Thursday, September 5, 2019
Cambridge Analytica Data Scandal: Quality Management
Cambridge Analytica Data Scandal: Quality Management    Executive Summary  This report is prepared to study the issue Facebook recently faces. It is in news because of the Cambridge Analytica data scandal in which the personal information of Facebook users have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica ââ¬â a data mining and political strategy firm. When the scandal exposed the CEO and Chairman of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg had to apologize publically for the data breach and said that it was a mistake made by Facebook for not designing a process to restrict third party developers to work on Facebook API. He also pledged to make changes in the design and reform the privacy policy. This study gives an understanding of loopholes in Facebookââ¬â¢s quality management system and how it could have been prevented if they have followed the theories of quality management gurus. By understanding different theories described by these gurus, a strong quality management system can be placed from the design stage itself. It also states that customer loyalty is    a very important value which can be gained by continuous improvement in quality management system. A poor system result in loss of company reputation, customers and monetary value.   1.0 Introduction  Facebook is an American social media company providing social networking services to people around the world. It was founded in 2004. Mark Zuckerberg is the Chairman and CEO of the company. It has more than 2.2 billion active users. People use Facebook to stay connected to their friends and family and to share and express their views.  2.0 Issue of data breach   Recently Facebookââ¬â¢s data privacy scandal  came into limelight where Facebook membersââ¬â¢ data were improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica, a data mining and political  strategy firm. à  These data were accessed  during Donald Trumpââ¬â¢s presidential campaign. Cambridge Analytica accessed the  data for more than 2 years. This is the biggest public relation crisis Facebook  has faced.   In April 2010, Facebook launched a  platform called Open Graph to third party apps. This allowed the external  developers to reach out to Facebook users and request permission to access  their personal dataà  (CNBC, 2018).   In the year 2013, Cambridge Universityââ¬â¢s  researcher named Aleksandr Kogan created an App called ââ¬Å"thisisyourdigitallifeâ⬠.à    The app prompted users to answer questions for a psychological profile. About  270,000 people downloaded the ââ¬Ëappââ¬â¢ and shared their personal information. This  gave Aleksandr Kogan to access data of not only Facebook users but also of the  usersââ¬â¢ friends. These information were shared with Cambridge Analytica and used  to know about the personality of the people and to effectively target political  advertising on people. Cambridge Analytica obtained the information in total  violation of Facebookââ¬â¢s rule and didnââ¬â¢t tell anybody that the data will be used  for political campaigning.à   (Casey, 2018)  In the same year Facebook was made aware  about this violation of accessing data of not only who installed this app but  also of their friends. Facebook demanded Cambridge Analytica to delete all the  data and they agreed to delete all the data. Aleksandr Kogan in reality never  deleted the data and later on Facebook never investigated whether they have  deleted the data as promised (Casey, 2018).  In 2014 Facebook changed their rules for  external developers and restricted them from accessing userââ¬â¢s friendsââ¬â¢ data  without taking permission from them.  With the approaching 2016 Presidential  elections, Cambridge Analytica did not have time to create its own data for  election campaign. It went to Aleksandr Kogan who created Facebook app that  paid users to take a personality testà  (The Guardian,  2018).  In the year 2016 ââ¬Å"The Guardianâ⬠ reported that  Cambridge Analytica is helping Ted Cruzââ¬â¢s presidential election by sharing  psychological data based on their previous research. Facebook waited for more  than two years before suspending Cambridge Analytica even after knowing about  the data breach. à    In mid  March 2018, this scandal was  exposed by The Guardian and The New York Times.   Facebook admitted that it did not read the  terms of the app that accessed the data of 87 million people and apologised for  the ââ¬Å"breach of trustâ⬠. à  Facebookââ¬â¢s CTO  Mike Schroepfer told U.K. lawmakers that Facebook did not notify the U.K.s data protection  watchdog after it learned of the sharing of data with Cambridge Analytica and  it was their mistake. (Ryan, 2018).  According to U.K.ââ¬â¢s data protection law,  sale or use of personal data without userââ¬â¢s consent is banned. In 2011, after  Federal Trade Commission complaint, Facebook agreed to get clear consent from  the users before sharing their data. The FTC now started investing whether  Facebook violated privacy protection of their users. The U.S.A. and U.K.  lawmakers are investing in their own way. Mark Zuckerberg apologized on behalf  of Facebook by publishing a personal letter in all major newspapers and make  changes and reform the privacy policy to prevent such kind of breaches.   