=0|access-date=2022-01-15|website=www.alumni.lse.ac.uk|language=en}}</ref> specialising in technology, media and IP law, and being awarded the Dechert Prize for Property Law.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Santiago|first=Ellyn|date=2018-03-18|title=Christopher Wylie: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know|url=https://heavy.com/news/2018/03/christopher-wylie-whistleblower-facebook-cambridge-analytica/|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en-US}}</ref> | ||
Wylie has a PhD in predicting fashions trends from the ].<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|title=Christopher Wylie|url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/christopher-wylie/|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en}}</ref> | Wylie has a PhD in predicting fashions trends from the ].<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|title=Christopher Wylie|url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/christopher-wylie/|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en}}</ref> | ||
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==SCL Elections and Cambridge Analytica, 2013-14== | ==SCL Elections and Cambridge Analytica, 2013-14== | ||
===Work at SCL=== | ===Work at SCL=== | ||
In 2013, Wylie began working as a contractor for ], and its offshoot for American elections (later renamed ]), an international consultancy specialising in data-driven ] in elections.<ref name="Observer2017"/> | In 2013, Wylie began working as a contractor for ], formerly Strategic Communication Laboratories''',''' and its offshoot for American elections (later renamed ]), an international consultancy specialising in data-driven ] in elections.<ref name="Observer2017"/> | ||
Wylie's role at SCL was first revealed in May 2017 by ''The Observer'' journalist ], who wrote that "He’s the one who brought data and micro-targeting to Cambridge Analytica".<ref name="Observer2017">Carole Cadwalladr, 'The great British Brexit Robbery: how our democracy was hijacked', ''The Observer'', 7 May 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/may/07/the-great-british-brexit-robbery-hijacked-democracy</ref> Describing his role as being the company's "director of research", Wylie worked with ] academic ] to illegally scrape the personal data of 87 million people from their ] profiles, and used the data to develop new forms of ] ].<ref name="KoganScapegoat">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/21/facebook-row-i-am-being-used-as-scapegoat-says-academic-aleksandr-kogan-cambridge-analytica|title=Facebook scandal: I am being used as scapegoat – academic who mined data|first=Matthew|last=Weaver|date=21 March 2018|website=the Guardian|accessdate=21 March 2018}}</ref> | Wylie's role at SCL was first revealed in May 2017 by ''The Observer'' journalist ], who wrote that "He’s the one who brought data and micro-targeting to Cambridge Analytica".<ref name="Observer2017">Carole Cadwalladr, 'The great British Brexit Robbery: how our democracy was hijacked', ''The Observer'', 7 May 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/may/07/the-great-british-brexit-robbery-hijacked-democracy</ref> Describing his role as being the company's "director of research", Wylie worked with ] academic ] to illegally scrape the personal data of 87 million people from their ] profiles, and used the data to develop new forms of ] ].<ref name="KoganScapegoat">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/21/facebook-row-i-am-being-used-as-scapegoat-says-academic-aleksandr-kogan-cambridge-analytica|title=Facebook scandal: I am being used as scapegoat – academic who mined data|first=Matthew|last=Weaver|date=21 March 2018|website=the Guardian|accessdate=21 March 2018}}</ref> | ||
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===EU Referendum campaign, 2016=== | ===EU Referendum campaign, 2016=== | ||
Wylie has repeatedly denied having had any involvement in the ], describing himself as "A Eurosceptic, but I wouldn’t call myself a Brexiteer",<ref name="PrivateEye2018b"/> and pointing to his having been abroad at the time of the referendum |
Wylie has repeatedly denied having had any involvement in the ], describing himself as "A Eurosceptic, but I wouldn’t call myself a Brexiteer",<ref name="PrivateEye2018b"/> and pointing to his having been abroad at the time of the referendum. He has conceded that most of the key personnel involved in the Vote Leave campaign's digital and campaign financing controversies were all friends or colleagues of his, including ] founder Darren Grimes, BeLeave Treasurer Shahmir Sanni, ] founders Zack Massingham and Jeff Silvester (a company set up at Wylie's instigation when he was SCL's director of research), and Vote Leave HQ staffer Mark Gettleson (who recruited AggregateIQ to work for Vote Leave), with Sanni and Gettleson later becoming witnesses in criminal investigations of the Vote Leave campaign.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Cadwalladr|first=Carole|last2=Graham-Harrison|first2=Emm|last3=Townsend|first3=Mark|date=2018-03-24|title=Revealed: Brexit insider claims Vote Leave team may have breached spending limits|url=http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/mar/24/brexit-whistleblower-cambridge-analytica-beleave-vote-leave-shahmir-sanni|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-15|website=]|language=en}}</ref> | ||
