Est. 1min 20-06-2016 (updated: 25-07-2016 ) The UK should urgently begin talks with the EU on obtaining a data adequacy decision, say MPs. [kentoh/Shutterstock] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Print Email Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Politicians across Europe often look suspiciously at the “big data” revolution as a trend imported from the US, which encroaches on their privacy. But others are also surfing the wave and see a multitude of areas where big data analytics can support decision-making – and sometimes also help politicians win an election. Download PDF Guillaume Liegey: ‘Big data is cheaper for electoral analysis than polls’ Interview | Technology 24-06-2016 Est. 6minPolitical campaigns can be refined by the analysis of "big data" to analyse and target voters. The challenge is knowing how best to use the data, said Guillaume Liegey. Big data revolutionises Europe’s fight against terrorism News | Technology 23-06-2016 Est. 6minThe threat of terrorism has greatly accelerated the exchange of data between European states. Social media has become indispensable, both for investigative purposes and to fight propaganda. EURACTIV France reports. Data analysis shows more Twitter users want to remain in the EU News | Brexit 22-06-2016 Est. 6minAn analysis of over one and a half million tweets mentioning Brexit over the last two weeks indicates that Twitter users in the UK tend to support remaining in the EU. EU politicians convert to ‘big data’ as campaign weapon News | Data protection 21-06-2016 Est. 11minUS politicians are the acknowledged forerunners when it comes to using digital technologies in election campaigns. But Europeans are making strides in their attempt to catch up, with the 2014 EU election providing a testing ground for big data analysts. Europe’s rude awakening to big data politics News | Technology 20-06-2016 Est. 7minTo many in the Brussels bubble, the big data revolution came as a rude awakening, with revelations of mass-scale eavesdropping by US intelligence. Although EU policymakers have now embraced the economic potential of big data, privacy fears are never far in the distance