The Sentinel-Record

Shame on Google workers for treating military as evil

- Copyright 2018, Washington Post Writers group Marc A. Thiessen

WASHINGTON — Giving in to pressure from its workforce, Google recently announced that it is pulling out of Project Maven, a groundbrea­king Pentagon program to harness artificial intelligen­ce to sift through and interpret video imagery from drones. The move came after an uprising by 4,000 Google employees who signed a letter urging the company to cancel Project Maven and promise to never “build warfare technology.” Google should be ashamed.

In their letter, the employees said that working with the Pentagon would violate Google’s longtime motto “Don’t Be Evil” and “irreparabl­y damage Google’s brand.” Excuse me? Are they saying that the U.S. military is evil? What would damage Google’s brand is the impression that its workforce thinks they are too good to support the men and women of the armed forces who face real evil on distant battlefiel­ds so that

Google workers can sleep safely in their Google “nap pods,” enjoy free massages and take free guitar lessons.

Their objections to Project Maven are nonsensica­l. They fear that Google technology will be used to make drone strikes more accurate. What’s wrong with that? If Google’s AI technology could make it easier for our men and women in uniform to distinguis­h combatants from civilians, it could help prevent the accidental killing of innocent men, women and children. Does Google not want to help save civilian lives?

If saving lives is not motivation enough, how about self-interest? Consider: Taiwan is Google’s largest R & D center in Asia.

Last September, Google announced it is investing $1.1 billion to buy a division of Taiwan’s HTC that makes its Pixel smartphone­s, and in March the company announced an investment in Taiwan’s artificial intelligen­ce research and developmen­t that was called the largest ever in that nation by an internatio­nal tech company. Who, exactly, does Google think prevents mainland China from launching a cataclysmi­c invasion of Taiwan? The men and women of the U.S. military. They provide the security umbrella in East Asia that allows Google to make these investment­s.

The free riders at Google don’t seem to understand that their jobs and livelihood­s are built on the foundation of peace and security provided by the U.S. military.

Today, China is investing heavily in AI as part of its military strategy to undermine the Pax Americana in the Pacific. Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently testified that China will pose “the greatest threat to our nation by about 2025.” Beijing gets 100 percent acquiescen­ce from Alibaba and other Chinese tech companies in this effort. U.S.-based companies such as Google must decide whose side they’re on.

Fortunatel­y, in our dynamic free enterprise system, Google’s competitor­s will not hesitate to jump in to fill the vacuum it has left. President Donald Trump spends a lot of time berating Amazon, but the company runs a giant data cloud for the CIA that allows the intelligen­ce community to share top secret informatio­n and, along with Microsoft and other tech companies, is pursuing contracts to build the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastruc­ture Cloud (JEDI), potentiall­y the largest IT procuremen­t project in history. (Jeffrey P. Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, also owns The Washington Post.) The New York Times reports that “Google is widely expected to compete with other tech giants” for a piece of that $10 billion business. But according to Pentagon officials, the purpose of JEDI is to “increase lethality and readiness” of the military. If it does not want to be in the “business of war,” perhaps that contract should be off the table as well.

Our military strength is the best guarantee of peace. Former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt understand­s this. This is why he chairs the Defense Innovation Board, advising Defense Secretary Jim Mattis on ways to speed technologi­cal innovation of the armed forces. During recent congressio­nal testimony, Schmidt praised Project Maven and urged “closer collaborat­ion” with industry in the developmen­t of AI to “ensure American military supremacy,” warning that failure to do so would “would guarantee a loss of superiorit­y on the future battlefiel­d.”

Schmidt is a patriot who knows that the men and women of our armed forces are not “evil” and that supporting them does not contradict Google’s core values. His old company is moving in the opposite direction. Google recently ditched its “Don’t Be Evil” motto. Too bad they seem to have replaced it with “Don’t Fight Evil.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States