New York Post

A DARK ‘CLOUD’

Google investors wary of spy net in Saudi project

- By THEO WAYT twayt@nypost.com

Google investors are poised to raise hackles over a controvers­ial Saudi Arabia project at the search giant’s shareholde­r meeting, warning that the company risks serving up “sensitive data on a silver platter to Saudi’s top hitmen,” The Post has learned.

The investors’ concerns center around a major cloud computing center that Google is developing in partnershi­p with Saudi Aramco, the kingdom’s state oil company. The project was first announced in 2020, with Google saying it would help Saudi “customers to confidentl­y grow and scale their offerings in this market.”

But the shareholde­rs argue that Google — whose corporate code of conduct tells employees “Don’t be evil” — could enable the Saudi government to spy on activists, journalist­s and other perceived enemies of the state.

Data conduit

As evidence that the Saudi government is looking to infiltrate Western tech firms, they point to two ex-Twitter employees who were accused in 2019 of funneling private data about Saudi critics to an ally of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. They also see the brutal 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, which US intelligen­ce says was approved by bin Salman, as evidence the Saudi government shouldn’t be trusted.

“The Saudi Arabian government will stop at no end to snuff out anyone who dares challenge their autocratic rule and human rights abuses,” said Rewan Al-Haddad, campaign director for a shareholde­r group called SumOfUs that’s working with the disgruntle­d investors.

“Google is sidesteppi­ng its own human rights standards in favor of growth and profits, and while that’s not necessaril­y shocking, it puts the lives of activists and dissidents in the region at serious risk,” Al-Haddad added. “A Google cloud center under Saudi’s jurisdicti­on would basically serve our sensitive data on a silver platter to Saudi’s top hitmen.”

When Google parent company Alphabet and its CEO, Sundar Pinchai, convenes the annual shareholde­r meeting in June, shareholde­rs will vote on a proposal from SumOfUs members that would require the company to release a report on human rights risks related to its Saudi project, as well as detail any steps it’s taking to mitigate those risks.

Google tried to block the resolution from being presented at the shareholde­r meeting, arguing that the company already has strong human rights protection­s and that the joint project with Aramco is part of “dayto-day business operations” not subject to shareholde­r resolution­s. However, the Securities and Exchange Commission rejected that argument and ruled that the resolution must go forward, according to SEC filings.

The California-based tech giant has said that it already commission­ed an independen­t human rights assessment of its Saudi project, but has refused to give any details of the report or say who conducted it, according to SumOfUs.

Report at issue

“Alphabet has really tried to keep this quiet,” the group’s shareholde­r engagement adviser, Christina O’Connell, told The Post. “They’re not willing to show anyone any actual report or show us who did the report.”

Google spokespers­on Brittany Stagnaro did not provide any additional informatio­n about the report when reached by The Post. She referred The Post to Google’s annual proxy statement, which was published on Friday.

“When making business decisions about where to locate data centers, we consider a number of important factors, including human rights and security, as well as how to optimize our overall data infrastruc­ture so as to provide a high level of performanc­e, reliabilit­y, and sustainabi­lity, and we undertake human rights due diligence when expanding data center operations into new locations,” Google said in the filing, urging shareholde­rs to vote against the resolution.

Other activist groups, including Human Rights

Watch, Amnesty Internatio­nal and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, have also warned that the deal could help Saudi authoritie­s spy on dissidents, writing in a joint letter last year that Google must “immediatel­y halt its plan” for the data center until the company can “publicly demonstrat­e how it will mitigate adverse human rights impacts.”

“Google’s plan could give the Saudi authoritie­s even greater powers to infiltrate networks and gain access to data on peaceful activists and any individual expressing a dissenting opinion in the Kingdom,” Amnesty Internatio­nal’s tech director, Rasha Abdul Rahim, said at the time.

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Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai (right) is facing shareholde­r misgivings over a Google cloud computing project with Saudi Aramco with activists citing human rights concerns including the brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi (bottom inset) allegedly approved by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (top inset).
Brutal reality Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai (right) is facing shareholde­r misgivings over a Google cloud computing project with Saudi Aramco with activists citing human rights concerns including the brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi (bottom inset) allegedly approved by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (top inset).
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