
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


You've probably heard about how Cambridge Analytica used access to the Facebook data of millions of U.S. citizens and advanced digital advertising wizardry to essentially “hack” Americans’ minds and deliver a surprise presidential victory to Donald Trump. This depiction of Cambridge Analytica as nefarious data geniuses has been shared in many news stories (probably most prominently in the documentary The Great Hack).
But what if this perception is untrue? What if Cambridge Analytica were exaggerating their behavior-influencing abilities, as many companies do? And what if our perceptions of CA as geniuses of digital influence is based on people accepting those exaggerated claims uncritically?
That is the stance of political scientist Dr. Dave Karpf, and in this episode he explains why.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Zachary Elwood4.2
277277 ratings
You've probably heard about how Cambridge Analytica used access to the Facebook data of millions of U.S. citizens and advanced digital advertising wizardry to essentially “hack” Americans’ minds and deliver a surprise presidential victory to Donald Trump. This depiction of Cambridge Analytica as nefarious data geniuses has been shared in many news stories (probably most prominently in the documentary The Great Hack).
But what if this perception is untrue? What if Cambridge Analytica were exaggerating their behavior-influencing abilities, as many companies do? And what if our perceptions of CA as geniuses of digital influence is based on people accepting those exaggerated claims uncritically?
That is the stance of political scientist Dr. Dave Karpf, and in this episode he explains why.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

43,572 Listeners

2,545 Listeners

1,863 Listeners

69 Listeners

12,193 Listeners

12,762 Listeners

1,392 Listeners

1,343 Listeners

429 Listeners

1,386 Listeners

724 Listeners

71 Listeners

8,087 Listeners

107 Listeners

87 Listeners