translated from Spanish: The owner appeared: Spanish company Alto Data Analytics produced the report “Big Data” of the Government

None of them wanted to take over their authorship. Not from the Undersecretariat of the Interior or from The Currency. The questioned “Big Data” report that interior minister Gonzalo Blumel gave him on 19 December to the national prosecutor, Jorge Abbott, spent 10 days without an owner. Until now.
According to the newspaper La Tercera, after contrasting information provided by the National Intelligence Agency (ANI) with versions of La Moneda, the report was prepared by the Spanish company Alto Data Analytics.
The firm was created in 2012 by Spain’s Alejandro Romero and has offices in Madrid, Washington, D.C. and Sao Paulo. According to the company’s description on its website, “Alto’s software and artificial intelligence algorithms turn billions of public data points into actionable cyberintelligence for better and faster decision-making.”
Romero in 2018 gave an interview to the Spanish newspaper El País and, among other things, said that Alto Data Analytics has “a software that acquires information from the public sphere, understood very broadly, not only social networks” and that also index “sources additional information, such as news and comments from readers, information from the BOE, the U.S. Senate, Wikipedia databases, even dark web.”
In its Linkedin profile, the company says it “offers a wide range of data analytics solutions to public, private and non-profit organizations around the world.”
“Collecting and analyzing a large amount of data can be complex and challenging, even for the most sophisticated companies,” he adds, saying that’s why they believe that “this explosion of information is an improvement in our lives,” so they help “accelerate that transformation, helping organizations focus on what really matters beyond digital chaos.”
Another of the Big Data reports they made was an analysis of the “Yellow Vests” in France.

Original source in Spanish

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