Companies sever ties with hate groups
But determining who falls in that category isn’t always obvious
Hate is bad for business. Facing pressure from activist groups and social media campaigns, several big-name technology and financial companies are promising to cut or limit their business with hate groups following a violent white supremacists rally in Virginia last weekend that led to three deaths.
Among the companies that have gone public with such statements: Internet security service provider Cloudfare; rooms-for-rent site Airbnb; messaging app Discord; Internet domain provider GoDaddy; music streaming app Spotify; dating site OKCupid; online payment service providers PayPal, ApplePay and Mastercard; and credit-card company Discover.
“Most constituencies of these companies expect companies to speak out,” says Ira Kalb, professor of marketing at the University of Southern California. “There’s a far greater number of customers of these companies that are against hate.”
Large companies’ shifting attitudes toward race and diversity are increasingly reflected in their value statements. The fallout after President Trump equally blamed the white supremacists and counterprotesters at the rally led to the resignations of many business leaders from two White House advisory councils. Their departures underscore corporate America’s fine-tuning of its stance on these sensitive issues.
Knowing that alienating large population segments is bad for their bottom line, many have moved diversity beyond lip service and see it as a key strategy in sales, marketing and recruitment. But with so many legal and financial implications, companies are also contending with the difficult modern-day calculus of inclusion and rejecting hate without making broad assumptions and violating customers’ freedom of expression and lifestyle choices.
“The danger of companies acting individually is determining what is a hate group,” says Charles Elson, professor of corporate governance at the University of Delaware. “Is it someone who says something you don’t like? Someone who wants to overthrow the government? Or someone who says something we all don’t like? That’s why we allow the government to determine who violates the law.”
Stridently and overtly racist groups, such as neo-Nazis and KKK groups, may be easier to spot and target for shunning by businesses. Most businesses express their right to refuse service to certain customers based on decorum, behavior and security risks. But segmenting customers based on business owners’ values is a trickier slope. And the law, as of now, doesn’t provide definitive guidance, though most states prohibit discrimination by businesses.
Silicon Valley companies drove the initial wave of cutting ties with hate groups. Spotify says it plans to pull “hate music” from its library as soon as it is brought to its attention. Twitter continues to ban accounts that resort to “violent threats, harassment and hateful conduct.” Cloudflare dumped neo-Nazi site The Daily Stormer. Discover and Mastercard said they’ve identified hate groups that will no longer be able to use their services.