It subsequently emerged that in January 2016, Wylie and Gettleson wrote a joint proposal, on behalf of Eunoia, to ] campaign Director ], to pitch for a pilot providing microtargeting services to the Leave campaign in the ].<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> The pitch was ultimately unsuccessful, with Cummings later describing them as "charlatans".<ref name="Cummings2018">Dominic Cummings, 'On the referendum #24: Global conspiracies and a Scooby Doo ending?', ''Dominic Cummings' blog'', 23 March 2018. https://dominiccummings.com/2018/03/23/on-the-referendum-24-global-conspiracies-and-a-scooby-doo-ending/</ref> Gettleson subsequently admitted that they had only made the pitch to Vote Leave after first making a pitch to ] in November 2015.<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> | It subsequently emerged that in January 2016, Wylie and Gettleson wrote a joint proposal, on behalf of Eunoia, to ] campaign Director ], to pitch for a pilot providing microtargeting services to the Leave campaign in the ].<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> The pitch was ultimately unsuccessful, with Cummings later describing them as "charlatans".<ref name="Cummings2018">Dominic Cummings, 'On the referendum #24: Global conspiracies and a Scooby Doo ending?', ''Dominic Cummings' blog'', 23 March 2018. https://dominiccummings.com/2018/03/23/on-the-referendum-24-global-conspiracies-and-a-scooby-doo-ending/</ref> Gettleson subsequently admitted that they had only made the pitch to Vote Leave after first making a pitch to ] in November 2015.<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> | ||
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Eunoia Technologies Ltd was voluntarily wound up in October 2017,<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> with accounts running up to 31 May 2016.<ref name="Eunoia2017">'Eunoia Technologies Ltd: filing history', ''Companies House'', 23 March 2018. https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/09596348/filing-history</ref> | Eunoia Technologies Ltd was voluntarily wound up in October 2017,<ref name="PrivateEye2018"/> with accounts running up to 31 May 2016.<ref name="Eunoia2017">'Eunoia Technologies Ltd: filing history', ''Companies House'', 23 March 2018. https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/09596348/filing-history</ref> | ||
== |
==Whistleblowing== | ||
] | ] | ||
In March 2018, Wylie released a cache of documents to ''The Guardian'' centered around Cambridge Analytica's alleged unauthorized possession of personal private data from up to 87 million ] user accounts,<ref>{{cite web|last=Schroepfer|first=Mike|date=4 April 2018|title=An Update on Our Plans to Restrict Data Access on Facebook|url=https://newsroom.fb.com/news/2018/04/restricting-data-access/|publisher=}}</ref> which was obtained for the purpose of creating targeted digital advertising campaigns. The campaigns were based on psychological and personality profiles mined from the Facebook data which Wylie had commissioned in a mass-] exercise.<ref name="cbc" /> | In March 2018, Wylie released a cache of documents to ''The Guardian'' centered around Cambridge Analytica's alleged unauthorized possession of personal private data from up to 87 million ] user accounts,<ref>{{cite web|last=Schroepfer|first=Mike|date=4 April 2018|title=An Update on Our Plans to Restrict Data Access on Facebook|url=https://newsroom.fb.com/news/2018/04/restricting-data-access/|publisher=}}</ref> which was obtained for the purpose of creating targeted digital advertising campaigns. The campaigns were based on psychological and personality profiles mined from the Facebook data which Wylie had commissioned in a mass-] exercise.<ref name="cbc" /> |
Revision as of 18:52, 15 January 2022
Canadian data consultant (born 1989)Chris Wylie | |
---|---|
Wylie in 2019 | |
Born | (1989-06-19) 19 June 1989 (age 35) Victoria, British Columbia, Canada |
Education | London School of Economics (LLB) University of the Arts London (PhD) |
Occupation | Data consultant |
Employer | H&M |
Christopher Wylie (born 19 June 1989) is a Canadian data consultant who released a cache of documents to The Guardian he obtained while he worked at Cambridge Analytica, prompting the Facebook–Cambridge Analytica data scandal, which triggered multiple government investigations and raised wider privacy concerns. Wylie was included in Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2018. He is the head of insight and emerging technologies at H&M.