By doing this Facebook has breached the trust  of users and privacy policy law. à  A  customer or user shares information with a company trusting that personal  details are safe. A companyââ¬â¢s name and reputation makes people to trust on  them. à  Quality of the brand is very  important in building and growing a company.   Facebook is a very well know networking  site and it has monopoly in the market. People joined Facebook and disclosed  their personal details knowing that whatever information they share about  themselves and their friends will be confidential and will not be disclosed  anywhere outside without their consent.   3.0 Referring to statements made by Quality management Gurus  It is very important for a company to have  a well defined quality management system in place. For a company like Facebook,  where the personal data of people are at risk, there is a continuous risk of  hijacking the data for misuse.   How a good quality management system can  be placed, has been described by many Quality management gurus. Mentioned below  are some of the points stated by these gurus:  According to quality management guru W. Edwards Deming there are seven deadly diseases that are described as barriers in understanding the basic quality management system statistical principals. One of the diseases says that ââ¬â A company runs on visible figures only. Deming argued that apart from the visible figures there are many costs and figures that are not know and cannot be calculated. à  Customer loyalties gained as a result of continuous quality improvement are the numbers that are unknowable and management has to consider thisà  (Deming, 2012).   It is also very important to gain confidence of the customers by building trust. In case of Facebook data breach scandal, it was very important for the company to monitor and improve the system. Once Aleksandr Kogan accessed the data of the Facebook users and their friends, it was important for Mark Zuckerberg to monitor and improve the system putting a barrier for third party developers to access data. This would have resulted in maintaining the confidentiality of the usersââ¬â¢ data.  Based on the quality management guru J M Juranââ¬â¢s trilogy, it is very important to plan, improve and control quality.    Quality Planning  A proper quality plan  should be in place. This involves creating a process that will be able to meet  the goals .Once the process is in place it will not be difficult to respond to  customer needs.  Quality Improvement  It is important to continuously  improve the quality and run the process with optimal effectiveness.   Quality Control ââ¬â To control and maintain good quality it is important to create a process that required minimal monitoring. This will help in running the operations in accordance with quality plan (Juran, 1986).  Facebook should have  created a process to maintain the privacy of their usersââ¬â¢ information. This  process should have barred the third party developers to run their app in  Facebook API.   Quality guru Genichi Taguchi emphasized on improving the quality of the product and process at the design stage rather than achieving quality through inspection. Taguchi also developed a concept of quality loss and worked on it rather than just quality.à   He defined quality loss as loss to the company cost such a reworking on design, scrapping and maintenance and also loss to customer through poor product or service and low reliability. (Taguchi, n.d)  After the scandal exposed, Facebook has faced huge loss in terms of its reputation, breaking customersââ¬â¢ trust and monetary value. Many users deleted their Facebook à  Ã   account feeling that their personal information are not secured and can be misused by the company. à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã     4.0 Conclusion   It is very important for a company to develop a quality system at its designing stage and to control and improve the quality system with minimal inspection requirement. It is also important to know and understand the unknown costs and figures like customer loyalty that can be gained by continuously improving quality. A proper system should be in place with zero defects. A poor quality management system will result in loss of reputation, customers and monetary value.  5.0 References:  (2018, March). Retrieved from The Guardian:  https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/mar/19/facebook-data-cambridge-analytica-privacy-breach  (2018,  April). Retrieved from CNBC: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/10/facebook-cambridge-analytica-a-timeline-of-the-data-hijacking-scandal.html  Casey, N.  (2018, April). Retrieved from  https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/10/17165130/facebook-cambridge-analytica-scandal  Deming, E.  (2012, Janauary). Retrieved from https://www.qualitymag.com/articles/88324-quality-management-2-0-deming-s-7-deadly-diseases-of-management  Juran, J.  (1986, May). Retrieved from The Quality Trilogy:  http://app.ihi.org/FacultyDocuments/Events/Event-2930/Presentation-16071/Document-12762/Tools_Resource_C7_Juran_trilogy1.pdf  Ryan, B.  (2018, April). Retrieved from CNBC:  https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/26/facebook-cto-admits-firm-didnt-read-terms-of-aleksandr-kogans-app.html  Taguchi, G.  (n.d). Retrieved from British Library: https://www.bl.uk/people/genichi-taguchi    
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