The Palm Beach Post

Google making plans for Chinese censorship

- By Hamza Shaban Washington Post

Google executives addressed the company’s plans to reintroduc­e a search service in China, following an employee backlash over concerns about complying with Beijing’s censorship laws, according to reports of an allhands company meeting.

Chief executive Sundar Pichai told staff that Google is in the “early stages” of considerin­g a return to China, Bloomberg reported, but that the company is not close to finalizing a search product. Pichai pledged transparen­cy as the developmen­t process advances and cast the potential for business in China as a boost to Google’s mission.

“I genuinely do believe we have a positive impact when we engage around the world, and I don’t see any reason why that would be different in China,” Pichai said, according to Bloomberg.

The discussion with staff followed a report by the Intercept this month that revealed Google’s plans to develop a China-compliant search engine that would prevent Chinese users from accessing websites and using search queries blackliste­d by the government.

Web users in China can’t access Google’s service because the government there blocks it as part of its sweeping censorship infrastruc­ture, known as the “Great Firewall.” Google withdrew its search engine from the country in 2010 after it suffered what it called a sophistica­ted cyberattac­k targeting human rights activists there and amid heightened the pressure of government censorship.

In a letter to Pichai this month, a bipartisan group of six senators called Google’s potential return to China “deeply troubling,” noting the country’s repressive surveillan­ce apparatus, human rights abuses and its alleged record of stealing intellectu­al property from foreign technology companies.

Google employees are also sounding the alarm. More than 1,400 workers have signed an internal letter, according to the New York Times, calling on the company to establish an oversight process to review the China project and other plans that “raise urgent moral and ethical issues.” “We urgently need more transparen­cy, a seat at the table, and a commitment to clear and open processes: Google employees need to know what we’re building,” the letter said.

The objection to the developmen­t of a search engine in China is just the latest example of tech employees protesting the business decisions of their companies.

Earlier this summer, employees at Amazon.com urged chief executive Jeff Bezos to discontinu­e partnershi­ps with companies that work with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and to end the sale of facial-recognitio­n technology to law enforcemen­t agencies.

Microsoft staff also criticized their company’s $20 million contract with ICE, compelling chief executive Satya Nadella to address the issue.

Previous protests at Google over controvers­ial projects have proven successful. Executives there said they would not renew a contract with the Pentagon and would ban the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce to be used in weapons following a firestorm of employee resignatio­ns and public outcry.

 ?? ANDY WONG / AP ?? A security guard walks past Google China headquarte­rs in Beijing in 2010. Google withdrew its search engine from the country that year after it suffered what it called a cyberattac­k.
ANDY WONG / AP A security guard walks past Google China headquarte­rs in Beijing in 2010. Google withdrew its search engine from the country that year after it suffered what it called a cyberattac­k.

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