With the help of more than 100 engineers from the data mining company Palantir, Peter Cavicchia III collected emails, browser histories and GPS locations from company phones, as well as transcripts from recorded phone conversations. The original surveillance, started in 2009, was sanctioned by the bank as a means to keep tabs on potentially dishonest traders, according to a Bloomberg News report published Thursday.
The extensive data collection, however, came to an abrupt halt after Cavicchia "went rogue," collecting data on some of the bank's senior executives and sparking an internal scandal, the report said. He was forced to resign in 2013.
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/19/jp-morgan-reportedly-had-to-oust-a-security-chief-backed-by-palantir.html
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