tv Unfair Game Al Jazeera April 8, 2020 9:00am-10:01am +03
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repression of the weakness tell the one on al-jazeera what's most important is talking understanding what they're going. to see you know we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. i am fully back to bill in doha with a look at our main stories here on al-jazeera the u.s. president has criticized the world health organization for its handling of the coronavirus spend demick donald trump has accused the agency of being china's centric n.s.a. and to cut funding mike hanna reports after a series of critical tweets during the day president trump launched a verbal attack on the w.h.o. in the daily coronavirus briefing the president seemed particularly angered by the w. chose recommendation an early february that international travel should continue this
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just days after he had imposed a ban on flights from china he also appeared to echo allegations that the organization rely too heavily on information from china during the initial phase of the outbreak they called it wrong they call it wrong they really they missed a call they could have called it months earlier they would have known and they should have known and they probably did know so we'll be looking into that very carefully and we're going to put a hold on money spent to the w h o we're going to put a very powerful hold on it and we're going to see it's a great thing if it works but when they call every shot wrong that's not good. the ban on flights from china was one of the recommendations the president's economic adviser made in a memorandum sent to the national security council at the end of february peter numbers are also warned that as many as 600000 americans could lose their lives
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navarro sent a 2nd memorandum a month later and this time he included the president on the distribution list he said that between 2 and 3000000 americans could die he also specified the medical supplies the government would need to opting to prepare this included a 1000000000 face masks 11000 ventilators and 25000 respirators memorandum was largely ignored president trump denies he ever saw the documents yes sir history has to be good but there is a president just this president this today he learned about the family today which is maybe a day going to feeling among your staff or your very own self to them and really here was a recommendation use of feeling that he had i think he told certain people in this
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but it didn't matter i didn't see it the president told reporters the contents of the documents would not have changed the way he's acted and then left the briefing after saying he would greet them later. mike. washington staying in the u.s. voting has ended in the wisconsin presidential primary which went ahead despite the coronavirus spend demick the stages the 1st in the u.s. to hold a major votes in stay at home orders were implemented the primary only went ahead after a last minute ruling in the supreme court results aren't expected until next week. elsewhere france has become the 4th country to register more than $10900.00 deaths it's been knocked down since mid march the government is expected to extend those restrictions britain's prime minister has spent a 2nd night in intensive care boris johnson has been given supplementary oxygen but is not on a ventilator is said to be in good spirits he was admitted to hospital on sunday
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after showing persistent symptoms of cold with 90 in ecuador medical staff are struggling to deal with a number of current virus infections more than 3702 thirds of those cases are being reported in the city of kill the government says it's ramping up containment measures there and temporary morgues have been set up to deal with a number of dead and nearly 3 months after it was sealed off from the world has opened its doors again people can now enter the city and highways and train lines have been open to traffic as residents are now able to leave without specific authorisation but they still need an app that tracks the health and movement 1st reported the novell virus at the end of december and it's believed to have originated there you're upset with the headlines here on al-jazeera i have more news for you after unfair games do stay with us.
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the election of the 45th president of the united states raises ethical and potentially legal questions. today mainstream media can easily be disrupted and personal online data easily accessed. how can this information be used to sway the outcome off an election. and can it undermine the basic tenets of democracy that are so cherished. think if americans knew this was happening they would be outraged.
