Google staff pledge cash to striking workmates
Google staff
have pledged $200,000 (£157,000) to engineers if they go on strike over the
firm's work on a censored search engine for China.
A prominent
Google engineer started the fund after reports suggested it would avoid
standard internal checks.
The
Intercept news site claimed that project Dragonfly was being developed without
the oversight of privacy and security teams.
Google said
the project had undergone checks and would face more later.
According to
The Intercept, senior staff at Google involved with Dragonfly are worried about
its development. It claims that Google ignored human rights worries voiced
during early meetings and that standard checks on the development were being
avoided.
Google has not
released many details about Dragonfly, but it is believed to be a censored or
restricted search engine created with the co-operation of the Chinese
government. China uses lots of technical measures to restrict and censor what
its citizens can say and see online.
In response
to the article, senior Google engineer Liz Fong-Jones called for the creation
of a fund to support any staff who went on strike over Dragonfly.
Ms
Fong-Jones said she would match funds up to a total of $100,000. Within hours,
other Google staff had met her offer.
The funding
drive comes soon after a large group of Google workers signed a letter calling
on the search giant to drop Dragonfly.
In early
November, thousands of staff walked out in protest at the way Google handled
reports of sexual harassment and other inappropriate behaviour by senior
managers.
In response
to The Intercept story, Google said: "This is an exploratory project and no
decision has been made about whether we could or would launch."
It added
that privacy and security engineers had been consulted during Dragonfly's
development.
"For
any product, final launch is contingent on a full, final privacy review but
we've never gotten to that point in development," it said. "Privacy
reviews at Google are non-negotiable and we never short-circuit the
process."
Heather
Adkins, director of security and privacy at Google, also said Dragonfly had
been reviewed.
In a tweet,
she said the story in The Intercept did not "represent my experience
working on security and privacy for Dragonfly, which were positive and
thoughtful. I saw no sidelining whatsoever."
Comments