Early life and education
Wylie was born to parents Kevin Wylie and Joan Carruthers, both physicians. He was raised in Victoria, British Columbia. As a child he was diagnosed with dyslexia and ADHD. After being abused at the age of 6 by "a mentally unstable person", he successfully sued the British Columbia Ministry of Education after a six-year legal battle, winning a settlement of $290,000 at the age of 14. He left school in 2005 at the age of 16 without a qualification, and when asked about his "probable destiny" on his school leaver's yearbook page, he stated "just another dissociative smear merchant peddling backroom hackery in its purest Machiavellian form".
He taught himself to code at age 19.
In 2010, at the age of 20, he began studying law at the London School of Economics, graduating with a Bachelor of Laws in 2013, specialising in technology, media and IP law, and being awarded the Dechert Prize for Property Law.
Wylie has a PhD in predicting fashions trends from the University of the Arts London.
He later completed a master's degree in Political Management at George Washington University in Washington D.C.
Early career
Liberal Party of Canada (2005-2009)
After leaving school, Wylie moved to Ottawa, where he began volunteering for "a short stint" in the parliamentary office of his Member of Parliament, Keith Martin. During his time in Martin's office, he overlapped with Martin's executive assistant Jeff Silvester, who was later commissioned by Wylie to set up AggregateIQ. The following year, he got a job in the office of the Canadian opposition leader, Michael Ignatieff, at the age of 17. He subsequently "lost his job" in 2009 "in large part because he was pushing a nascent form of the controversial data-harvesting technique. At the time, the idea was viewed as too invasive and raised concerns with the Liberals, who declined to have anything to do with it. Wylie's recommended data-collection approach spooked party officials", CBC reported, quoting one Liberal Party colleague as saying "Let's say he had boundary issues on data even back then. He effectively pitched an earlier version of exactly to us back in 2009 and we said, 'No."'
Obama campaign (2008)
In 2008, he volunteered on the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, learning about microtargeting from Obama campaign adviser Ken Strasma. There has been some dispute over whether he volunteer in a senior campaign or a junior-level data entry role.
UK Liberal Democrats
During his time as a student, he had worked as a microtargeting and digital campaigns strategist for the Liberal Democrats in the UK, although his fixed-term contract was not renewed - one former colleague explained "We did not renew his contract because he is a compulsive bullsh*tter and doesn’t know what he’s talking about".
SCL Elections and Cambridge Analytica, 2013-14
Work at SCL
In 2013, Wylie began working as a contractor for SCL Elections, formerly Strategic Communication Laboratories, and its offshoot for American elections (later renamed Cambridge Analytica), an international consultancy specialising in data-driven psychographic targeting in elections.
Wylie's role at SCL was first revealed in May 2017 by The Observer journalist Carole Cadwalladr, who wrote that "He’s the one who brought data and micro-targeting to Cambridge Analytica". Describing his role as being the company's "director of research", Wylie worked with Cambridge University academic Aleksandr Kogan to illegally scrape the personal data of 87 million people from their Facebook profiles, and used the data to develop new forms of psychographic microtargeting.
During his time at SCL, Wylie worked for American Republican candidates affiliated with the party's "Tea Party" wing in the 2014 United States elections; and on disinformation campaigns for political parties in Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and the Caribbean. Wylie's research work included message-testing work for Steve Bannon on building a wall on the American-Mexican border, and he later recounted, "My ears perked up when I started hearing some of these things like 'drain the swamp' or 'build the wall' or 'the deep state' because these were all narratives that had come out from the research that we were doing," and that the wall "is not really about stopping immigrants. It's to embody separation. If you can embody that separation and you can further distance in the minds of Americans us here in America and them elsewhere, even if it is just across a river, or just across a desert, then you have won that culture war."
Departure from SCL
Wylie ceased working with SCL in 2014 to found his own company, Eunoia Technologies. A subsequent QC's report by Julian Malins, based on access to SCL/Cambridge Analytica's records, queried substantial parts of Wylie's account of his time at SCL, and the timing and circumstances of his departure. It states that he was never the company's "director of research" as claimed (a role which did not exist within the company), but that his employment contract made it clear that he was hired as a part-time "intern" on a student visa, limited to 19 hours of work a week; it queried his claim that he worked at the company until late 2014, quoting his resignation emails which stated that he left on 10 July 2014; it concludes that there was no evidence to support his claim to being a "founder" of Cambridge Analytica; and that contrary to his claims to have resigned in disgust at the company's practices, contemporary correspondence "does not suggest that, at least as at the end of his engagement with SCL, he had any qualms about the work he had been doing at SCL or helping others to do."
