15 comments

  • tbabb 2036 days ago
    Since when does the government get to police ideological speech, or complain about "bias"? Google could in principle make its results insanely left-leaning and the first amendment should protect them. Are we going to let the government choose which results get suppressed to suit its own needs?

    They must be very careful not to let the narrative become "we don't bias our results, we swear!" (even if it's true) because that validates the notion that the government is allowed to complain about it, and puts the burden on them to prove it. Their position should be a very firm "don't tell us what to f*cking do."

    • chrisco255 2036 days ago
      Google's power today is far greater than Microsoft's ever was in the 90s, and yet they had to sit through years of antitrust trials. Now we have Republicans arguing for fair treatment and threatening the use of the FTC...while Democrats (the traditional antitrust party) have sat on their hands over the past decade on these issues. Presumably, as far as I can tell, neither party has any particular morals. They're for things that are good for their base and against things that are bad for their base. And in this case, a left-leaning tech elite is good for Democrats...so we're not hearing a peep of antitrust talk from the Dems.
      • jasonlotito 2036 days ago
        > while Democrats have sat on their hands over the past decade

        Well, except for when they didn't. A simple search reminds us of this:

        https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/ftc-to-an...

        "Google emerged from nearly two years of intense federal scrutiny Thursday by convincing the Federal Trade Commission that even though rivals may suffer as the company continually refines its search engine, consumers often win through better, faster, more valuable answers to their queries."

        This also ignores more recent requests from Democrats to look into Google:

        https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2018/06/04...

        "The new complaint comes from Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison, a progressive in the upper ranks of the Democratic National Committee. In a letter to the Federal Trade Commission dated May 31, Ellison urged the watchdog agency to take a closer look at Google and its parent company, Alphabet, given that European regulators recently found that the search giant harmed its rivals and fined it $2.7 billion.

        “The FTC should determine whether Alphabet has engaged in similar conduct in the United States and whether such conduct violates the FTC Act,” he wrote."

        Those are just two cases I found in searches.

        I wouldn't call this sitting on your hands.

        > ...so we're not hearing a peep of antitrust talk from the Dems.

        We are. It's just getting drowned out by everything else that is happening.

        • chrisco255 2036 days ago
          Those are good finds, but none of this scrutiny compares to what Microsoft got in the 90s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft_Cor.... That the Obama-stacked FTC did not take Google to trial is sort of telling.

          You got one company, presiding over 90% of the search on the web: http://www.visualcapitalist.com/this-chart-reveals-googles-t...

          Might as well call Google the Ministry of Truth. They sit in a very powerful position over information and influence. China understands this, that's why they tightly control their search results.

          Anyone arguing that one company should have so much influence without probably being subject to some sort of oversight or regulation, is naive at best.

          • jasonlotito 2035 days ago
            > Those are good finds, but

            nothing.

            Your claim wasn't that they didn't receive enough scrutiny. Your claim was that people haven't done anything.

            You lied, or at best, are seriously misinformed, and got called out for it, and now you are moving the goal post trying to pretend like you weren't wrong and ignorant. Just admit it. You were wrong, you didn't know, and yeah, they are trying to do something, but haven't found anything yet, and even in 2018, they are calling for investigations.

            What more do you want? Do you want them to NOT investigate or ask for investigations?

            • chrisco255 2034 days ago
              The FTC chooses who they really go after and who they don't. And that's at their discretion. It's not a lie that the FTC has done nothing. They have glazed over on the fact that Google owns 90%+ of the search engine market. That's a monopoly. The Democrats of the early 20th century would have gone ape shit over a company with the size and power of Google. Take a look at FDR's actions, for example:

              https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/06/word-mo...

              Google makes Ma Bell look like a tiny tyke by comparison. Their position and influence over the modern internet is in a word, scary. There's no check on their power, and the Obama administration did nothing to check said power. I don't care what rubber stamps or certificate of approvals they got. Google is a monopoly. It's fine if the Democrats have abandoned that principle. Totally fine. But don't call that analysis dishonest.

              Also, I'm not the only one mentioning this:

              https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/politics/348217-the-...

              https://newrepublic.com/article/144694/democrats-face-import...

      • JasonFruit 2036 days ago
        I hate to argue where you've said so much that's right, but neither party is really concerned about what's good for their base. They are concerned about what keeps them in power. Sometimes that is about doing what's good for your base, so they keep on voting for you, but sometimes you shaft your base to enlarge, enrich, or strengthen your kingdom. But in the end there are no statesmen — just power-hungry opportunists.
      • voxl 2036 days ago
        Being left-leaning is not cause for antitrust. Making your argument a false equivocation. Should Google be subject to antitrust trials? I would say yes, but not because of a left or right leaning bias in their search results.
        • chrisco255 2036 days ago
          I think it's their 90% dominant position over the search market, mobile, advertising, and online video that should be subject to antitrust trials... As for the left/right leaning bias, I think that's all part of the same banana. Their powerful position gives them the flexibility to lean whatever way they choose with few, if any, market repercussions.
          • bobdole123456 2036 days ago
            Being the best in the market isn’t an antitrust issue.

            There isn’t any credible alternative to Google because they’re head and shoulders above everyone else.

            There are other search engines, they just don’t measure up.

            • obpacheco 2036 days ago
              its not just that google has a search engine, they also own youtube, which plays a huge role into how people are getting their news today, as people watch less and less television.
              • thrmsforbfast 2036 days ago
                bobdole123456's point is that monopolies aren't illegal but abuse of monopoly power is illegal (you're being downvoted because you do not explicitly address that fact).

