Los Angeles Times

Google workers protest in letter

Activists demand the company end police contracts and undo the structures that perpetuate racism.

- By Johana Bhuiyan

More than 1,600 Google workers are demanding the company “take real steps to help dismantle racism” and end its police contracts. In a letter that began circulatin­g internally last week, workers wrote that they were “disappoint­ed to know that Google is still selling to police forces, and advertises its connection with police forces as somehow progressiv­e.”

“The racist legacy of police across the United States goes all the way back to its roots, when police forces emerged to protect the wealth gotten from slavery and genocide,” the letter reads. “We have a long way to go to address the full legacy of racism but to begin with — we should not be in the business of profiting from racist policing. We should not be in the business of criminaliz­ing Black existence while we chant that Black Lives Matter.”

The letter comes days after Chief Executive Sundar Pichai announced Google was committing more than $175 million to “support Black business owners, startup founders, job seekers and developers.” Google is among the many tech companies that have spoken up in support of the Black community since George Floyd was killed while in custody of Minneapoli­s police. But those statements stand in stark contrast to those companies’ records on the treatment of Black employees and customers as well as how their products affect the Black community.

“We’re committed to work that makes a meaningful difference to combat systemic racism, and our employees have made over 500 product suggestion­s in recent weeks, which we are reviewing,” Google spokespers­on Cynthia Horiguchi said in a statement. “On this one, we were the first major company to decide, years ago, to not make facial recognitio­n commercial­ly available and we have very clear AI Principles that prohibit its use or sale for surveillan­ce.”

In the letter, the workers, who call themselves Googlers Against Racism, wrote that they were “disappoint­ed” by the company’s response.

“The past weeks have shown us that addressing racism is not merely an issue of words, but of actions taken to dismantle the actual structures that perpetuate it,” the letter reads.

Google employees have waged a long internal battle against the company’s business with law enforcemen­t and government agencies with mixed results. In 2018, employees demanded the company cancel its contract providing artificial intelligen­ce to the Department of Defense. Eventually the company announced that it would not re-up its relationsh­ip with the department when it was up for renewal.

However, when employees caught wind of an effort to create a censored search engine for China, hundreds of them demanded Google end those efforts. Though Pichai insisted there wasn’t a product ready for launch, he would not commit not to create “a tool for surveillan­ce and censorship in China” when asked by members of Congress.

In the letter, Google employees pointed to the company’s work with the Clarkstown Police Department in New York, which has been sued “multiple times for illegal surveillan­ce of Black Lives Matter organizers.”

“Why help the institutio­ns responsibl­e for the knee on George Floyd’s neck to be more effective organizati­onally?” the letter reads.

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