Staff push Google to end China search app

Google employees have signed an open letter urging the company to stop work on a search app that would allow China to block politically sensitive results.

Google is reportedly working on a mobile version of its search engine that will comply with strict censorship controls in China.

Google is reportedly working on a mobile version of its search engine that will comply with strict censorship controls in China. Source: AAP

Eleven employees comprising engineers and managers at Alphabet Inc's Google have published an open letter, demanding the company end development of a censored search engine for Chinese users, escalating earlier protests against the secretive project.

Google has described the search app, known as Project Dragonfly, as an experiment not close to launching. But as details of it have leaked since August, current and former employees, human rights activists and US lawmakers have criticised Google for not taking a harder line against the Chinese government's policy that politically sensitive results be blocked.
Human rights group Amnesty International also launched a public petition on Tuesday calling on Google to cancel Dragonfly. The organisation said it would encourage Google workers to sign the petition by targeting them on LinkedIn and protesting outside Google offices.

About 1400 of Google's tens of thousands of workers urged the company in August to improve oversight of ethically questionable ventures, including Dragonfly.

Google has long sought to have a bigger presence in China, the world's largest internet market. It needs government approval to compete with the country's dominant homegrown internet services.

The employees who signed their names on Tuesday's letter said they had seen little progress, and expect more colleagues to publicly back the push to cancel Dragonfly.
The letter expresses concern about the Chinese government tracking dissidents through search data and suppressing truth through content restrictions.

"We object to technologies that aid the powerful in oppressing the vulnerable, wherever they may be," the employees said in the letter published on blogging service Medium.

The employees said they no longer believe Google is "a company willing to place its values over profits", and cited a string of "disappointments" this year, including acknowledgement of a big payout to an executive who had been accused of sexual harassment.

That incident sparked global protests at Google, which like other big technology companies has seen an uptick in employee activism during the past two years as their services become an integral part of civic infrastructure.

Google was not immediately available for comment.

 


Share
2 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP

Share this with family and friends


News

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Mandarin-speaking Australians.
Understand the quirky parts of Aussie life.
Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
Simplified Chinese Collection

Simplified Chinese Collection

Watch onDemand