                But I actually think you raise an extremely interesting question: does pushing a political agenda using your monopoly position constitute an abuse of monopoly power?

                The advent of privately controlled monopolistic forums is somewhat new. I don't think it's at all obvious how the spirit of anti-trust law should be extended in the age of platforms...

                We're in new territory.

        • bilbo0s 2036 days ago
          >Being left-leaning is not cause for antitrust....

          As horrible as this may sound, it is a cause for anti trust break up when those in power are right leaning.

          I mean, let's not split hairs here. As a matter of pragmatic reality, that's pretty much what it comes down to.

      • lvs 2036 days ago
        This is totally beside the point. Antitrust law governs market dominance and manipulation of market competition. It has nothing to do with political speech. If it did, Fox News would be in serious trouble!
      • dmode 2036 days ago
        Disagree. Left leaning companies constantly get hit by legislation from left leaning politicians. See Amazon and BEZOS act for example. Airbnb and city legislations is another example.
    • mc32 2036 days ago
      I think the problem would be if their Search aspect were to be classified as a utility, then they would have to be more careful of their results manipulation.

      So long as they are not regulated as such, then I don’t think the gov should get involved. But then again, that raises the question, should google be allowed lawfully to, say, supress all topics around Atheism, or Christmas or Hanukah or Russian meddling, if their management and ownership changed to one even more manipulative?

      • magicalist 2036 days ago
        > I think the problem would be if their Search aspect were to be classified as a utility

        People have been writing this, but I'm curious what they mean, as there is no single legal "Utility" classification that could be put on something like google or facebook.

        Is there a specific legal approach people are talking about or is it just the commonly understood meaning of "utility" they're referring to?

        • Someguywhatever 2036 days ago
          Example: You can't shut off somebody's electricity or water because they are a bad person, or have expressed unorthodox opinions. But you can shut off their twitter, their email, their web search, their facebook, their linked-in, stop processing payments for them (potentially cutting them off from their livelihood). You can cut them off from their digital identity and shut them out of the digital "public" in a manner of speaking. When that happens right now today, people hand-wave it away because "X is a private company they can do what they want." Never minding the fact that X has become how almost everybody addresses/interacts with the rest of the public digitally, or how X has ALL their email data, and many important documents etc Getting locked out of these things is not life threatening in the way that no water is, but it can essentially delete somebody from the "public" with almost no recourse.
          • Kalium 2036 days ago
            Many years ago, the same was true of phone books. The publishers of those were, as far as I am aware, free to delist whomever they pleased for any reason.

            I'm not aware phone books being regulated as utilities.

            • mc32 2036 days ago
              IIRC you had to pay to not appear in the phone book.
            • Someguywhatever 2035 days ago
              I think the main point is not to get bogged down in whether or not phone books are this or that, or how legacy media relates to the internet era etc.

              The point i'm making is not : "Do you sympathize with 'bad guys'?"

              it's more: "Would you want whats happening to 'bad guys' to happen to you?".

          • jonwachob91 2036 days ago
            The utility company will turn off your services for failure to pay, a violation of their ToS. Twitter/Facebook/Google/whomever will suspend your account for violating their terms of service. What's the difference?
            • roenxi 2036 days ago
              A usual TOS relationship with a utility isn't politically charged.

              The important line that is being crossed here is that you can get banned from Twitter/Facebook/Google/whomever for saying something that is not illegal but is in the opinion of the company objectionable.

              No utility has the power to disconnect me if I do something they think is objectionable with their service. And that goes to the heart of what people seem to want from "regulating as a utility" (a phrase that is terrifying in its vagueness) - they want freedom to voice unpopular opinions and let those who agree, agree.

              • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
                But does that extend to advocating harassment? That's what Jones was accused of doing. Does harassment count as an unpopular opinion?
                • roenxi 2036 days ago
                  I have no idea what Jones was doing, not being an InfoWars viewer or following the story closely.

                  But, I feel under no threat of being disconnected by my water provider because /they think/ that I am harassing someone.

                  For Jones in particular, I believe the appropriate channels of response are for the person being harassed to: (1) Sue him (2) Respond clearly.

                  The tech majors, who have mounting leaked evidence that their management is politically active in the workplace, should not be arbitrating what a publisher does. If they do, then they are publishers themselves, in which case they should be regulated differently and their status as publishers made very public.

                  • s73v3r_ 2035 days ago
                    "I have no idea what Jones was doing"

                    Then it seems very bad faith for you to be using him as an example.

                    "For Jones in particular, I believe the appropriate channels of response are for the person being harassed to: (1) Sue him (2) Respond clearly."

                    This is simply not true. Further, if you're Twitter, and you have users that are harassing other users, that makes those users less wanting to use your platform. And you have other people that catch wind that Twitter is doing nothing about harassment, and now very few people want to use Twitter.

                    "The tech majors, who have mounting leaked evidence that their management is politically active in the workplace"

                    [Citation Needed]

                    "If they do, then they are publishers themselves, in which case they should be regulated differently and their status as publishers made very public."

                    I disagree. Asking someone to leave who is harassing other users is not causing themselves to be publishers.

                • tomp 2036 days ago
                  Harassment is not illegal. I believe the parent’s point is that a utility seevice can’t disconnect you because of vague allegations of legal behaviour such as “harassment”.
                  • GW150914 2036 days ago
                    Harassment is not illegal.

