Privacy watchdogs say firm broke rules for political ads on Facebook
VANCOUVER — Canada’s privacy commissioner says the findings of an investigation into a Victoria software company linked with the Cambridge Analytica scandal has profound implications for fundamental democratic principles and privacy rights.
The federal and B.C. privacy commissioners released a joint report Tuesday finding that AggregateIQ Data Services Ltd., also known as AIQ, broke Canadian privacy laws when it used and disclosed the personal information of millions of voters in British Columbia, the United States and the United Kingdom.
“With AIQ we now have a Canadian player playing a key role in the troubling ecosystem of political campaigning in the digital era. This is too close for comfort,” Daniel Therrien, Canada’s privacy commissioner, told a news conference in Vancouver.
AggregateIQ provides election-related software and political advertising. It has been linked to Cambridge Analytica, a now bankrupt company accused of improperly helping to crunch data for Donald Trump’s presidential campaign in the United States.