More than 87 million people have been victims of the
Posted: Tue Jan 07, 2025 8:41 am
Although many users have denied being victims of the biggest internet scam in history, the truth is that the perfect storm was unleashed when, in 2016, the company Cambridge Analytica entered the scene.
Not even the best Hollywood movie could have created a plot as complex, implausible and damaging as the one we have all witnessed over the last few years.
A largest data breach ever seen azerbaijan phone number and have been the target of manipulation and fake news that undoubtedly had an impact on the election result that brought Donald Trump to the White House.
And yet, despite all this, most users still believe they are immune to third-party attacks. Although the sense of alertness has increased in recent years, it is quite clear that citizens have not changed their information habits and headlines continue to be the seed of public opinion.
With new elections in the United States just around the corner, there should be a high level of concern about preventing a new Cambridge Analytica from happening again, and yet we still believe ourselves immune to third-party interference in what we see on the Internet.
Anyone with a sense of civic responsibility should therefore invest their time in “The Great Hack” , a documentary that Netflix has just released and which details the Cambridge Analytica case, reveals its consequences and, above all, warns of its impact on the future.
If you cannot view the embedded video correctly, click here.
Through three key characters, professor and digital rights activist David Carroll; the journalist who uncovered the case Carole Cadwalladr and former company employee Brittany Kaiser, the production tries to answer the question “how has the dream of a connected world separated us?” with which the documentary begins.
The ins and outs of the most notorious scandal in the history of the Internet are brought to light in a documentary that reveals bad practices, political and economic interests and the consequences for citizens of the use of a resource, data, whose value already exceeds that of oi
Not even the best Hollywood movie could have created a plot as complex, implausible and damaging as the one we have all witnessed over the last few years.
A largest data breach ever seen azerbaijan phone number and have been the target of manipulation and fake news that undoubtedly had an impact on the election result that brought Donald Trump to the White House.
And yet, despite all this, most users still believe they are immune to third-party attacks. Although the sense of alertness has increased in recent years, it is quite clear that citizens have not changed their information habits and headlines continue to be the seed of public opinion.
With new elections in the United States just around the corner, there should be a high level of concern about preventing a new Cambridge Analytica from happening again, and yet we still believe ourselves immune to third-party interference in what we see on the Internet.
Anyone with a sense of civic responsibility should therefore invest their time in “The Great Hack” , a documentary that Netflix has just released and which details the Cambridge Analytica case, reveals its consequences and, above all, warns of its impact on the future.
If you cannot view the embedded video correctly, click here.
Through three key characters, professor and digital rights activist David Carroll; the journalist who uncovered the case Carole Cadwalladr and former company employee Brittany Kaiser, the production tries to answer the question “how has the dream of a connected world separated us?” with which the documentary begins.
The ins and outs of the most notorious scandal in the history of the Internet are brought to light in a documentary that reveals bad practices, political and economic interests and the consequences for citizens of the use of a resource, data, whose value already exceeds that of oi