                    That’s simply not true.

                    https://definitions.uslegal.com/h/harassment/

                    • tomp 2036 days ago
                      Ok, well, Twitter harassment is not illegal. The link you point to only mentions physical harassment (e.g. followig someone, making them reasonably feel unsafe, assaulting them). Harassing speech (and hate speech) is legal (in the US).
                      • GW150914 2036 days ago
                        Ok, well, Twitter harassment is not illegal. The link you point to only mentions physical harassment (e.g. followig someone, making them reasonably feel unsafe, assaulting them). Harassing speech (and hate speech) is legal (in the US).

                        In fact it specifically mentions anonymous communications in a variety of forms.

                        Either (a) communicates with a person, anonymously or otherwise, by telephone, or by telegraph, mail or any other form of written communication, in a manner likely to cause annoyance or alarm; or (b) causes a communication to be initiated by mechanical or electronic means or otherwise with a person, anonymously or otherwise, by telephone, or by telegraph, mail or any other form of written communication, in a manner likely to cause annoyance or alarm; or Makes a telephone call, whether or not a conversation ensues, with no purpose of legitimate communication;...

                        I can only recommend a more in-depth reading for you. At the very least you owe it to yourself to have basic knowledge of the laws in question before you go about declaring what’s legal and illegal.

                        • tomp 2035 days ago
                          Ah, interesting, I didn’t realize there were so many exemptions to free speech. Thanks! So basically all IRS letters are “illegal” :)
          • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
            Electricity and water are pretty important to be able to live. Being able to rant on Twitter isn't.
            • mc32 2036 days ago
              The right to vote and the right to free speech are also not essential to life, but we defend both as pillars of a free society.
              • spunker540 2036 days ago
                People blocked on Twitter are free to host their own websites with their own speech.

                I really don’t believe just because Twitter is popular it’s suddenly mandatory that it host any and all content. If hacker news became as popular as twitter could the government suddenly start compelling HN to stop censoring off topic conversation and host any and all posts?

                Twitter was created by people to serve a certain purpose and for certain conversations and they are within their rights to control the content they host on their machines and on their site.

                • Someguywhatever 2035 days ago
                  >People blocked on Twitter are free to host their own websites with their own speech.

                  On paper this is true, but network effects mean you won't be able to interact with the general public UNLESS the general public also moves to your platform as well, which is fairly unlikely.

                • mc32 2036 days ago
                  Let's put it this way, let's say George Soros bought it. He then directed the employees who didn't quit to ban all people who are not leftists.

                  Or, let's say on the other hand the Koch brothers buy it and again, direct employees who have not quit to ban all non-conservative posters.

                  Would that be okay because they don't owe it to anyone to be a medium for everyone?

                  • spunker540 2036 days ago
                    Yeah that’d be okay.

                    Someone else could create a more neutral site since there’d certainly be a void to fill.

                    • mc32 2036 days ago
                      Then, I'm pretty sure your opinion is in the minority. There would be outrage from either side, if affected, I'm sure.
                  • root_axis 2035 days ago
                    Where is the ambiguity? In your example, a private company was purchased by a private individual and now they legally own it... why shouldn't they legally be allowed to do whatever they want with it?
                  • sangnoir 2036 days ago
                    Didn't someone make an alt-right twitter and an alt-right Reddit? No-one's complaining - those who don't like it keep away.
        • bcheung 2036 days ago
          "An important legal requirement for common carrier as public provider is that it cannot discriminate..."

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_carrier

          "Net neutrality is the principle that [providers] treat all data on the Internet equally, and not discriminate"

          "In a "dumb network", the endpoints are thought to be where the intelligence lies, and as such, proponents argue that the network should leave the management and operation of communications and data transfer to the end users, not a government bureau or Internet company."

          "Supporters of net neutrality... want to ensure that [companies] cannot screen, interrupt or filter Internet content without a court order."

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_neutrality

        • creaghpatr 2036 days ago
          Same framework as net neutrality except with speech/content instead of bandwidth. Of course, net neutrality isn't en vogue with current lawmakers.
          • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
            But the problem is that it is content and not simply bandwidth. Bandwidth is objectively measured, content isn’t.
      • ericd 2036 days ago
        Maybe crawling should be a common utility, with the ranking being left to individual competition, similar to fiber lines owned by utilities and then companies being free to lease those and deal with end customers. As it is, many websites are hostile to new crawlers that don't already have lots of traffic to bring them in exchange, so it's difficult to offer an alternative to Google, even if you can get over the high minimum bar of being able to crawl a significant fraction of the web.
        • bduerst 2036 days ago
          Isn't that just creating a duplicate internet then - one that taxpayers have to pay to host instead? That creates a ton of issues around being forced to pay for hosting other people's speech. For example, I don't want to pay to host anti-vaxxer site information but because of the first amendment, this public service can't remove it.
          • ericd 2036 days ago
            Why would you care about the cost to store a copy of sites you disagree with? It's a crawl, it's not the government making value judgements one way or the other. I'm sure the library of congress also contains material you disagree with.

            I don't think it would count as a duplicate internet any more than archive.org would.