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we just weren't mentally able at that point in time to see that coming. this is democracy taking place in darkness it's not democracy. i look presenting the facts plainly and hottest. staten island new york. in a state that's considered a stronghold for democrats this suburb is an exception. most of the people here voted for donald trump. scott libido lives here patriots artists and a big supporter of the president's. his unconventional. i am unconventional i
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mean new york city artist i'm selling for $45.00 because he's the 45th president is a new sheriff in town knows we're going to get a clean house we can kick some ass did you need the media to win an election when the it was stacked against him you know it's always stacked against a republican no matter who won it's the media is like that and just like the than that ugly hatred you know the exterior the obvious it's like you put on you know c.n.n. knows the psych alright alright alright alright but i'll flip around and it's like holy. you know it's an innocent b c and it's like relentless they can't stand bad he beat vam because they said he wasn't going to win fed up with traditional media god gets his information on the internet it's you know i'll spend like an hour like
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i said before i go to sleep i'll have my phone on and you know i'll go from this to that and then all chant made a speech i didn't hear it today we're hearing now you know i mean and sometimes it's i don't even honestly i don't look like who's giving it. like millions across america scott believed most of what he saw on the web with little question. for example this article trump believes millions voted illegally. or this one that hillary clinton received over 800000 illegal votes. i'm not saying all 3000000 are but i'm sure a lot of them are absolutely you should not be able to vote if you are in a league if you're not a legal citizen that's a child but that's works and then they want to change that like no that's not how it works. this information is of course false it would be nearly impossible for illegal immigrants to vote in the united states articles like the these are
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examples of what is now called fake news. scott is far from being the only one to refer to these sources. breitbart news is one such source known for its misleading stories. on breitbart we can try and articles like this does feminism make women ugly. or this would you rather your child had feminism or cancer. breitbart is also obsessed with the west versus islam is the new cold war. or political correctness protects muslim culture. its content has been called missile genetic xenophobic and racist by liberals and conservatives alike. breitbart as you know it's a it's a right wing media outlet that was founded by the late andrew breitbart
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a conservative activist and commentator and journalist. breitbart is a real french publication it's a representative of what they call the old right you know people who want to take on this stuff. as quote politics but do so in a very divisive way they're rail against immigrants to this country they rail against people of muslim faith they you know devout use tactics to divide people on the basis of gender on the basis of race. breitbart became a main source of information for the american far right it's the sensually served as an organ for sort of the trap of then. the worldview projected by breitbart was in line with donald trump's and it touched a nerve with his outlook towards. people wanted to describe the trump voters as angry i'm not sure they were angry i think they were more fearful worried concerned
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scared about about the future in the spring of 2016 if we looked at the people who were voting in republican primaries these people were very concerned about terrorism very concerned about immigration they they saw the 2 of them working together as creating a threat annex almost an extension threat to the to the united states and this was something that was being spoken about by donald trump and not necessarily by other republican candidates these concerns were heightened as trump played to existing anxieties. ted division has been in politics for 40 years for him it would be a mistake to think that fake news has no impact on american alec toro behavior here's what's happening in our politics people are consuming information entirely
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different ways that we used to you know when i started doing presidential campaigns when jimmy carter you know has an office i mean if you turn on the news at 630 at night and we'd watch 3 networks at once and that was the way america. essentially consume news now there is a constant flood of information both on television in the cable environment and particularly online you know that that online consumption of information is having a real effect on things because what's happening is the legitimate media is being supplanted by you know this fake news where people get information which sounds like it's real and true but has no basis in fact and in fact much of it is just made up and delivered you know by people who are attempting to you know affect the outcome in the election by introducing false narrative and information into the flow of information so you know so yeah i think it does have a real impact. like of regard for the truth became more apparent than in
