This is a viable mode for
precise data sharing, as far as «subject specialists» are concerned.
Not exact matches
The trove of documents
shared publicly by the company's former research director, Christopher Wylie, illustrates that granular personal
data on each of us can be used to create
precise messages to any individual voter, then delivered to us through the online ecosystem over Facebook, Instagram, Google, Twitter and other free services.
Science also, practically, requires a culture with a written language for the easy recording and
sharing of large amounts of
precise data.
And now, thanks to a whistleblower and two stunning reports in the Observer and the New York Times, we know that one of those developers siphoned
data on more than 50 million Facebook users and
shared them with the Trump campaign's voter targeting firm, Cambridge Analytica — a company that has bragged it has psychological profiles on 230 million American voters, which it uses to target people online with emotionally
precise digital messaging to influence elections.