            • bduerst 2036 days ago
              The library of congress is curated by Selection officers for material value, the internet is not.
              • ericd 2036 days ago
                I didn't mean to say that the library of congress was indiscriminate, just that it likely also contains material that you disagree with. And that that doesn't really matter, because it's not the purpose of the repository to contain only non-controversial material.
                • bduerst 2035 days ago
                  Without an example, I can't agree with you, and no - the point is that the library of congress is curated content, the internet is not.
                  • ericd 2035 days ago
                    Old books from the 1800s with very outdated views on race, sex, etc would be an obvious example.

                    Edit: and why is curation relevant to the question of whether there should be a common crawl that can be accessed by all, a publicly hosted mirror of the web that can be used to create competing search engines?

                    • bduerst 2034 days ago
                      I really don't care about old books from the 1800s.
      • AmericanChopper 2036 days ago
        This is the obvious reason why they have to take the government seriously. The stakes are that they end up heavily regulated.

        On a side note, I find it very ironic that a community who so passionately embrace net neutrality are so quick to cry 1A and liberty when it comes to political censorship and bias by the huge internet companies.

      • sieabahlpark 2036 days ago
        Now you've shown that what they desire is a slippery slope for later.
      • FireBeyond 2036 days ago
        > So long as they are not regulated as such

        And to think, it's the Republican Party that's been anchoring for removing any pretense of net neutrality.

        But now it's Bad(TM). Or at least Unfair(TM).

    • twtw 2035 days ago
      > Google could in principle make its results insanely left-leaning and the first amendment should protect them

      This is a far too simplistic and superficial analysis. Yes, Google could decide to position themselves as a publisher and claim the corresponding right to editorialize their content, but this would mean accepting a publishers' responsibility for all of the content. Historically, Google and others have been immune as a result of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which shields them from responsibility for libel, defamation, threats, falsehoods, child porn, fair housing violations, etc.

      They could choose to become a publisher in the eye of the law, but then they would have to play by the rules of a publisher. They can't simultaneously be protected as a publisher by freedom of the press and claim immunity as not a publisher.

    • rdtsc 2036 days ago
      > Google could in principle make its results insanely left-leaning and the first amendment should protect them. Are we going to let the government choose which results get suppressed to suit its own needs?

      That's the part that confuses me. Why not embrace the bias. Those who think that Google is biased are not going to be convinced by the a PR statement saying "we are impartial, etc". They've already made up their mind.

      It's like with the leaked video we discussed recently. Was anyone surprised by the reaction? Not me, it was exactly what I expected. But their PR response to the leak is what bothered me:

      > Nothing was said at that meeting, or any other meeting, to suggest that any political bias ever influences the way we build or operate our products.

      Why not just be brave and come out and say "we support these values and not those values, we are not a neutral platform, please move on to another service if you don't agree".

      • murderfs 2036 days ago
        > Why not just be brave and come out and say "we support these values and not those values, we are not a neutral platform, please move on to another service if you don't agree".

        Presumably because telling half of your users to fuck off is a terrible financial decision?

        • rdtsc 2036 days ago
          I don't know if it'd be half, I think less. And also where would they go? Most will still be "Googling" things, driving with Google maps and have an Android phone with location turned on at all times. On the other hand it will make their most devout users, including the majority of their employees quite proud and even more more dedicated.

          Here executives were crying on camera saying "we lost". I don't think many believe they are then going to turn around wipe their tears, sit down at their desks and be impartial when deciding which news to filter, which videos to demonetize, which charities to support. I don't think they will be, and they shouldn't. They should be more brave and stand up for what they believe. It will make them seem more honest and they might even recover some of the PR image they lost recently.

      • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
        Because it legitimizes a false narrative.
        • rdtsc 2036 days ago
          Sorry I don't follow what's the false narrative?
          • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
            That Google is censoring conservative viewpoints.
      • gkoberger 2036 days ago
        You'll never find a conservative banned on Google or Twitter or Facebook for saying they believe in trickle-down economics, or that they want a smaller government.

        Google/etc have policies on hate speech and false content, and for some reason banning those things is now considered a political bias.

        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
          You'll never find a conservative banned on Google or Twitter or Facebook for saying they believe in trickle-down economics, or that they want a smaller government.

          Fact: You will find such people subjected to strikes and bans on YouTube and Twitter who are simply ideologically opposed to the goals of Intersectionality and Feminism on the basis of philosophy rooted in "smaller government."

          • kevinh 2036 days ago
            I don't see what intersectionality or feminism have to do with smaller government.
            • stcredzero 2036 days ago
              Enforcing Equality of Outcome requires increased government infringement.
              • bduerst 2036 days ago
                So is enforcing Child Pornography laws. Is that a bad thing too?
                • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                  No. So you are saying that you'll only support child pornography laws if you get all the rest of your political agenda? You mean that's a good thing too?
                  • bduerst 2036 days ago
                    That's a straw man. I was just pointing out the flaw in your logic about laws being government infringement.
                    • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                      I was just pointing out the flaw in your logic about laws being government infringement.

                      Really? I was parodying your lack of logic. Why is it that you can't enforce child pornography, but still refrain from other kinds of government infringement. Please explain the reasons you so carefully gave above before you started to poison the well by invoking child porn. Provide quotes. Or is there a hole in your logic there?

                      • bduerst 2036 days ago
                        Nah, you tried to set up a straw man with the "So you are saying {{straw man}}" to knock it down.

                        And giving counter-examples is not poisoning the well, unless you personally have a history with violating child pornography laws that I'm not aware of. Then that would be discrediting you as a pedophile, not your argument, and in which case I apologize for picking such a touchy counter-example for you.