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any other us presidential campaign. according to politico fact an independent fact checking websites only 4 percent of donald trump statements during the campaign were true false information was constantly circulating in fact it became self-propagating you have to look at our media landscape and how americans get their news nowadays conservatives get their news only from fox news or alternative sites like breitbart so that's the only news they see and they view the manged what they call the liberal media the mainstream media with distrust and they don't believe the kind of c.n.n. new york times washington post so they are only getting their news or large most of their news from very slanted sources and so. what trump will say trump picks up his information from the same news sources these voters hear something conspiracy theory and breitbart news or something on fox trump hears it too says it in the
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virus's eye for eye for a die hard on the news and i heard that from president trump so he must be telling the truth if they're in a silo and it's really hard to break that silence so it's a self reinforcing cycle of mr. it became more difficult to discern fact from fiction and the traditional press was brushed aside sort of a way that these campaigns have you know traditionally been covered and. and that model of campaign coverage was not sort of created with donald trump in my hand trumps disregard for making true statements is something that a lot of reporters have had trouble dealing with as we're not used to it we're not used to politicians or press people just sort of straight out lying the mainstream media is disrupted and because the mainstream media is disrupted truth is disrupted and if truth is disrupted you can just spread your own version of that. i didn't
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know that corruption has reached a level like never ever before in our country. 8383 will sure boulevard and address among the most prestigious offices in los angeles behind these windows at number 1000 or a few companies that would seem to have no connection. the 1st is break news regarded as a platform for the so-called right. the 2nd is glittering steel it's a small audio visual production company and these companies are linked to a billionaire who's rarely in the public eye. his name robert mercer. he is co c.e.o. of a hedge fund firm renaissance technologies whose ranks has been climbing since 1993 . carol cadwallader has been investigating this computer engineer turned
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billionaire robert is he is an absolutely brilliant scientist did really pioneering work. in the sixty's and in the field of natural language processing which is the base of. basically and he was royce at the start of it and working out how to do my machine translation between languages so that google translates which we use all the time that is a descendent of the work that he did you know he is with the brilliant computer engineers of his generation and he was just an ordinary middle class guy doing a professional job and he got an offer from renascence technologies this hedge fund
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. for them and he did. it was in the early ninety's that robert mercer left i.b.m. to work for run a song technologies. there he applied his methods of calculation on the stock exchange in order to predict its fluctuations. at technologies he pioneered. algorithmic trading which now is you know. written. something which still remains a bit secret about hard to make profit in markets but the origin of it is in applying a computer techniques to the data without worrying about fear of where the economy is going. what are the actual meaning of instruments or trading if you're buying wheat. or if you're buying a car company. you don't really care that it's
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a car company or that it's wheat you just look at the performance of these futures or these stocks and the key thing was to view this just as a set of numbers by applying his mathematical tools robert mercer revolutionized renaissance technologies investment methods making it the world's most profitable fund into this. mess it became very rich renaissance because the performance of the fund which he had his own money and. was extraordinary i mean if it goes up 30 percent 35 percent every year then pretty quickly you become very rich. robert mercer is known to be very private he almost never speaks publicly. even google has a difficult time producing photos of the few that exist are always the same. there
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is also a poor quality video a public speech in 2014 during a ceremony in his honor. found out after ike this i'm sure i'll accept this award but i would have to make it all right on some topic or other for an hour now which by the way is more than i typically talk and in a month. robert mercer might have quietly enjoyed his new fortune but he decided to invest in politics. he's been recognized as one of the most generous republican donors since 2010. merce's donations appear to be motivated by his own special interests. the political system in america is so broken right now because of the special interest money which floods campaigns i mean what happens is when the special
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interests have an agenda or if you're annoyed company for example and you'd like to continue you know drilling for fossil fuel you know or your polluter and you want to make sure you can continue to pollute you go in and you support politicians who believe in your agenda politicians who will say for example that you know climate change is not happening because of bandmates activities you know they will they will promote that publicly because that protects the special interests who fund their campaigns. robert mercer set up his own foundation. the mercer family foundation. headed by his daughter rebecca. but what exactly are these special interests he's protecting. it's hard to say since robert mercer never expresses his opinions publicly anyway you'll never know what's going on in robert this is brian said just look that's what he's funding for the money that way and i think that kind of bill
