Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower Says Facebook Users’ Data Could Be Stored in Russia

The number of Facebook users affected by the recent data breaching scandal could surpass 87 million and the data could be stored in Russia, Cambridge Analytica whistleblower Christopher Wylie stated on Sunday, CNBC informed.

Wylie said that Aleksandr Kogan, the creator of the quiz app that harvested the records of tens of millions of Facebook users, could have permitted that data to be stored in Russia. Global Science Research (GSR), an organization run by Kogan, shared the data with controversial political data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica without their permission.

“I think that there is a genuine risk that this data has been accessed by quite a few people and it could be stored in various parts of the world, including Russia, given the fact that the professor who was managing the data harvesting process was going back and forth between the U.K. and Russia at the same time that he was working for Russian-funded projects on psychological profiling,” Wylie told NBC’s Chuck Todd during a “Meet the Press” segment.

“I couldn’t tell you how many people had access to it, that’s a question better answered by Cambridge Analytica, but I can say that various people had access to it.”

Facebook and Cambridge Analytica were not available for comment when contacted by CNBC. CNBC also tried to make a contact with Kogan through his Cambridge University email address, but the academic could not be reached at the time of publication.

Wylie assumes the total number of Facebook users whose data was shared could be even more than the 87 million acknowledged by Facebook last week. Initial reports by the Observer and New York Times newspapers put the figure at 50 million. Cambridge Analytica has said that it licensed no more than 30 million Facebook users from GSR.

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