                        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                          Nah, you tried to set up a straw man with the "So you are saying {{straw man}}" to knock it down.

                          I was parodying you with a reference to "lobster" logic.

                          And giving counter-examples is not poisoning the well, unless you personally have a history with violating child pornography laws that I'm not aware of.

                          I'm going to be charitable and think you're trolling here, not hilariously lacking self-awareness.

                          • bduerst 2036 days ago
                            Thanks, I guess? That's still a "lobster" straw man, by your own characterization. Neither is it definitively poisoning the well (unless you're a pedophile); or trolling, since it was you who brought up poisoning the well, making child pornography about your character. This is an awful lot of patronizing and reading into a counter-example to avoid addressing it.
                            • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                              You're the one who failed to come up with the quote I asked for.
                  • spunker540 2036 days ago
                    No it’s just that by saying you oppose feminism and equal opportunity because you want small government it’s implied that in general you don’t think the government should protect people and would probably for the same reason oppose child pornography laws- or really any law. I’m curious- do civil rights laws also go against your small-government principles?
          • gkoberger 2036 days ago
            I'd like to see a source on that.
          • neuronexmachina 2036 days ago
            Example?
        • komali2 2036 days ago
          I'm with you, I've yet to see actual evidence of political bias in a Google product. I.e. search, etc.

          I've heard conservatives say they're uncomfortable working there because "everyone" is liberal, but they also live in San Francisco California, where "everyone" is liberal, so that's hardly Google's fault.

          • stcredzero 2036 days ago
            The way in which YouTube commenters are demonetized is very pointedly politically biased.
            • komali2 2036 days ago
              The only evidence I've seen of this is where hate-speech automatically triggers filters that causes videos to be demonetized, and after the uploader makes the case that no, this was (for example) a report on hate speech usage and therefore should be allowed, the video is re-monetized.

              For example: https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/03/youtu...

              I have yet to see evidence of actual enforced liberal bias by youtube.

              • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                I have yet to see evidence of actual enforced liberal bias by youtube.

                It depends on who you watch. If you get away from the left-leaning bubble on YouTube, it's rampant. Phillip DeFranco often gets demonetized, often because he gets lurid, but at times it's apparently because he's "too neutral" from a Far Left point of view. Dave Rubin gets demonetized all the time, though he almost never covers anything lurid, and his entire channel basically consists of people talking about things. Computing Forever gets demonetized all of the time, though he's basically just a talking head coming from a conservative point of view. Independent Man: same.

                • zach43 2036 days ago
                  > If you get away from the left-leaning bubble on YouTube, it's rampant.

                  Can you point me to a few left-leaning spaces on YouTube that do not get demonetized? I follow a few leftist YouTubers, and all have them have several demonetized videos.

                • komali2 2036 days ago
                  I follow Phillip DeFranco. My understanding is all his videos where he gets demonetized are, just like you said, because they were "lurid."

                  I've never seen evidence that Phillip DeFranco or Dave Rubin got demonetized specifically because of the political leaning of their video.

                  Alex Jones got demonetized because he claimed shooting victims were crisis actors, which is an acceptable form of "bias" to me. I actually blame his blow-up as the origin of the "Youtube censors conservatives" meme.

                  I think this polygon article does a generally fair analysis: https://www.polygon.com/2018/3/9/17101166/youtube-purge-robe... though it doens't talk about Rubin or DeFranco.

                  The most thrown around quote is this:

                  "As we work to hire rapidly and ramp up our policy enforcement teams throughout 2018, newer members may misapply some of our policies resulting in mistaken removals,"

                  Which, yea, hire a bunch of moderators out of San Francisco (I assume) and that can happen. But, the company rectified the issue. The fact that videos lost out on money is due to YouTube's dumb method of content moderation (demonetization immediately and invalidating all those views), not because the company itself has a bias. If the company had a bias, it would not train employees to not remove pro-gun videos merely for being pro-gun, or reinstate banned pro-gun videos.

                  But, you seem to have the greatest handle on this - do you have any articles or analyses across multiple conservative accounts facing demonetization on a regular basis? That kind of evidence would indicate a trend and would finally fulfill my desire for actual evidence of anti-conservative bias by Google.

                  • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                    I think this polygon article does a generally fair analysis

                    Polygon is thoroughly biased and intellectually dishonest.

                    "As we work to hire rapidly and ramp up our policy enforcement teams throughout 2018, newer members may misapply some of our policies resulting in mistaken removals,"

                    Which, yea, hire a bunch of moderators out of San Francisco (I assume) and that can happen. But, the company rectified the issue.

                    The issue isn't rectified. Basically, those ideologues are just being sneakier.

                    • komali2 2036 days ago
                      >Polygon is thoroughly biased and intellectually dishonest.

                      This seems to be to be ad hominem fallacy. As you haven't successfully targeted individual points of the article, an outside observer would (so far) correctly surmise my argument to be the stronger one. I welcome you to challenge me on this.

                      >Basically, those ideologues are just being sneakier.

                      Are they being so sneaky we can't even tell they're doing it? Well then how do you know they're doing it!

                      • stcredzero 2035 days ago
                        This seems to be to be ad hominem fallacy.

                        I'm going by their track record.

          • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
            I haven’t seen a lot of evidence for this bias at all. The whole thing feels like just an update “liberal media bias”. Which was always a useful myth.

