Hence
the researchers named their app «TaintArtist.»
Not exact matches
In 2013, a Cambridge University
researcher named Aleksandr Kogan created a personality quiz
app.
That Facebook
app, called «This is Your Digital Life,» was a personality quiz created in 2014 by an academic
researcher named Aleksander Kogan, who paid about 270,000 people to take it.
The
researchers hope the
app will eventually give people with bipolar disorder and their health care teams an early warning of the changing moods that give the condition its
name.
For example, the
researchers found that websites more frequently leak locations and
names, whereas only
apps were found to leak a device's unique identifying number.
In June 2014, a
researcher named Aleksandr Kogan developed a personality - quiz
app for Facebook.
The
app developer, Cambridge University
researcher Aleksandr Kogan, who is not
named in the Cook County suit, told the BBC last week that he didn't know the data would be used for Trump's election campaign and that Cambridge Analytica is using him as a scapegoat.
The
app developer, a Cambridge University
researcher named Aleksandr Kogan, told the BBC this week that he didn't know the data would be used for Trump's election campaign and that Cambridge Analytica is using him as a scapegoat.
He also provides a timeline of the event, detailing when a
researcher named Aleksandr Kogan created a personality quiz
app, deployed it on Facebook, collected data from millions of users, and then later shared the dataset with Cambridge Analytica.
On March 23, a French security
researcher, who goes by the pseudonym Elliot Alderson, revealed that the Indian prime minister's
app sends user data —
name, email, mobile phone number, device information, location, and network carrier, among other things — to California - based CleverTap without their consent.
In a post on Thursday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, while explaining how the data was misused pointed out how, in 2013, «a Cambridge University
researcher named Aleksandr Kogan created a personality quiz
app.
Indian journalist Pratik Sinha, who double - checked the
researcher's work, explained all the attention by pointing to the fact that Modi's
name was attached to the
app.