The data scientist at the heart of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Aleksandr Kogan, has apologised for his role in it.
Kogan spoke to 60 Minuteson Sunday, maintaining that at the time, he believed he was doing everything correctly, and that he wouldn't have done anything to destroy his relationship with Facebook.
SEE ALSO: Facebook's facial recognition features could cost it billions of dollarsBut Kogan apologised for thinking that people knew they were giving away their data.
"Back then we thought it was fine. Right now my opinion has really been changed," he told the program.
"And it's been changed in particular, because I think that core idea that we had — that everybody knows and nobody cares — was fundamentally flawed. And so if that idea is wrong, then what we did was not right and was not wise. And for that, I'm sincerely sorry."
Facebook has since expressed remorse, taking out full-page ads to say sorry too back in April. Mark Zuckerberg also said sorry in Congress.
Of course, things weren't so contrite amid revelations of the scandal, when the social media giant said Kogan "lied" to them. He said Facebook allowed it to happen, because it "clearly has never cared" nor enforced its developer policy.
Kogan's app had a terms of service which allowed transfer or sale of user data, despite it being in conflict with Facebook policy.
"And they tell you that they can monitor it. And they can audit. And can let you know if you do anything wrong. I had a terms of service that was up there for a year and a half that said I could transfer and sell the data. Never heard a word [from Facebook]," he said.
"The belief in Silicon Valley and certainly our belief at that point was that the general public must be aware that their data is being sold and shared and used to advertise to them. And nobody cares."
Kogan maintained he was being singled out by Facebook, even though he believes the problem is much bigger. He pointed to a former colleague, Joseph Chancellor, who now works for Facebook but said they "did everything together" for the Cambridge Analytica project and has escaped blame.
Facebook even worked with Kogan between 2013 and 2015, where he said he was brought in to teach staff about what he learnt from the data he collected from Cambridge Analytica.
Facebook confirmed to 60 Minutesthat he did some "research and consulting" work with them, but wasn't aware of Kogan's Cambridge Analytica activities.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Data scientist behind Cambridge Analytica scandal apologises-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
7
浏览
18339
获赞
56
Bitcoin wipes coronavirus losses, passes $10,000 again
There's a popular meme that shows Bitcoin on a perpetual rollercoaster. It's true: The world's largeYouTube is working on a fix to its crashing iOS app
If you're having problems with YouTube on your iPhone, it isn't just you.Wednesday afternoon saw widThis is the secret message Elon Musk sent to space on his cosmic Tesla
Elon Musk is always one for a nice surprise. Just after SpaceX launched the first flight of its FalcPSVR2 launches in February for $550
The next generation of console virtual reality finally has a price tag and a release date.Sony lifteFacebook insists new Workplace tool was for 'preventing bullying,' not suppressing unions
Facebook wants to empower you to make the world more open and connected as you suppress your workersDonald Trump threatens to take aid from Puerto Rico and, seriously, WTF
UPDATED(1:50 p.m. ET) to include comments from San Juan mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz.Just when youTrump is feeling really, really under
Trump's latest tweet about Puerto Rico is certainly on-brand, to say the least.The U.S. president upGoogle is shutting down Stadia, its cloud gaming service
Stadia is joining that great big Google cloud in the sky.On Thursday, Google announced it will be shTim Cook calls out 'senseless killing' of George Floyd in WWDC opening remarks
Tim Cook took the stage this morning at Apple's Steve Jobs Theater in Cupertino, California to talkElon Musk reveals SpaceX launch date plan for the Falcon Heavy
Elon Musk's "week or so" until the Falcon Heavy launch is now looking like it'll be closer to two weMicrosoft Office to be renamed Microsoft 365
Can you believe it? Microsoft Office soon won't be called Microsoft Office anymore. Microsoft is rebLensa AI app: What to know about the self portrait generator
An influx of vibrant AI self portraits has taken over social media in the past week. Each of these aComedian gives her family brilliant informational pamphlets before going on a date
Anticipating her family's inevitable questions, Mary Beth Barone prepared an informational pamphletSide hustle advice from 11 entrepreneurs who've been there
Whether the pandemic afforded you more time to focus on a longtime passion, or helped you discover aICE doxes thousands of immigrants seeking asylum on its website
Thousands of immigrants had their personal information released by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enfo