Cruz Analytics — five types of Republicans

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  • #39286
    wv
    Participant

    I heard an npr story on this so i googled it. Apparently, Cruz’ analytics program breaks Republicans down into FIVE categories — and then he tailors his messages to each of those five categories.

    I would like to find an article describing those five types of Republicans. So if anyone comes across an article like that, post it.

    This article just mentions the Five types.

    w
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    https://www.yahoo.com/politics/cruz-app-data-collection-helps-185811302.html
    Cruz app data collection helps campaign read minds of voters

    Michael Biesecker and Julie Bykowicz, Associated Press
    February 11, 2016

    Cruz app data collection helps campaign read minds of voters

    <p> FILE – In this Feb. 10, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas talks to reporters outside the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington. Cruz has campaigned against government spying on law-abiding citizens, but his campaign is testing the limits with personal data from his supporters. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz is testing the limits of siphoning personal data from supporters, even as he campaigns to protect law-abiding citizens from spying by the government.

    His “Cruz Crew” mobile app is designed to gather detailed information from its users’ phones — tracking their physical movements and mining the names and contact information for friends who might want nothing to do with his campaign.

    That information, and more, is then fed into a vast database containing intimate details about nearly every adult in the United States to build psychological profiles that target individual voters with uncanny accuracy.

    Cruz’s sophisticated analytics operation was heralded as key to his victory in Iowa earlier this month — the first proof, his campaign said, that the system has the potential to power him to the nomination.

    The son of mathematicians and data processing programmers, Cruz is keenly and personally interested in the work.

    “Analytics gives the campaign a roadmap for everything we do,” said Chris Wilson, data and digital director. “He has an acute understanding of our work and continually pushes me on it.”

    Data-mining to help candidates win elections has been increasing among both Republicans and Democrats. Mobile apps by other presidential campaigns also collect some information about users.

    But The Associated Press found the Cruz campaign’s app — downloaded to more than 61,000 devices so far — goes furthest to harvest personal data.

    The Cruz app prompts supporters to register using their Facebook logins, giving the campaign access to personal information such as their name, age range, gender, location and photograph, plus lists of friends and relatives. Those without a Facebook account must either provide an email address or phone number to use the app.

    The Cruz app separately urges users to let it download their phone contacts, giving the campaign a trove of phone numbers and personal email address. The campaign said that by using its app, “You hereby give your express consent to access your contact list,” but Wilson said the campaign will not do this to anyone who declines to allow it when the app requests permission.

    Cruz’s app also transmits to the campaign each user’s physical location whenever the app is active, unless a user declines to allow it. Cruz’s campaign tells users it can share all the personal information on users it collects with its consultants or other organizations, groups, causes, campaigns or political organizations with similar viewpoints or goals.

    It also shares the material with analytics companies. Cruz’s campaign combines the information with data from a group called Cambridge Analytica, which has been involved in Cruz’s efforts since fall 2014. A Cambridge investor, Robert Mercer, has given more money than anyone else to outside groups supporting Cruz.

    Cambridge has a massive 10 terabyte database — enough to fill more than 2,100 DVDs — that contains as many as 5,000 biographical details about the 240 million Americans of voting age.

    Cruz, the junior senator from Texas, has been outspoken about protecting American’s personal information from the government, including the National Security Agency. “Instead of a government that seizes your emails and your cellphones, imagine a federal government that protected the privacy rights of every American,” he said when announcing his campaign.

    Cruz campaign officials reject any comparison, saying it’s different for the government versus a campaign to collect data.

    The scope of Cruz’s system is formidable. Cambridge’s database of Americans combines government and commercial data sets such as voter rolls and lists of people who liked certain Facebook posts, along with consumer data from grocery chains and other clients that can provide a voter’s preferred brand of toothpaste or whether he clips coupons.

    Cambridge CEO Alexander Nix said the company categorizes every American into one of five basic personality types derived from academic research and up to 50,000 questionnaires conducted each month.