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for the paycheck. to understand the ideas that robert mercer wants to promote we can. look at where he's been spending we can do so with tax documents declarations of the foundation's fiscal allocations for the years 2012 to 2015 mercer financed a number of institutes and lobbies among them the heritage foundation which fights taxes and economic regulation $1500000.00 the media research center which fights leftist media bias $12000000.00 the government accountability institute which tracks government corruption and publishes books against hillary clinton 3.7 $1000000.00 the heartland institute which defends climate change skeptics $2800000.00. in new york he even paid for an ad
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denouncing the construction of a mosque near ground 0 in just 2 years robert mercer became one of the 10 most influential billionaires in politics according to the washington post's. in 2011 breitbart news the right wing online newspaper was in financial difficulty . mercer saw an opportunity and he invested $10000000.00 in the web site. the executive chairman of breitbart was a prominent figure closely linked to trump's campaign stephen bannon. a former goldman sachs trader he became a hollywood producer in the late 1990 s. he wanted to make films and t.v. series to promote his ultra conservative political views. mercer and bad and are very closely associated and by mercer associating himself with somebody like steve
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better that maybe that may be a clue it is interbred or merce's personal view. in a few much. it's a ban and made breitbart an outlet dedicated to reactionary i.d.'s. you see that with the breitbart publications over the course of many years it was someone like bannon who just proclaims this publicly that they're going to take on these situations and they're going to try to deconstruct the government of the united states to pursue the agenda that they have which is to you know fundamentally change this nation and turn it into you know a place where people experience a level of division that i don't think we've seen since you know going back to the civil war. robert mercer had built a political media network. to promote his ideas he was only missing one thing i can did it. in 2015 he began by supporting texas
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senator ted cruz a figurehead of the american far right. but after donald trump surprise victory in the republican primaries he placed his bet on trump. robert mercer created a pro trump political action committee called make america number one endowed with $15000000.00 his role in trump's campaign quickly expanded. in july 26th seen a dinner was held in a hotel in new york. it brings together among others rebecca robert mercer's daughter and donald trump the dinner resulted in key campaign changes. trump's campaign manager was replaced. the chair of making america number one rebecca mercer whose family also fund the super pac. was able to influence the trump campaign to hire stephen bannon as campaign c.e.o.
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. steve benen became donald trump's campaign director. kellyanne conway who headed the merced. political action committee for ted cruz became number 2. david bossie a mercer family stalwart became number 3. robert mercer has assembled team was in place. bannon basi and conaway would from this point forward steer the republican candidate strategy. when the merc versus decide to support a candidate they expect the candidates to be responsive to their needs both in terms of how the candidate runs their campaign it also also after if the kid is successful and there are and they are elected as an office holder it's reasonable to presume that the mercers expect that the office holder will be responsive to the mercer's needs needs as well and their policy preferences.
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robert mercer his plan was proving to be successful. but a mistake was made that made steve bannon's role controversial. here's what was discovered by looking at donald trump's official campaign books each of these lines corresponds to an expense during his 5 month tenure there was no trace of payments for steve benen. but when we look at the payments made by robert mercer as political action committee one name appears several times. glittering steel a video production company. in total the company received $302500.00 from the committee in 5 months the company is run by steve bannon. that would mean that his work for trump's official campaign might have been paid via glittering steel which would be illegal campaign
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financing. the campaign legal center decided to file a complaint. and . steve bannon faced a fine and an investigation by the justice department. we believe or we think it's possible that the super pac make america number one was subsidizing stephen bannon's work for the trump campaign by making payments abandoned through glittering steel at all see this consulting firms last movie production company located in california at the same address as and its own consulting firm. glittering steel and breitbart are not the only companies tied