Upon departing from SCL in 2014, Wylie took with him several hundred pages of sensitive company documents, along with a copy of the complete Facebook dataset of 87 million individuals. At a 2018 Q&A session, "Wylie appeared visibly wrong-footed when asked why he had obtained so much compromising material on Cambridge Analytica prior to his departure, and why he held onto it for three years, and seemed to visibly struggle to provide any clear answer."
Eunoia Technologies, 2014-17
In 2014, Wylie co-founded Eunoia Technologies along with former SCL/Cambridge Analytica senior staff Brent Clickard, Mark Gettleson and Tadas Jucikas. In describing his ambitions for developing Eunoia, Wylie stated "I want to build the NSA’s wet dream". Eunoia Technologies has been criticized for the similar psychographic profiling tactics used by Cambridge Analytica, using the same dataset shared by Alexander Kogan.
In December 2014, Wylie registered Eunoia Technologies Inc in the tax haven of Delaware. In May 2015, a wholly owned UK subsidiary of Eunoia was registered in the UK as Eunoia Technologies Ltd. The name "Eunoia" meant "beautiful thinking" in ancient Greek, and the company offered election-related consultancy services including "psychographic microtargeting", "multi-agent system voter behaviour simulation", and "data & communications management".
Wylie's lawyer subsequently assured journalists that Eunoia had no data, but parliamentary testimony from Dr Kogan later revealed that Eunoia had possessed Kogan's full data set of 87 million Facebook users; and that SCL/Cambridge Analytica had only ever had access to some 4% of the scraped data, "in contrast with the contract with Mr. Wylie’s entity Eunoia, where Eunoia received all of the page like data as well as dyads", and that unlike SCL/Cambridge Analytica, Wylie's company had been the only organization Kogan granted complete access to the dataset.
Donald Trump presidential campaign, 2015
During the Easter of 2015, two of Wylie's Eunoia colleagues who had joined him from SCL, Tadas Jucikas and Mark Gettleson, flew to New York to meet Donald Trump's then-campaign manager on his 2016 presidential bid, Corey Lewandowski, for a meeting in a Central Park hotel. They pitched for Eunoia to work on the 2016 Trump presidential campaign, but were ultimately unsuccessful. The approach to the Trump campaign was made with Wylie's knowledge as CEO of Eunoia, and reportedly had his blessing.
Liberal Party of Canada, 2015
In November 2015, Eunoia Technologies pitched Facebook data-mining techniques to the Liberal Party of Canada, securing a $100,000 contract in January 2016 for "a short-lived pilot project" with the Liberal Caucus Research Bureau. However, the contract was not renewed beyond the pilot.
EU Referendum campaign, 2016
Wylie has repeatedly denied having had any involvement in the 2016 United Kingdom European Union referendum, describing himself as "A Eurosceptic, but I wouldn’t call myself a Brexiteer", and pointing to his having been abroad at the time of the referendum. He has conceded that most of the key personnel involved in the Vote Leave campaign's digital and campaign financing controversies were all friends or colleagues of his, including BeLeave founder Darren Grimes, BeLeave Treasurer Shahmir Sanni, AggregateIQ founders Zack Massingham and Jeff Silvester (a company set up at Wylie's instigation when he was SCL's director of research), and Vote Leave HQ staffer Mark Gettleson (who recruited AggregateIQ to work for Vote Leave), with Sanni and Gettleson later becoming witnesses in criminal investigations of the Vote Leave campaign.
It subsequently emerged that in January 2016, Wylie and Gettleson wrote a joint proposal, on behalf of Eunoia, to Vote Leave campaign Director Dominic Cummings, to pitch for a pilot providing microtargeting services to the Leave campaign in the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum. The pitch was ultimately unsuccessful, with Cummings later describing them as "charlatans". Gettleson subsequently admitted that they had only made the pitch to Vote Leave after first making a pitch to the opposing Remain campaign in November 2015.
It was subsequently reported that on the morning of the referendum result, Wylie posted the "Brexit butterfly" graphic to his social media in support of Brexit, along with the caption "We did it", tagging four individuals: Conservative MP Nigel Evans of the Vote Leave campaign board; BeLeave founder Darren Grimes, later found guilty by the Electoral Commission of using BeLeave as a vehicle for illegally breaking campaign spending limits; and Leave campaigners Luis Lopez and Shahmir Sanni, with the latter later becoming a "whistleblower" on Vote Leave's campaign finance breaches.