            As GOP Chairman Rich Bond said,"There is some strategy to it [bashing the 'liberal' media...] If you watch any great coach, what they try to do is 'work the refs.' Maybe the ref will cut you a little slack on the next one."

            [0] https://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/16/books/chapters/what-liber...

          • bcheung 2036 days ago
            Companies have a responsibility to ensure the workplace is not a hostile environment that discriminates, no matter the political leaning of the locality.

            Enforcement in Silicon Valley tends to let bad actors from the left have lots of leeway while immediately censoring or disciplining for expressing mainstream conservative views.

            • komali2 2036 days ago
              Right, as someone that grew up liberal in South Carolina, I get it. But when I got bullied for it, I'd go to the principal (a man who once told me Harry Potter was written by Satan himself) and he'd mete punishment regardless, because thems the rules.

              What examples are there of a company in silicon valley censoring or disciplining conservative employees for conservative views?

              • bcheung 2036 days ago
                • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
                  Using Mozilla as an example is a bit odd. Sure it certainly was because of his political actions, but Mozilla isn't exactly a normal company. It's very collaborative and community run. He lost the support of the almost the entire community he was supposed to lead. If Mozilla was a normal company with shareholders, it would have been a shareholder revolt. That's just not a tenable situation.
                • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
                  Are you trying to say that anti-equality and anti-women views are now mainstream conservative ones?
                  • komali2 2035 days ago
                    I agree with your assessment. Those that disagree probably aren't convinced the Google manifesto was sexist, or that opposing equal rights for gays is not homophobia. I've been in many discussions about both but have never been successfully conviced on either topic - maybe someone downvoting you will explain their reasoning?
                • komali2 2036 days ago
                  Thank you, this is exactly what I wanted to read up on.

                  Oh, the Google thing. That's easy to sum up in my opinion. From his tldr:

                  >Differences in distributions of traits between men and women may in part explain why we don’t have 50% representation of women in tech and leadership. Discrimination to reach equal representation is unfair, divisive, and bad for business.

                  He failed to demonstrate a difference in traits between men and women correlating to engineering interest and ability. Therefore, equal representation is fair. Therefore, it is an attack on an underrepresented gender to argue otherwise.

                  If he wants to go and research whether or not there are actual trait differences he's more than welcome to, but he shouldn't be surprised if Google doesn't want to fund that effort.

                  By the way, it seems you're suggesting "belief that women are biologically predisposed to not be interested in / good at engineering" is a conservative value. I'd agree that it's a value many people that are conservatives hold, but I also know many fiscal conservatives who'd be quite insulted by this conflation.

                  Brendan Eich opposed a bill giving equal rights to a certain group of humans based on born traits. Is "not wanting to give equal rights to a certain group of humans" a conservative value? That's a shame, because that kind of thing is typically illegal at the Constitutional level. If someone feels bad that they argue that gays shouldn't have equal rights, and then tbeh get fired over it, I have about as much sympathy for that person as I do for a racist.

                  In any case, racism, sexism, hate against gays are not political opinions, and shouldn't be protected.

                  For the CNN video, which was most interesting as I haven't seen it before, so thank you for turning it up:

                  The first guy says "if I suggest we have more border security am I gonna get fired?" I'm not allowed to talk about politics at work, why should he? If there's an environment he's in where people are talking about this stuff, and he doesn't get to, that's definitely an issue! Same for maga hat guy.

                  If someone holds unpopular opinions and is getting pushback about it, that's life in the big city. Every big city, actually. They're all full of liberals. I've yet to hear of people suffering actual consequences for expressing non-hateful aspects of their personal philosophy.

                  Tldr I don't care that sexists, racists, or homophobes get fired for their beliefs. I don't care that a maga hat guy can't wear his hat to work because I can't put a Bernie sticker on my laptop and fair's fair. If a trump supporter doesn't have any friends in San Francisco, I am unsympathetic. If they get fired over it, though, I will be mad.

      • x220 2036 days ago
        Google is less likely to be allowed to operate in China if they let on that they are operating on American liberal values.
        • StreamBright 2036 days ago
          Implying that Google is operating on American liberal values. I guess this depends on the definition of liberal values a lot.
    • alexryan 2036 days ago
      People who live in the Silicon Valley bubble either don't seem to understand just how terrified people are in the heartland, or they don't care, or they don't understand the consequences of not caring. If Silicon Valley firms continue to use their power to bend reality to reflect the world view of the privileged coastal elites, then elections will no longer be viewed as free and fair. If that happens, then civil war is a real possibility.
      • chris_mc 2036 days ago
        You mean if the minority in the heartland continue to exert an oversized influence due to representational bias in Congress? Maybe the heartland should realize that their days of being majority are over, both demographically and by proportion and stop using the coastal elites excuse now that it's the coastal majority.

        edit: I was just saying that the heartland is dying and doesn't yet realize it and that their death throes are going to screw us all. I don't think civil war is inevitable, I think that the "right wing" or whatever will fizzle over the coming years.

        • bcheung 2036 days ago
          Maybe people should embrace diversity, agree to disagree, and stop forcing their views on others. Democracy was never meant to legitimize oppression of minority views.

          The "heartland" is also biased to things like food production and military service to defend the rights of all (including the "coastal majority"). Probably not a good idea to unnecessarily stir the pot and risk secession or civil war.

          A little understanding, compassion, and tolerance goes a long way.