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to the trump campaign $8383.00 will serve boulevard in los angeles also hosts cambridge analytic a company that came under the spotlight for its influence in politics around the globe. cambridge analytical claim to have revolutionary data modeling techniques that can change political campaigning. it was a subsidiary of an english firm and its role in donald trump's campaign is regarded as manipulation of public opinion. agrees the birthplace of democracy but ethnic turks from the northeast tell a different story they. believe their religious leaders jailed journalists silenced schools closed and a surge in the far right they say that if you don't like what you can both hurt you
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why i'm doing it but i'm all. the greek people in power investigates western thrice contested space on al-jazeera there are people in the world who want all forms of verification to just go away so we need people fighting against that reality trying to see if it's a fake to be view may be in syria but in a different time they risk a great deal to find out the truth in very complex situations that include major global play as we've been targeted by cyber attacks from russia they're all dangerous and through this conflict reading kept. the truth from the pope's truth well and on 00. london is one of the most important cities in the world and decisions made here have an impact on prices around the globe and so here it out to 0 at we will show you the true impact of those decisions on people and how it affects their everyday that. we are free to put that one out into reading gauge post is because we know that all audience is interested not just in the mainstream
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news but also the more hidden stories from parts of the world that often go under reported. or. the old. how again i'm fully back to boy in doha with the headlines on al-jazeera the u.s. president has criticized a wall health organization for its response to the coronavirus pandemic donald trump accused the agency of being too china centric and of giving bad advice. they actually criticized and disagreed with my travel ban for the time i did it and they were wrong they've been wrong about a lot of things and there are a lot of information early on they didn't want to do very they seem to be very china centric. we have to look into that so we're going to look into it we pay for
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you the majority of the money that they get they called it wrong because. they really they missed a call they could have called it months earlier they would have known. they should have known and they probably didn't. voting has ended in the wisconsin presidential primary which went ahead despite the coronavirus endemic the state is the 1st in the u.s. to hold a major votes in stay at home orders were implemented the primary only went ahead after last minutes ruling in the supreme court's results aren't expected until next week elsewhere france has become the 4th country to register more than 10000 called the 1000 deaths it's been in lockdown since mid march the government is expected to extend those restrictions britain's prime minister has spent a 2nd night in intensive care for his johnson has been given supplementary oxygen but is not on a ventilator is said to be in good spirits he was admitted to hospital on sunday
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after showing persistent symptoms of cold 19 in ecuador medical staff are struggling to deal with a number of infections more than 3702 thirds of those caught a virus cases are being reported in the city of the government says it's ramping up containment measures said temporary morgues have been set up to deal with a number of dead and nearly 3 months after it was sealed off from the world to han has opened its doors again people can now enter the city and highways and train lines have been open to traffic its residents are able to leave without specific authorisation but they must use an app that tracks the health and movement on 1st report of the novell coronavirus at the end of december and it's believed to have a originated there that you're upset with the headlines on al-jazeera unfair game continues next year to say that this.
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the election of the 45th president of the united states raised ethical and potentially legal questions. the possibility to undermine basic democratic principles has significantly increased. there will be no lies we will honor the american people with it truth and nothing else. the headquarters of a firm little known to the general public called s.c.l. group strategic communication laboratories is located in the heart of london. in these offices data scientists compiled and analyzed terabytes of personal information. their objective was to determine what motivates human behavior in order to influence
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a. they specialize in psyops. which is. a military term psychological operations it's a whole discipline it's an academic subject it can be used in different ways. the firm is very clear about its services on its. clients include nato the british ministry of defense the n.s.a. and the u.s. state department. as c.l. has helped identify key leaders in afghanistan facilitating u.s. intervention. it's also organized communications for vaccination campaign in ghana. but the company's practices remain questionable.
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it's a way of not cheap people that's the working towards better outcomes for them but it also can be used to manipulate people without being aware and it can and has been used by authoritarian regimes. the company organized protests in nigeria in 2007 to win fluence the elections. s e l also intervene during an election on the island of st vincent in the caribbean. it is not just on his own parliament they have he just really moved it clear program of occlusion a stance pretty scared of candidate that they can have a problem because of the clinton $402.00 but for a player that has. ensured. c.l.