Eunoia litigation with SCL/Cambridge Analytica, and closure
From 2015, Wylie and Gettleson became embroiled in litigation with Cambridge Analytica's parent company, the SCL Group, with SCL alleging that Eunoia had infringed SCL's intellectual property, had misappropriated SCL's data, had attempted to 'poach' other SCL contractors, and had attempted to 'poach' SCL's clients. Wylie elaborated on the Eunoia allegations when denying them: "They tried to sue me over their claims that I was somehow trying to steal their clients, or to somehow try to interfere with their contractual relations with other employees, or what have you." SCL later claimed that Eunoia had been "the subject of restraining undertakings to prevent the misuse of the company's intellectual property". A QC's report noted:
- "On 21 May 2015, SCL discovered that Eunoia Technologies Limited had approached at least one of SCL’s existing clients in the USA, following confirmation from a US political client that they had received a proposal from Eunoia Technologies, which purported to deliver exactly the same services as SCL. Consequently, SCL’s lawyers wrote to Wylie and others at Eunoia Technologies Limited regarding suspected breaches of covenants on intellectual property, client solicitation, staff solicitation and non-competition."
Eunoia Technologies Ltd was voluntarily wound up in October 2017, with accounts running up to 31 May 2016.
Whistleblowing
In March 2018, Wylie released a cache of documents to The Guardian centered around Cambridge Analytica's alleged unauthorized possession of personal private data from up to 87 million Facebook user accounts, which was obtained for the purpose of creating targeted digital advertising campaigns. The campaigns were based on psychological and personality profiles mined from the Facebook data which Wylie had commissioned in a mass-data scraping exercise.
On the 18 March 2018, Wylie gave a series of detailed interviews to The Observer with revelations about his time at SCL/Cambridge Analytica, presenting himself as a "whistleblower". He subsequently provided testimony and materials to a range of inquiries and legislatures around the world, and his revelations were instrumental in the May 2018 collapse of Cambridge Analytica. Wylie admitted to having been the principal anonymous source for a May 2017 The Observer article by Carole Cadwalladr, which first drew attention to Cambridge Analytica. Cadwalladr subsequently related how she had tracked Wylie down via LinkedIn in early 2017, and after finding him "fascinating, funny and brilliant", had spent a year persuading him to go public with his allegations.
On March 27, 2018, Wylie provided evidence to the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee of the UK Parliament that contained further revelations about the practices at Cambridge Analytica and its associated companies.
In an interview with The Guardian, Wylie stated that Rebekah Mercer "loved the gays, and so did Steve Bannon. He figured if you could get the gays on board, everyone else will follow...(like the) Milo Yiannopoulos thing".
Post-whistleblowing career
On 1 December 2018, Wylie was hired by H&M as its consulting director of research.
Wylie criticised Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg over Facebook's role in spreading religious intolerance in Sri Lanka. Moulavi Zahran Hashim, a radical Islamist imam believed to be the mastermind behind the 2019 Sri Lanka Easter bombings, preached on a pro-ISIL Facebook account, known as "Al-Ghuraba" media.
He appeared in the 2019 documentary The Great Hack.
His book Mindf*ck: inside Cambridge Analytica's plot to break the world was also published in 2019.
Bibliography
- Wylie, Christopher (October 2019). Mindf*ck: inside Cambridge Analytica's plot to break the world. London, United Kingdom: Profile Books. ISBN 978-178816-506-8. Export edition.
Personal life
Wylie is self-described as gay and vegan.
References
- ^ Larsen, Karin (20 March 2018). "Who is Christopher Wylie? How a B.C. high school dropout set out on path to political data harvesting". CBC News. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- Gross, Terry (9 July 2018). "Reporter Shows The Links Between The Men Behind Brexit And The Trump Campaign". npr. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Timberg, Craig; Adam, Karla (21 March 2018). "How Cambridge Analytica's whistleblower became Facebook's unlikely foe". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
- Gold, Ashley; Scola, Nancy (20 March 2018). "Congress to Facebook: Send us Zuckerberg". POLITICO. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "Christopher Wylie: The World's 100 Most Influential People". Time. Retrieved 2020-09-23.
- Milmo, Dan (10 October 2021). "Frances Haugen takes on Facebook: the making of a modern US hero". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "Christopher Wylie: The whistleblower in the Cambridge Analytica scandal". Sources: Reuters, The New York Times, The Guardian, The Washington Post. Straits Times. 21 March 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - Zameena Mejia, 'Meet Christopher Wylie, the millennial whistleblower behind Facebook’s data controversy', CBC, 20 March 2018 https://www.cnbc.com/2018/03/19/4-facts-about-facebook-data-whistleblower-christopher-wylie.html
- Patrick White, 'Meet Christopher Wylie, whistle-blower on Cambridge Analytica and Facebook use of data', Globe & Mail, 19 March 2018 https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-who-is-christopher-wylie-the-whistle-blower-on-cambridge-analytica/
- ^ "Business plan hatched by Christopher Wylie sheds light on whistle-blower's ambitions, anxieties about Big Data". Retrieved 2018-09-30.
