Los Angeles Times

Google workers stage sit-in to protest ‘culture of retaliatio­n’

Demonstrat­ion occurs in a climate of greater tech employee activism

- By Suhauna Hussain

Google employees staged a sit-in Wednesday to protest what they call a “culture of retaliatio­n” at the company — the latest in a series of demonstrat­ions by tech industry workers.

It’s unclear how many employees participat­ed in the sitin, but organizer Meredith Whittaker tweeted that hundreds of people protested at the New York office Wednesday morning.

The demonstrat­ion comes six months after thousands of workers at Google offices around the world walked out to protest how the company handled sexual misconduct claims.

Whittaker and Claire Stapleton, longtime Google employees and organizers of November’s walkout, accused the company of retaliatin­g against them for holding that protest in a message posted to internal Google mailing lists on April 22, Wired reported.

Whittaker wrote that she was informed that her role at the company would be “changed dramatical­ly,” and that she would have to abandon her outside work on artificial intelligen­ce ethics at AI Now Institute, an organizati­on she co-founded.

Stapleton alleged in the internal Google message that she was told she would be demoted, and one of her projects was nixed two months after the walkout. She said that after she took her concerns to the company’s human resources department, her manager started ignoring her and her work was delegated to others. Her position was restored after she hired a lawyer who prompted management to investigat­e, Stapleton wrote in the message obtained by Wired.

“Our stories aren’t the only

ones. Google has a culture of retaliatio­n, which too often works to silence women, people of color, and gender minorities,” Whittaker and Stapleton wrote. “Retaliatio­n isn’t always obvious. It’s often confusing and drawn out, consisting of icy conversati­ons, gaslightin­g, project cancellati­ons, transition rejections, or demotions.”

Since April 22, the employee activists have promoted a social media campaign, #NotOKGoogl­e, to gather other stories of alleged retaliatio­n against Google workers.

The company denied allegation­s of retaliatio­n last week. A Google spokespers­on declined to comment but pointed to a previous statement from the company about retaliatio­n.

“We prohibit retaliatio­n in the workplace and publicly share our very clear policy,” the company said. “To make sure that no complaint raised goes unheard at Google, we give employees multiple channels to report concerns, including anonymousl­y, and investigat­e all allegation­s of retaliatio­n.”

Last Thursday, Google said it had created a new site for employees to report concerns and publicly shared its policies on harassment and retaliatio­n.

The protests at Google on Wednesday — which coincided with Internatio­nal Workers Day — appear to have taken many shapes. One Google software engineer tweeted that she was present at work but boycotting emails and meetings, and created an auto-response email explaining that she was unavailabl­e because she was participat­ing in the protest. Some employees, she tweeted, planned to take a sick day — riffing off an allegation that Stapleton was urged to go on medical leave by the company after organizing the walkout.

Activism by employees of technology companies has grown more common across the industry in recent months.

Hundreds of video game developers are talking about unionizing. Amazon and Microsoft workers denounced their employers’ work on military and law enforcemen­t technology. Google’s workforce has previously petitioned the company to afford more rights to contracted workers, reform its AI ethics board and stop developing a censored search engine for China.

The protests have had some effect.

Soon after the walkout, Google stopped requiring arbitratio­n in sexual misconduct cases. The company also scrapped its AI ethics council after a backlash over controvers­ial appointees and let go of a deal with the military to build object-recognitio­n technology for drones.

 ?? Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images ?? THE PROTEST comes six months after employees walked out to call attention to Google’s handling of sexual misconduct claims.
Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images THE PROTEST comes six months after employees walked out to call attention to Google’s handling of sexual misconduct claims.
 ?? Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images ?? FLIERS ARE posted at the Mountain View, Calif., campus. Two workers who organized November’s walkout have accused Google of retaliatin­g against them and said others also have been targeted.
Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images FLIERS ARE posted at the Mountain View, Calif., campus. Two workers who organized November’s walkout have accused Google of retaliatin­g against them and said others also have been targeted.
 ?? Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images ?? GOOGLE WORKERS have petitioned the company to afford more rights to contracted workers, reform its AI ethics board and stop developing a censored search engine for China. The protests have had some effect.
Amy Osborne AFP/Getty Images GOOGLE WORKERS have petitioned the company to afford more rights to contracted workers, reform its AI ethics board and stop developing a censored search engine for China. The protests have had some effect.

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