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sets up ultra targeted influenced strategies. the advent of the web and the vast amount of data circulating created an entirely new dimension of business. in order to extend their market as c.l. group created a new subsidiary in the us cambridge analytic tech 7 wanted to suggest that a structure just doesn't take. it was it says any can bridge the need to check the coupon fit on the wall and i'm so just. to create cambridge analytics partnered with the american billionaire robert mercer a mathematician specialized in data. steve bannon served as vice president of the firm. from the outset the objective was clear nothing less than a revolution in the election campaign process despite multiple interview requests
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cambridge analytical has refused to speak with us. but it's possible to understand the work they did by simply watching their advertisements political campaigns have changed they're no longer about running the most t.v. spots sending out the most direct mail or spending the most money they're about to spend the smartest money in today's political world but campaigns are getting more expensive and elections are won by small but crucial numbers of votes putting the right message in front of the right person at the right moment is more important than ever this is where cambridge analytical in our revolutionary data modeling techniques can help. it sounds like a more logical approach to campaign strategizing however the reality is more complex and above all much murkier than cambridge and in that it was willing to admit it. since coming to the. united states the firm embarked on an unprecedented
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operation to compile data on the american population without its knowledge here's how it works. imagine that inside this car is mr x. like anyone he leaves thousands of pieces of personal information on the internet his address age income hobbies purchases religion and whether or not he owns a gun. cambridge and america legally bought this data from credit companies banks social security and web giants like facebook google and twitter. in total the firm claim to possess about 425000 pieces of data for over $230000000.00 adults living in the united states. this is how they plan to use its traditional political campaigns use geography and demographics like age and
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gender to break down voters into target groups this can work up to a point but it misses the important personal details that really drive voter behavior we combine geographic and demographic information with up to $5000.00 data points of national political consumer and lifestyle behavior for every voter in the united states then we add a unique extra layer of data about personality decision making and motivation. this creates an unparalleled rich and detailed view of voters in the issues they care about so you know exactly who to target with exactly what type of message we call this behavioral micro targeting our team of data scientists psychologists and campaign experts can show you which individual voters you need to win over in order to secure victory. the idea is to give people psychological tests and then compare the results with the in from. nation they already have to know
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what motivates them and thus influence their vote it's a technique that existed before cambridge analytical one of its inventors teaches psychometrics at stanford university california his name is michelle kosinski metrics is basically a science of psychological measurement so basically have not is that instead of using question to ask you about your thoughts feelings experiences and past behavior such as are your well organized person you can basically look at your digital footprints and see what are you in fact i well organized person in real life. tests to determine a person's psychological traits are cold ocean tests they measure personality based on 5 criteria. openness conscientiousness extroversion agreeableness and neuroticism. it's done with seemingly
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innocuous questionnaires that can be completed online like these. in 2008 michelle kosinski created the most famous of these tasks on facebook called my personality a questionnaire to learn more about yourself. became really popular we had over 6000000 people to take the question there and a large fraction of these people's who donated their facebook profile information to us and from this information you can use. algorithms to transform this information into very detailed and very accurate intimate profiles. as a result of michelle kosinski hospital largest psychometric database in the world.
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a database he can cross-reference with the facebook profiles of the 6000000 people who responded it's. this kind of shadow so basic you can turn your facebook likes into an actor it's a prediction of your political views religious views your personality intelligence happiness sexual intake or even whether your parents were divorced or not people often ask me how accurate those algorithms are at predicting our intimate traits and i think that a great example comes from our recent study where we have compared the curacy of algorithms with a curiosity of other people so what we did we took friends and family members of our participants and we asked these friends and family members to feel in the personality question as in the name of our participants now we would provide algorithm with a set of facebook likes and have it do the same thing so based on your facebook
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likes trying to predict your personality the results of this experiment are staggering by studying 10 of your likes on facebook the algorithm knows you better than your call the next with a 100 likes it knows you better than your family. and with 230 likes it knows you better than your spouse. now given how much footprints how many footprints we're living every day while using internet and splaying of our phones. it basically means that computers can clearly know us better in many ways than even our close family member this. prediction of human behavior through the combination of personal data and psychological tests is shockingly accurate. david garrow is a media professor at parsons university in new york. he battled for months to
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retrieve the data that cambridge analytical had on him. he was amazed by what he discovered. this is the excel spreadsheet that they provided it is broken into 3 tabs core data election returns and models the model on the one hand personal data that the firm has gathered from the web and then my registered now this is all the voter data here and this is what would normally be public in voter records but it it's all accurate it has the day i registered to vote and it has figured out my birthday my address the zip code down to you know all of my address it's connected it to census information and it's connected to all the different kinds of elections so u.s. congressional state senate state house state legislative then you have some consumer information here like the designated mark information and f i p s it is
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another kind of consumer voter code and when you're on the other hand the psychometric interpretation of his personality together that's how you can really 0 in and target the model is my profile so you can see the different topics were ranked in order of importance and i registered. artisanship my unreligious or partisanship you clearly see who their client was it didn't measure me as a democrat or republican just a very unlikely republican and you can also see sort of the model itself is in the interest of sort of finding. conservative voters especially conservative voters who might be registered as a democrat but are actually going to vote republican so being able to go down to the zip code level and then reus o.c. that to all other election districts allows you to geo target. so precisely and that's how you're going to move the needle in u.s.
