Orlando Sentinel

House panel grills Google CEO on bias

- By Marcy Gordon and Barbara Ortutay

WASHINGTON — Questions on privacy, data collection, China, Russia —and especially political bias — dominated Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s grilling before Congress Tuesday.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy opened the House Judiciary Committee hearing by noting a “widening gap of distrust” between tech companies and the American people. He asked whether tech companies are “serving as instrument­s of freedom or instrument­s of control” in the U.S. and beyond.

He also expressed concerns that Google’s business practices may have been influenced by employees’ political bias against conservati­ves.

The question of bias has dogged tech companies for years, but there has been no credible evidence that political leanings factor into Google’s search algorithm.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the committee’s top Democrat, called the notion of bias a “delusion” and a “right-wing conspiracy theory.”

Nadler said Tuesday’s hearing is the committee’s fourth one to address political bias. Hinting at a new agenda under Democratic control next year, Nadler said lawmakers should instead examine issues such as the spread of misinforma­tion and Russia’s efforts to influence U.S. elections online.

Pichai reiterated the company’s position that it has no plans “right now” to launch a censored search engine in China. If that changes, Pichai promised to be “fully transparen­t” about the move. Pichai, who became CEO in 2015, has said that he wants Google to be in China serving Chinese users.

Pichai’s appearance comes after he angered members of a Senate panel in September by declining their invitation to testify about foreign government­s’ manipulati­on of online services to sway U.S. elections. Pichai’s no-show at that hearing was marked by an empty chair for Google alongside the Facebook and Twitter executives who did appear.

Pichai went to Washington later in September to mend fences, meeting with some two dozen Republican­s and indicating he also planned to meet with Democrats. He took part last week in a White House meeting with other tech industry executives that focused mainly on getting government and businesses working more closely on accelerati­ng emerging technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce.

In October, Google announced it was shutting down its long-shunned Plus social network following its disclosure of a flaw discovered in March that could have exposed some personal informatio­n of as many as 500,000 people. The company avoided disclosing the privacy lapse at the time, in part to avoid drawing regulators’ scrutiny and damaging its reputation, according to a Wall Street Journal report citing anonymous individual­s and documents.

Lawmakers want Google to explain its failure to reveal the breach.

On Monday, the company said it was accelerati­ng its plans to shutter Plus after discoverin­g a privacy flaw that inadverten­tly exposed the names, email addresses, ages and other personal informatio­n of 52.5 million users last month. The service will now go dark in April instead of August, as previously announced.

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