mercoledì 4 aprile 2018

Cdu, Spd ed Fdp Usavano i dati personali di Deutsche Post.

Giuseppe Sandro Mela.

2018-04-04.

2018-04-02__Deutsche_Post__001

CDU, SPD and Greens use big data to target Bundestag voters

«The Christian Democrats and Social Democrats are going door-to-door collecting voter information. They are hoping to gain access to the electorate in a way that was once unthinkable under Germany’s strict privacy laws.

Cornelius Golembiewski takes an iPad and a smartphone with him when he goes door-to-door for the Christian Democrats (CDU). On the iPad, he sees a map of his hometown, Jena, covered in green spots. The green indicates clusters of houses where potential CDU voters are likely to live.

Golembiewski gives a CDU pamphlet to a woman at her home near Jena’s main train station and talks to her about the party’s goals, just like in any other election season. But what is different this time around is that once she closes the door, he pulls out his smartphone and opens an app called Connect17. First, he clicks on a smiley face to show that the conversation went well and then enters the woman’s estimated age, gender and any questions she had about the campaign.»

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«Deutsche Post sold client microtargeting data to the Christian Democrats and Free Democrats before the 2017 elections»

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«Is this a scandal along the lines of Cambridge Analytica in the US?»

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«The Sunday edition of the national broadsheet Bild reported that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) and the center-right Free Democrats (FDP) purchased “more than a billion” of pieces of personal data about potential voters from a subsidiary of Deutsche Post in the run-up to Germany’s national election in September»

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«The data was reportedly anonymized but contained enough information for the parties to determine, for instance, the general political leanings of residents of a building»

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«The report comes as concern continues to grow about the role of data mining and microtargeting in elections»

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Non si è minimamente scandalizzati che Cdu, Spd e Grüne abbiamo comprato dati da entità che avevano istituito larghi database, magari non del tutto ortodossi.

Procedura altamente illegale, sia ben chiaro, ma umanamente comprensibile.

Né si resta poi tanto scandalizzati che Frau Merkel ed Herr Schulz se la dessero da santerellini, bacchettassero a destra e manca, e poi si comportassero anche peggio degli altri. È comportamento questo che disprezziamo in quano ipocrita.

Ciò che scandalizza invece è il pessimo uso che hanno fatto di tutte quelle informazioni sensibili: il 24 settembre alle elezioni hanno preso una batosta più che sonora. Almeno avessero perso un po’ meno.


→ Deutsche Welle. 2018-04-01. Deutsche Post sold voter microtargeting data to CDU and FDP

Deutsche Post sold client microtargeting data to the Christian Democrats and Free Democrats before the 2017 elections. Is this a scandal along the lines of Cambridge Analytica in the US? That depends on whom you ask.

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The Sunday edition of the national broadsheet Bild reported that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) and the center-right Free Democrats (FDP) purchased “more than a billion” of pieces of personal data about potential voters from a subsidiary of Deutsche Post in the run-up to Germany’s national election in September.

The data was reportedly anonymized but contained enough information for the parties to determine, for instance, the general political leanings of residents of a building. Officials from Deutsche Post, which is still partly publicly owned, have refused to comment, but the two political parties have confirmed that they did acquire the data, which included such information as disposable income, level of education and whether the people concerned owned cars.

The report comes as concern continues to grow about the role of data mining and microtargeting in elections. In particular, the British company Cambridge Analytica has generated headlines for its role in the 2016 US presidential election. The company has been accused of appropriating data from 50 million Facebook users to help Donald Trump’s campaign tailor advertisements to voters in swing states.

On its website, the national mail carrier touts the advantages of its Deutsche Post Direkt service with jargon-laden claims that it allows businesses to “approach the right target groups thanks to microgeographical consumer information,” ensuring “precise target group selections, reduced coverage waste and lower costs thanks to sharply defined attributes.”

German data-protection advocates are up in arms.

“This is an intolerable situation,” the Left party’s Anke Domscheit-Berg told Bild. “Passing on private data in the absence of express permission must be forbidden without exceptions.”

All of Germany’s parties, including the Left, purchase data so as to better target their messages to supporters — and even opponents.

Seehofer in Russian

Along with the Greens, the Left is relatively up front about its targeted appeals. For example, the party sent the voting records of deputies of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) to supporters of the party.

“There are crass differences between what the AfD promised in the campaign and what they actually vote for in parliament,” Mark Seibert, a consultant to the Left party, told the online journal Netzpolitik. “People need to know about this.”

Other parties are less forthcoming about data-driven microtargeting, but they still use it. The FDP, for instance, sent an ad campaign using the alias Heisenberg from “Breaking Bad” to people who had expressed an interest in Netflix, the streaming service that carried the US TV series.

Meanwhile, the Christian Social Union, the CDU’s allied Bavarian party, launched a Facebook campaign specifically aimed at Germany’s often very conservative Russian immigrant community. In Russian, it quoted party leader Horst Seehofer as saying: “We don’t want a republic in which leftist forces and multiculturalism have the upper hand.”

Social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter have long sold political advertisements — something for which they are coming under increasing criticism. Nonetheless, questions abound as to whether such ads do much good in Germany.

‘Auspicious electoral constituencies’

Though microtargeting now plays a role in elections in several countries, technology analysts point out that its effectiveness is constrained by the types of political systems that various countries use. Germany’s proportional representation means that there are no “swing votes” as there are in first-past-the-post democracies such as the US and the UK. That limits the value of microtargeting here.

Microtargeting in Germany focuses on “constituencies that had been party strongholds in the past, but saw lower voter turnout in former elections,” the researchers Simon Kruschinski and Andre Haller wrote in a 2017 study.

For example, they wrote, the FDP might use microtargeting data to avoid sending ads to households that receive the magazines published by the AfD or Greens and are, therefore, possibly less receptive to the neoliberal party’s message.

In addition, EU law offers greater guarantees of personal privacy than people enjoy in the US, so the sort of information that data-mining companies in Europe are allowed to sell is more restricted.

“German ‘data-driven’ canvassing cannot be compared with the highly sophisticated US campaigns, which use reliable data, experimental findings and data modeling to identify individual voter targets,” Kruschinski and Heller wrote. “In contrast, German parties use geographical targeting based on the analysis of precinct-level results from past elections to identify auspicious electoral constituencies for their canvassing efforts.”

Nontransparent methods

There has so far been little legislative oversight of microtargeting, which is used by parties in various countries in Europe and elsewhere.

“Different rules apply to commercial and political advertising,” Balazs Bodo, Natali Helberger and Claes H. de Vreese, researchers at the University of Amsterdam, wrote in a 2017 study. “While both in the US, the UK and in the EU sophisticated regulatory frameworks protect consumers from false and misleading commercial advertisements, political speech is not judged by the same standards.”

There is little evidence that microtargeting had great influence on the outcome of the September 2017 vote in Germany. Even with the data from Deutsche Post, the CDU recorded its worst result in 68 years.

But Bild’s report is an embarrassment — particularly for the FDP, which often presents itself as a pro-privacy party that stands up for citizens’ rights. And the perception that microtargeting, regardless of its true effectiveness, can be used to influence election outcomes has the potential to further undermine popular faith in democracy.

“When the constitution tasks the parties with reflecting the will of the people,” Hamburg Data Protection Commissioner Johannes Caspar told Bild, “it certainly doesn’t mean using nontransparent methods … to manipulate that will among voters.”

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