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elections i think if americans knew this was happening and happening internationally they would be outraged. funded by robert mercer and headed by steve benen naturally cambridge on a lot of how would offer its services to candid donald trump. by late june 26th seen the partnership with a done deal. on july the 29th the 1st payment was sent to the company you can find it's in the campaign account. with 4 payments between july and october 26th in cambridge an emoticon would receive nearly $6000000.00. at the same time the political action committee for donald trump funded by robert mercer paid cambridge analytic top $5000000.00 between november 25th and november 26th in. ultimately the firm would receive $11000000.00 to work with the
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trump campaign. a digital targeting strategy was made possible and set to run for donald trump. all that was needed was a way to put it to use in the american elections certainly beat some camp which include cambridge analytical saw something in the american electorate that the clinton campaign and the media certainly did not see. it's been reported that thanks to cambridge analytic cuz knowledge of the electorate trumps advisors devise the highly targeted strategy based on the particularities. of the u.s. voting system. in the united states the president is not elected directly by the people but by the electoral college appointed in each of the 50 states. not all states have the same number of electors making some states more important to women than others. the trump camp suspected that they would not win the national
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vote so with strategists decided to concentrate on the state. knowing that they would lose the national popular vote. how do you win well you win by capturing the electoral college how do you do that you try and figure out a way of where you can go to appeal to relatively small numbers of people he was going to places that a lot of people thought why is he doing that he shouldn't be doing that he should be going someplace someplace else we didn't there was a strategy of looking at places that had been thought of as consistently democratic states states like michigan wisconsin and pennsylvania all 3 of which mr trump carried on in november. this was the strategy reportedly recommended by cambridge analytical not to try to convince millions of voters across the entire nation to vote for trump but rather to target only the 10s of thousands that the
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firm knew through its analyses were hesitating. if you are somebody who's as clever as robert. and you are just you're looking i mean what he does algorithmic trading it's all about finding the time vs edge is that tiny tiny tiny edge that you have of your competitors that you can leverage and make a massive difference and that's why you make the money and i think this idea of using data and the potential manipulation through a platform facebook is that you know just enough to give you that edge that then you can exploit 3 things like faith and all these other techniques and tactics. here are the techniques that motion by the data scientists i cambridge i'm going to be. using the information they had on the electorate they defined 32 types of
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personalities throughout the country. it's believed that individualized messages were sent targeting those considered to be the most concerned about issues. was discussed by trump during his campaign. the firm identified many such voters in 3 states wisconsin michigan and pennsylvania 3 states bay believed could swing in favor of trump. in a press release cambridge analytical openly explained its strategy. there remains one question that the firm does not address just how did they reach
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these targeted voters. they did it using a little known facebook feature dark posts. they do sit in on top is when bashed his book such a massage. and book readers should determine that because my search for certain movies you've said before that's one of them a certain about but it's all a 1st for those i cannot expect out of it if the decline in depth of but only under yourself is a book i make them as such but also when they get if look on you that make critical mistakes are not so i thought as for this christmas as the above but i have the money after a break. it's so dark posts are very personalized messages visible only to the person for whom they are intended how does that work exactly let's go
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back to mr x. analysis of his online data i can determine whether or not he's in favor of carrying firearms a message can then be created targeting him did you know that hillary clinton wants to take your gun away. he'll receive this message in his facebook news feed at a specific time porting to his happen and digital fingerprints. no one but him will see the targeted ads and it will disappear a few hours later. as no record of them you've got no way of investigating that you have no idea who saw what and this is democracy taking place in darkness it's not democracy if you're going to have a political debate have you out in the open you know who is all doing what and here is being told what and the idea of just sort of like sneakily targeting people with who know what's on their phones and on their computer and with anything they