        • chrisco255 2036 days ago
          You understand that civil war would rebalance the majorities, right? You think a nation with the size and diversity of U.S. would be sustainable without a federated system of power among states?
        • thrower123 2036 days ago
          Anybody contemplating the possibility of civil war in the United States should really take a look at demographics of military service members and locations of military bases.
    • partiallypro 2036 days ago
      Don't confuse meeting with Congressmen with the government as a whole or even a form of regulation. Google used to meet with other administrations all the time. The meeting stems a lot more from their dodging the Senate Committee hearings that Twitter and Facebook both showed up to, and their bending to the Chinese government than anything else, rtfa.

      To reiterate, there's a reason this article is about Google and not Facebook and Twitter...because those two showed up to the Senate hearing...which was bipartisan.

      • someonelse17 2036 days ago
        Google offered their top lawyer for the senate hearing but they rejected him, I guessing it's because they needed CEOs in order to maximize the pleasure from their exercise in public humiliation.

        The whole thing about snubbed senators getting mad and wanting revenge is beyond undemocratic it's tyrannical.

        • x220 2036 days ago
          It's not undemocratic merely because they are scared that two or three companies arguably control the majority of political discussion in America. It certainly doesn't follow the norms of American laws relating to public spaces and free speech, of which all important laws and decisions were made before the invention of the internet or its widespread adoption.

          Edit: If you downvote, tell me why you disagree.

        • partiallypro 2036 days ago
          The Senate hearing was about election influence of tech giants, not limited to any company bias (most of the hearing was about Russia/China,) not seeing how that's tyrannical and I'm incredibly libertarian. It was a show, as most public Senate hearings are...but my point is that the entire reason the CEO is meeting lawmakers now is because he snubbed them during the Senate hearing earlier.

          The Senate cares way way more about Google killing cooperation with the DoD and then cuddling up to China to censor search than anything else. Google's willingness to violate human rights to gain a foothold in a search market should bother more people than it currently does.

          • someonelse17 2036 days ago
            Unless it's illegal it's none of their business.
            • kbutler 2035 days ago
              What do you think is the business of senators?

              Senators are legislators. Legislators write laws, changing things from "illegal" to "legal" or vice versa. The question of whether conduct should be illegal is thus absolutely their business, and the purpose of senate hearings (aside from grandstanding) is to give a public forum of record where these issues can be discussed to guide future legislation.

              There seems to be a strange misperception that judges should decide whether something should be legal or not, when their role is to /interpret/ the law as it exists, and /apply/ the law to specific situations.

            • justtopost 2036 days ago
              They literally set the policy for the nation, they arent Police. It is percicely their business.
              • someonelse17 2036 days ago
                If it was truly about policy they would have accepted the lawyer, it's theatrics and grandstanding and campaigning from that dais.
            • partiallypro 2036 days ago
              If a US DoD vendor is getting cozy with a perceived enemy to violate human rights it is 100% the Senate's business.
              • someonelse17 2036 days ago
                Define "getting cozy" in this context and please explain why a public hearing is in any way better than a private one or even just exchanging correspondence.
            • drak0n1c 2036 days ago
              Nothing Facebook or Cambridge Analytica did regarding user data was illegal. Please clarify how the matter of legality determines whether a Congressional hearing is unwarranted, or undemocratic.
              • someonelse17 2036 days ago
                I don't think it was warranted in that case either, it was an exicise in public humiliation, a bunch of people who never created anything getting off on talking down to someone much better than them.
    • commandlinefan 2036 days ago
      > Since when does the government get to police ideological speech

      I think they're concerned (as am I) about the false advertising aspect of it - they're not presenting themselves as, say, a newspaper which just runs the stories it runs, but as a _global_ web search company. If they're not actually searching the entire web, or if they're performing tricks to make it difficult to actually use their product the way it's implied that it's supposed to be used, they have to disclose that and make it clear.

      • justin66 2036 days ago
        > I think they're concerned (as am I) about the false advertising aspect of it ... they have to disclose that and make it clear

        You don't believe false advertising is against the law in the United States, do you?

    • fvdessen 2036 days ago
      > Google could in principle make its results insanely left-leaning and the first amendment should protect them.

      Well, freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences. While the Government cannot police google's speech, it can certainly break it up with anti-monopoly laws.

      • thrmsforbfast 2036 days ago
        > Well, freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences. While the Government cannot police google's speech, it can certainly break it up with anti-monopoly laws.

        Does the first amendment prevent the government from using economic regulations to punish political speech by companies?

        There's actually a lot of SCOTUS case law on this question. Including very recent cases, such as http://www.scotusblog.com/2018/06/opinion-analysis-court-rul...

        > But the critical question of when and how Phillips’ right to exercise his religion can be limited had to be determined, Kennedy emphasized, in a proceeding that was not tainted by hostility to religion. Here, Kennedy observed, the “neutral and respectful consideration to which Phillips was entitled was compromised” by comments by members of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission. At one hearing, Kennedy stressed, commissioners repeatedly “endorsed the view that religious beliefs cannot legitimately be carried into the public sphere or commercial domain, implying that religious beliefs and persons are less than fully welcome in Colorado’s business community.

        Similar standards are applied elsewhere; e.g., local govt's limiting assembly (e.g. requiring permits) or speech (eg in council meetings) is, in general, acceptable. But only if those restrictions are applied without ideological/religious bias. Ditto for schools.