- ^ Cadwalladr, Carole (18 March 2018). "'I made Steve Bannon's psychological warfare tool': meet the data war whistleblower". The Observer.
- ^ "Christopher Wylie". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-01-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "News highlights". www.alumni.lse.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-01-15.
- Santiago, Ellyn (2018-03-18). "Christopher Wylie: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know". Heavy. Retrieved 2022-01-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - Jack Knox, 'How a Victoria kid ended up at heart of Facebook data-mining story', The Times Colonist, 20 March 2018 https://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/how-a-victoria-kid-ended-up-at-heart-of-facebook-data-mining-story-1.23206550
- Andy Blatchford, 'Facebook whistleblower pushed data-mining boundaries in Canada', CBC, 20 March 2018 https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/wylie-cambridge-analytica-liberals-1.4583810
- ^ 'News', Private Eye No. 1467, 8 April 2018, p. 5.
- Caron Lindsay, 'Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower used to work for Lib Dems and warned us of our 2015 demise', Lib Dem Voice, 18 March 2018 https://www.libdemvoice.org/cambridge-analytica-whistleblower-used-to-work-for-lib-dems-and-warned-us-of-our-2015-demise-56974.html Archived 2019-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
- "Ex-Lib Dem Colleagues Raise Doubts Over 'Walter Mitty' Observer Whistleblower". Retrieved 2018-12-30.
- ^ Carole Cadwalladr, 'The great British Brexit Robbery: how our democracy was hijacked', The Observer, 7 May 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/may/07/the-great-british-brexit-robbery-hijacked-democracy
- Weaver, Matthew (21 March 2018). "Facebook scandal: I am being used as scapegoat – academic who mined data". the Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- ^ 'Wylie's People', Private Eye No. 1497, 6 April 2018, p. 12.
- 'Nigeria to launch probe into two elections over Cambridge Analytica', Mail & Guardian , 3 April 2018, https://mg.co.za/article/2018-04-03-nigeria-to-launch-probe-into-two-elections-over-cambridge-analytica
- Kirker, Danica (21 March 2018). "Cambridge Analytica whistleblower gives inside look at Trump campaign". the Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- ^ Ryan Mac, 'The Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower Said He Wanted To Create "The NSA’s Wet Dream"', Buzzfeed, 22 March 2018. https://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanmac/christopher-wylie-cambridge-analytica-scandal
- ^ Julian Malins QC and Linda Hudson, Report Regarding Cambridge Analytica LLC and SCL Elections Ltd. (May 2018) https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/static.assets.commercial.prd.cambridgeanalytica.org/static_files/Malins+Report+re+Cambridge+Analytica+and+SCL+Elections+(4.27.18).pdf
- ^ "Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower Said He Wanted To Create "NSA's Wet Dream"". BuzzFeed News. Retrieved 2018-09-30.
- "Here are all the questions Mark Zuckerberg couldn't answer during this week's Congressional hearings". nordic.businessinsider.com. Retrieved 2018-09-30.
- Lee, Dave (2018-03-17). "Facebook suspends Trump campaign data firm". BBC News. Retrieved 2018-09-30.
- Aleksandr Kogan, 'Written evidence submitted by Aleksandr Kogan to the Digital Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee', House of Commons (UK), April 2018 https://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-committees/culture-media-and-sport/Written-evidence-Aleksandr-Kogan.pdf
- Aliya Ram, 'Cambridge Analytica whistleblower approached Kogan for data access', Financial Times, 24 April 2018 https://www.ft.com/content/72691744-47b0-11e8-8ee8-cae73aab7ccb
- Ryan Mac, 'The Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower Wanted His New Company To Work With Trump Campaign’s Manager', Buzzfeed, 28 March 2018. https://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanmac/cambridge-analytica-chris-wylie-eunoia-trump-campaign
- Andy Blatchford, 'Liberals awarded $100,000 contract to man at centre of Facebook data controversy', CBC, 21 March 2018. http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/christopher-wylie-facebook-liberals-canada-cambridge-analytica-1.4586046
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{{cite web}}
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