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could have been saying anything we'll never know because that's gone when it's on facebook said is interesting thanks but they're not giving up. this digital strategy for the trump campaign was focused on the last few weeks. on november the 8th 2016 against all odds trump took wisconsin 523000 votes michigan 511000 pennsylvania 543000. in total 77000 votes in these 3 key states kerry trying to victory when he was 3000000 votes behind over the entire country. the digital targeting strategy had proved effective we can see that approximately 70000 voters made the decision for everyone else because they were the ones in the districts that ended up
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deciding to really i think this highlights as well our electoral college system is a vulnerability that if software and data allows the most important voters to be easily. found it and. diminishing the vote of everyone else effectively. politics and democracy was the next industry to fall we knew that technology interrupted newspapers and journalism and music and it was like actually here is we've been talking all this time about how great you know technology is it. for the next disruptive technology and i was like this is technology disrupting politics and and it's not just politics it's democracy and donald trump is the great disruptor. after trump's election when 2 former employees of cambridge analytic claim that the front collected the data of tens of
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millions of facebook users i don't believe collection was done in violation of privacy policies. christopher wiley was the 1st whistleblower he's the former director of research at cambridge analytics. britney kaiser the former business development director was the 2nd. on march the 20th 2018 c.e.o. of cambridge analytic alexander nix was suspended after secret recordings were broadcast off next boasting if using fake news campaigns and honey traps to affect election campaigns globally. on may the 2nd 2018 s e l group announced that it was filing for insolvency and closing all of its operations including its subsidiary cambridge analytical. cambridge analytical stated that it has been vilified for activities that are legal and
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widely accepted as a standard component of online advertising in both the political and commercial arena as. however the acceptance of this digital strategy continues to be challenging as the manipulation of public opinion becomes clearer. donald trump's campaign strategy expose democracy to new threats however it also drew more attention to data technologies rule in politics around the globe. unless there is significant change in privacy policies personal online data can continue to be used to destruct politics all over the world.
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but. how the weather set fair across iraq and then slam is heating up as well further north that we have got a fair amount of cloud sliding out of iraq pushing into iran just around southern parts of the caspian still seeing some rather shop showers there for iran then that weather weather sliding over to wards that menace down towards his back as stan eventually pushing over towards afghanistan billet further south temperatures getting up to 36 celsius here in doha so they hate very much on the dry weather extends across the whole of africa somalia stays dry the be a few showers into uganda maybe seeing want to see showers into southern parts of kenya somewhat or whether they're just not in his way into good parts of tanzania the seasonal rains of course which stretch rural across the heart of africa see some very heavy showers just around the gulf of guinea southern parts of nigeria democratic republic of congo also seeing some rather wet weather as we go through the next couple of days and we had some rather wet weather just clipping the far
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south of south africa recently that's in the process of pulling away it brightens up nicely not. the fine and dry weather was a weather will make its way into central parts of mozambique we could also see some heavy downpours for todd russia pushing east and past zimbabwe. award winning the programming from international till may cause the bodies of its yeah we are going to wipe insect life if we carry on this work out just the arrest sets the stage that he's no longer here naivety is no longer an excuse giving voice to the voiceless so we went out for noble ex-pats and discussion that culture still exists and they're still combating that today open your eyes to an alternative view of the wild today on al-jazeera crossing borders breaking boundaries recording injustice fighting inequality from africa and asia to europe and use exile as it
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were mine overstreet every very good enough for me is one country or a world for refugees who've come to your touched people's lives and made a difference. the hard road from home photographers and activists on our. rewind returns with a new series a can bring your people back to life i'm sorry i'm brian new updates on the best of al-jazeera documentaries there has been a number of reforms put in kies since the program was filmed rewind begins with mohammed at the time when i was in libya i was the top of the class and now. like and the other student i was very fortunate to be awarded another scholarship rewind on al-jazeera.
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i want to see. what. they called it wrong because. president trump threatens to cut funding to the world health organization has nearly 2000 new coronavirus deaths are recorded in the u.s. . but i missed all the detail and this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up long lines and traffic jams in china as well as thousands are allowed to leave the city for the 1st time in months. the internally displaced.
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