    For example, a Cruz campaign worker about to knock on the door of a house could access information about the household’s members through the Cruz Crew app, receiving prepared scripts about what issues each person was likely to care about, modified to appeal to their personality.

    Cambridge and the Cruz campaign stressed that anyone providing personal information through the app does so voluntarily. Data uses are outlined in legal disclosures published on the campaign’s website.

    The chief technologist at the privacy advocacy group Center for Democracy and Technology, Joe Hall, said politicians are unlikely to strengthen privacy protections as their campaigns become more and more reliant on mining personal data to squeeze out votes.

    “This is a form of political-voter surveillance,” Hall said. “If people understood that this amount of fine-grained, sensitive data was being used by political campaigns, they would likely feel betrayed.”

    ___

    Follow Michael Biesecker on Twitter at https://twitter.com/mbieseck and Julie Bykowicz at http://twitter.com/bykowicz

    #39287
    wv
    Participant

    Ah. The analytics thingy categorizes ‘every’ american into one of five types. Not just Republicans.

    I’d still like to know what the five ‘types’ are.

    w
    v
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    http://www.cbsnews.com/news/ted-cruzs-data-app-helps-campaign-target-voters/

    “…Cambridge CEO Alexander Nix said the company categorizes every American into one of five basic personality types derived from academic research and up to 50,000 questionnaires conducted each month.

    “We’ve quantified the personalities of every adult American,” Nix said. “We can reach out and target those different clusters with messages about the things they care about most, but that have been nuanced to resonate with their personality type.”

    For example, a Cruz campaign worker about to knock on the door of a house would access information about the household’s members through the Cruz Crew app, receiving prepared scripts about what issues each person was likely to care about, modified to appeal to their personality.

    Even within issues such as the right to bear arms, Nix said personality types will tailor the message. For voters who care about traditions or family, a message may resonate about guaranteeing the ability of a grandfather teaching shooting lessons. For someone identified as introverted, a better pitch might describe keeping guns for protection against crime…”

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 7 months ago by wv.
    #39327
    sdram
    Participant

    Data Analytics is really in full flower now – it was the primary focus of the last Medicaid conferences that I attended. All the healthcare related software companies were trying to sell their analytic tools which really amount to statistical representations in fancy, detailed graphical format of whatever data is behind it.

    The base for analytics is data of any kind – too much is not enough. The idea of the analytic vendor is to save any of it just in case they can think of something that they can package and market to any entity that would value it. So, as a governmental agency they think we should be using their analytic tools to help make decisions about annual budgets, effectiveness of healthcare entities, cost breakdowns of both billed and actual per healthcare provider\patient\procedure\diagnosis\and on an on including gender, race, etc. And, so much more it becomes over whelming.

    I would guess every single candidate has some involvement with this from a who are the voting voters breakdown and what bullshit do I need to spew to get their attention to a high degree.

    That said, Cruz is a lying pos but he’s a politician so he has that right. To me – all of them seem like lying a-holes. It’s difficult for me to watch even two minutes of any of them and not get frustrated by their blather.

    I can’t see a single one that I want to vote for right now but I haven’t been listening to all the daily clatter they make either. Life is short so piss on all them right now.

    #39382
    Mackeyser
    Moderator

    See, that’s what gets me.

    I don’t see Bernie as a liar. The rest, yep.

    Moreover, if Elizabeth Warren had run, I’m pretty sure he wouldn’t have run because I don’t think this has ever been about him, but that SOMEONE had to get the progressive message out there and no one was doing it.

    What just kills me is that we see how his message is being received by the people and then we see how the Democratic establishment after pissing itself is doing everything it can to rig this election.

    Holding a debate the night Star Wars comes out? Only 4 debates before finally relenting because of massive protest for months?

    yeah the process is total shyte and most everyone in it is covered in it, but doggone it if it didn’t seem like we didn’t have a shot at a guy who woulda been different.

    At least they just screwed him out of the job instead of shooting him. I guess that’s an improvement?

    Sports is the crucible of human virtue. The distillate remains are human vice.

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