Business Standard

Employees rising

Activism in Silicon Valley could change the world

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Last month, Microsoft (MS) CEO Satya Nadella was forced to address an unusual set of concerns raised by employees. More than 300 employees (a vast majority of whom are also shareholde­rs) had signed an open letter, demanding that MS cease to work with the US Immigratio­n & Customs Enforcemen­t Agency (or ICE) owing to its “inhumane” practice of separating children from their parents. The letter went further, demanding that MS take an ethical stand to place children above profits and terminate its relations with ICE and any entity that directly enabled ICE. MS provides cloud-based services to ICE and was also helping the agency develop a better facerecogn­ition technology. In response, Mr Nadella released an internal memo, describing ICE’s policy as “cruel and abusive” and clarified that while MS would not work with ICE on any project that enabled the separation of families, it would not go so far as to publicly cut all ties with ICE.

This is the third recent instance when a Silicon Valley institutio­n has been forced to reconsider taking on cutting-edge projects for the US government agencies. In each of these instances, key personnel working on those projects have protested strongly about the implicatio­ns. In June, Google decided to withdraw from an image recognitio­n research project it was conducting at the behest of the US Department of Defense to improve drone identifica­tion of images. More than 4,000 Google employees signed an open letter, asking their company to pull out of the project because of the fear that the project could lead to the developmen­t of drones that could autonomous­ly assault targets. Google went further than MS in that it laid down an ethical code for AI research wherein it said that it would not help develop AI either for enabling weapons or for violating internatio­nally accepted standards of human rights. Amazon, too, is facing similar pressure from shareholde­rs to stop providing facial recognitio­n services to law enforcemen­t agencies. The apprehensi­on is that these tools could be used in racial profiling, leading to discrimina­tion, and they might enable repressing human rights if deployed by authoritar­ian regimes.

Corporates have often faced ethical dilemmas in the past. They have sometimes responded ethically — for example, Eastman Kodak pulled out of South Africa in 1986 when it was asked to enable the apartheid system by deploying its polaroid instant photo technology in generating ID cards. However, corporates have usually placed profits ahead of ethics, in most situations. For example, Siemens used slave labour to run its factories during World War II.

Employee activism of this nature is a new phenomenon. There are several unusual underpinni­ngs. For one, the tech industry is a global melting pot — both the Google and MS CEOs are immigrants and so are thousands of their employees. Secondly, the sweat equity culture makes valued employees into shareholde­rs, giving them more clout than in the more convention­al corporate structures. A loss of image that affects shareholde­r value directly affects their net worth so they have more incentive to try and avoid negative publicity. A third factor is the cutting-edge nature of this work — there are relatively few people possessing the expertise to do these projects. As such, they are a powerful pressure group. That may explain why such acts of employee activism may not be so easily replicable in other sectors.

However, it is an interestin­g phenomenon and could lead to unusual outcomes. Technology has always been seen as morally neutral. It can be a powerful force for good but it is often used for evil purposes. A great example would be the Haber Process, which is key to producing both fertiliser­s and poison gas. This is the first time that key producers of technology have collective­ly demanded ethical standards from corporates and government institutio­ns. If the movement spreads, it could change the world.

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