The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump to tech chiefs: ‘We’re here to help’

Industry was open in its contempt during campaign.

- By Jonathan Lemire and Michael Liedtke

NEW YORK — President-elect Donald Trump, who faced fierce opposition from some Silicon Valley leaders during the election campaign, strove to assure the titans of tech on Wednesday that his administra­tion is “here to help you folks do well.”

Trump, still savoring his election victory, convened a summit at Trump Tower for nearly a dozen tech leaders, who largely supported Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. Many in the industry are worried that Trump will stifle innovation, curb the hiring of computer-savvy immigrants and infringe on consumers’ digital privacy.

He immediatel­y tried to allay those fears.

“We want you to keep going with the incredible innovation. Anything we can do to help this go on, we will be there for you,” Trump said. “You’ll call my people, you’ll call me. We have no formal chain of command around here.”

The CEOs who filled the table in Trump’s 25th-floor conference room included Apple’s Tim Cook, Alphabet’s Larry Page, Google’s Eric Schmidt, Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Tesla’s Elon Musk, IBM’s Ginni Rometty, Oracle’s Safra Catz and Cisco Systems’ Chuck Robbins. Facebook’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, attended instead of its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, who is one of many tech executives who have expressed misgivings about Trump’s pledge to deport millions of immigrants who are in the country illegally.

Trump was joined by several members of his senior staff and his three eldest children, who are expected to help run his business once he takes office.

Reporters were allowed to witness only the first moments of the meeting and most of the attendees departed without comment.

Bezos, who is also owner of The Washington Post, which has been a frequent target of Trump complaints about campaign coverage, said he was “super excited about the possibilit­y of innovation,” a comment echoed by several other attendees.

No industry was more open in its contempt for Trump during the campaign. In an open letter published in July, more than 140 technology executives, entreprene­urs and venture capitalist­s skewered him as a “disaster for innovation.”

And Trump’s denigratio­n of Mexicans, his pledge to deport millions of immigrants now living in the U.S. illegally and his crude remarks about women were widely viewed as racist, authoritar­ian and sexist by an industry that prides itself on its tolerance.

Trump, in turn, sometimes lashed out at the industry and its leaders, and — despite his reassuranc­es Wednesday — questions remain about how he’ll govern.

He has lambasted Bezos for the Post’s campaign coverage and has suggested that Amazon could face antitrust scrutiny after his election. Trump also rebuked Cook for fighting a government order requiring Apple to unlock an encrypted iPhone used by a shooter in last year’s terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif.

And Trump’s repeated negative comments about immigrants raised fears that he might dismantle programs that have enabled tech companies to hire tens of thousands of foreign workers with the skills to write computer programs, design web pages and build mobile apps.

Some in Silicon Valley think the industry’s best move would be to keep its distance until Trump changes his tone. Former Google executive Chris Sacca, now a tech investor, argued that industry leaders should have steered clear of the meeting altogether.

Sitting down with the president-elect “would only make sense after Trump has given public assurances he won’t encourage censorship, will stop exploiting fake news, will promote net neutrality, denounce hate crimes and embrace science,” Sacca said. “If and until then, tech figures who visit are being used to whitewash an authoritar­ian bully who threatens not just our industry but our entire democracy.”

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