I'm perfectly at ease with assuming conspiracy theories of all sorts simply because we know our data is a free for all (gleaned & assembled or hacked). As JGD said 22 Apr 2018, 20:37: "We do have to be careful". Isn't our only option is stay alert and refuse to be manipulated?Sydenham Syd wrote:Did you ask 'how do you know who I voted for?' ??syd wrote:the windrush scandal has been going on for years so anything is possible. To be asked if I’d be voting Labour “again”was suspicious.Robin Orton wrote:I'm sure that however the Labour Party got information about (or guessed) your previous voting patterns, it won't have been by illegally tracing your ballot paper(s) through the unique number. If that sort of thing went on, we would have heard about it and it would constitute a major political scandal.
"Positive reinforcement" manipulation by canvassers also springs to mind, i.e. "Everybody else thinks... can we tick you as being with the 'In crowd'?" I.e. might not be based on actual prior voting, just the pressured implication that surely you're one of us.
JGD wrote 23 Apr 2018, 08:08 : "On acceptability (or wising up) - are those of us of an age more disturbed by the ease with which this manipulation can be executed ? Are our younger counterparts less concerned ?"
Speaking as my opinion of younger ones I know (e.g. mid twenties), the short answer is yes. I don't know if it's lack of understanding of data mining when their lives are posted (permanently) on e.g. Facebook or they truly believe everything is for "the greater good" or "lesser of two evils" which reduction by government of privacy is labelled as, which strangely people acquiesce to.