Toronto Star

Tech backlash is hindering Sidewalk’s plan, exec says

People concerned about use of data

- NATALIE WONG

Growing public mistrust of technology giants is making it more challengin­g for Sidewalk Labs to gain support for its high-tech neighbourh­ood in Toronto, according to an executive at the firm.

“There’s no question that that has affected our reception,” said Rohit Aggarwala, head of urban systems at New York-based Sidewalk, a unit of Google parent Alphabet.

“What we have been facing is the complete shift from say five, six years ago where large tech firms were highly trusted on almost everything and the public, in general, shared the perception that tech is going to solve a bunch of our problems, to the opposite, which is, whatever they’re doing, there’s danger

there,” Aggarwala said.

Sidewalk has been met with controvers­y in Toronto since winning the mandate to develop one of North America’s largest parcels of land along Lake Ontario.

Politician­s and citizens have raised concerns over how Sidewalk would use the data from the site, financing of the project and the amount of control Alphabet or Google might have over public lands.

To head off those concerns, Sidewalk has called for the creation of an independen­t, government-sanctioned trust to oversee data collection and offered to provide financing for certain infrastruc­ture ventures.

“We’re not asking the people of the city of Toronto to put too much at risk to allow some of these things to be tried out,” Aggarwala said in an interview.

“Frankly, Sidewalk Labs takes on most of the risk if it fails.”

While Sidewalk has had endorsemen­t from Google on some of their proposals, such as putting Google’s Canadian headquarte­rs in the developmen­t, it does not work closely with the company in any ongoing way other than on some very specific projects, Aggarwala said.

Sidewalk Labs trades notes with Google just like it would with other companies and government­s globally, Aggarwala said.

“If it were about privatizat­ion, we would be utterly self-defeating given the number of times we talk about bringing government in, creating entities we do not control and doing a number of things that are not about profit,” he said. No to china Sidewalk isn’t interested in developing a digital city in countries like China, where there has been less pushback against big tech over privacy or monopoly concerns and its citizens are more used to digital surveillan­ce. “There isn’t a crisis around how quickly can you build urban apartments in desirable cities in China, they don’t have that supply constraint that is what’s driving the opportunit­y gap in San Francisco, Toronto, New York, London, you name it,” Aggarwala said.

“They don’t have that problem, and that’s what we’re trying to solve.”

He added that Sidewalk’s objective is to “develop new and improved approaches to city expansion that works well in the kinds of cities that we like to live in, that we want to be citizens of.”

 ?? ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? To head off questions about use of data, Sidewalk Labs has called for the creation of an independen­t, government-sanctioned trust to oversee data collection.
ANDREW LAHODYNSKY­J THE CANADIAN PRESS To head off questions about use of data, Sidewalk Labs has called for the creation of an independen­t, government-sanctioned trust to oversee data collection.

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