UK demands US data from Cambridge Analytica in landmark privacy ruling

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Authors: JordanCan companies handling user data be forced to give up information on people in the US through regulations in the UK That's
the question being tested by the UK's Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), which has demanded that Cambridge Analytica agent SCL
Elections Limited hand over everything it has on file for American professor David Carroll.Carroll requested his data back in September
2017, before the most recent Facebook controversy, but wasn't happy with what he got back
That's when he contacted the ICO to see if he would have better luck going through UK channels.The ICO has sided with Carroll and now wants
to see everything Cambridge Analytica holds on him
The case may only cover one person – but if Carroll gets his way, that means up to 240 million other US users could demand to see the
personal information Cambridge Analytica has been storing through the UK's legal process, The Guardian reports.Data debateSome of the data
processing done by Cambridge Analytica was carried out in the UK, which is the technicality that has allowed Carroll and the ICO to demand
to see the data
The data mining company now has 30 days to respond to the request, otherwise it could face legal repercussions.Cambridge Analytica has
already entered liquidation and begun the process of winding down in the wake of its troubles, but the ICO says that won't be a valid excuse
for avoiding its responsibilities under UK law.Now all eyes are on Cambridge Analytica and its UK agent SCL Elections Limited to see what
happens next
"There's a lot of questions that no one has been able to answer until now so hopefully this will be a major breakthrough in our
understanding of what [Cambridge Analytica] did," Carroll told The Guardian.