Google reportedly paid £4,000 to settle a racial discrimination lawsuit in the UK
Google paid £4,000 to settle a discrimination lawsuit that claims it did not do enough to protect a contractor from being racially profiled while working on an undercover project for Google Maps in shopping malls, reports the Guardian.
The contractor, a UK citizen of Moroccan descent, said he was subjected to frequent harassment, including being asked if he was a terrorist, while gathering information about wi-fi signals inside stores, and the situation was exacerbated because he was instructed not to disclose that he was conducting research for Google.
Ahmed Rashid
(not his real name) contracted with Google last year to work on Expedite, a
project meant to help with indoor mapping within shopping centers. Rashid told
the Guardian he sued the company when an offer for a new contract was withdrawn
after he complained about being harassed while carrying out his duties. Google
denied wrongdoing, but paid to settle the case. Rashid agreed to sign a
non-disclosure agreement, but decided to speak out after the global walkout by
Google employees to protest sexual harassment and other forms of
discrimination.
“There was a
complete disregard for the safety and interest of contractors. This research
was being conducted in secret at the expense of the security of Google
contractors that fit a stereotypically Muslim/Arab profile,” Rashid said,
adding that he believes Google did not think about how researchers of Arab
background would be treated because “there weren’t any Arabs on the board
designing this project.”
Rashid says
his team members walked around stores in intervals of six, eight, or 12
minutes, while recording information about the strength and range of their
wi-fi signals through a private Google app installed onto their phones.
Rashid’s claims that he was frequently targeted for racial profiling and
harassment were corroborated by a white team member who also spoke to the
Guardian despite signing an NDA about the project.
“It would
have been helpful to all of us to have ID because we all got stopped, but a lot
of us didn’t have problems because we were white. Google could have done more
to help him,” the team member said.
Rashid said
he asked Google to let him wear a badge in order to avoid harassment, but was
ignored until he complained about being followed by security at a shopping
center in London last September. Rashid claims a new contract he had been
promised was withdrawn later the same day.
While
Google’s policies regarding sexual harassment, including forced arbitration
(which the company announced after the walkouts that it would end), have been
under scrutiny, Rashid believes the company needs to address other issues as
well. “We need to address sexual misconduct, but nobody is talking about
intersectional issues, like institutional discrimination and racism,” he said.
Other employees have also made similar calls, including the walkout’s
organizers, who wrote that “the company must address issues of systemic racism
and discrimination, including pay equity and rates of promotion, and not just
sexual harassment alone.”
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