        If the executive branch systematically communicated that it was breaking up Google because of ideological disagreements between the ruling political party and Google's executive team, I wouldn't be at all surprised to see SCOTUS slap down that enforcement action.

        • ardy42 2036 days ago
          > Does the first amendment prevent the government from using economic regulations to punish political speech by companies?

          I doubt it. The politicians criticizing Google's political actions aren't going to be the ones prosecuting it or adjudicating its violations. It'll be referred to regulatory bodies that will determine if it's in violation or not in a much more neutral manner.

          The case you cited was about improper bias exhibited by an adjudicator in the course of deciding a case.

          • thrmsforbfast 2036 days ago
            Right, that's why I said "the executive branch" rather than e.g. "Trump himself". I.e. if there's a clear chain of evidence from the adjudicator to the politicians, then SCOTUS would really have to pivot hard on many fundamental constitutional questions. Only a GOP-first, conservative-second court would do that. The current conservative wing of the court is very much conservative-first.

            I should've been more explicit about my meaning :)

        • oh-kumudo 2036 days ago
          Google is big enough, and have effectively monopoly in a lot of areas. I am sure if the current admin trying to hurt it, they can always find ways to do it.
      • tbabb 2036 days ago
        "Say more conservative things or else we'll take regulatory action against your company" sounds to me like an extremely first amendment-violating abuse of government power.
        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
          Say more conservative things or else we'll take regulatory action against your company" sounds to me like an extremely first amendment-violating abuse of government power.

          Many YouTubers and many Twitter users would say more conservative things, but Google and Twitter actively discourage and ban users in a way which is pointedly biased. Some of those so targeted deserve such treatment. However, not all of them do. Many of them are simply in ideological disagreement.

          It's a dilemma. If monopolies and near-monopolies are allowed to use corporate power to police speech, then this is allowed in the letter of the law, but it stinks to high heaven as far as the spirit of free speech goes. On the other hand, the government shouldn't be in the business of policing speech.

          The way out of this dilemma is to break up near-monopoly power where it exists. Right now, there really isn't a good alternative to YouTube, and this near monopoly power lets them effectively police speech across the entirety of a certain kind of widespread culturally relevant media: That of personal video commentary.

          • tbabb 2036 days ago
            There is a big philosophical and legal difference between a population of companies each executing editorial/moderating power over content published on their own platforms and a central government doing the same thing over arbitrary content on arbitrary platforms.

            Who is doing the editing is extremely important. If a newspaper declines to publish a white supremacist screed in their op-ed column, that is not censorship. The screeching racist can always try and publish somewhere else, or publish themselves (online or in print), or yell in the streets. But if the government intervenes and tries to force/prevent any of those things from happening, that's censorship and it's unconstitutional. Completely different ballgame. It drives me up the wall that people think those cases are "equivalent".

            • JoeAltmaier 2036 days ago
              Not the right word I think. Of course it censorship Its just not government censorship, and thus not a protected mode of free speech. Not equivalent of course, but still censorship all the same.

              Free speech is an American value, not just a few words in the Constitution. I'm sympathetic when folks object to private censors. As an American, I'm offended as well.

              • tbabb 2036 days ago
                In your view, is a newspaper obligated to publish a racist screed every time someone sends one in?
                • JoeAltmaier 2036 days ago
                  A newspaper has editors and a viewpoint. An online platform for folks to post their own articles does not. Its akin to the post office having an editorial board?
                  • tbabb 2036 days ago
                    Unlike the post office, both a newspaper and Google's primary competitive service is organizing and prioritizing information. Would you suggest that the government mandate how they do that?

                    The post office is more analogous to the transport layer, in which case you'd be making a solid case for net neutrality, and I'd agree with you there. The post office having an editorial board would be like Comcast having an editorial board.

                  • GW150914 2036 days ago
                    All of these self-styled platforms have already taken editorial actions under the guise of enforcing their TOS, it’s called moderation. Unless what you’re sending is illegal, the post office doesn’t get to pick and choose what it sends; Twitter, Facebook, Google and the rest do. If you want to send porn through the USPS, you can, but try that with FB.

                    The “platform” excuse is dead on the first real legal challenge. It’s past time for these publishers to be held to the standards other publishers have been held to for decades or longer. They can’t cry “free speech” on one hand while acting like publishers on the other. When it was just galling hypocrisy fair enough, but they’re big enough and have supplanted enough “traditional media” that their time has come.

                • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                  If the new media and the tech companies were controlled by right wingers, you would be singing an entirely different tune. Namely the "Free Speech" tune, exactly as performed in Berkeley in the 60's.

                  The problem isn't with excluding "X" screeds. The problem is with dishonest actors who happen to have corporate power who label everything they disagree with as "X." The problem is with arbitrary corporate media power which can have an effect commensurate with government violation of the 1st amendment, but which skirts the law because it's "private."

                  In the 1960's the government sought to suppress the speech of students and large segments of the populace, then that populace sought to fight back using Free Speech. Now, in the 21st century, corporate media and tech power seeks to suppress the speech of large segments of the populace online. The question isn't whether or not it's the government. It's the question of whether or not coercive power is going against the will of a segment of the populace. It's the question of force vs. argument.

                  • tbabb 2036 days ago
                    Fox news is what you describe-- a huge corporate power with control over the views accessible to millions of people. I hate Fox news and wish for them to stop existing, but you won't catch me arguing that the government should shut them down or tell them what to say.
                    • stcredzero 2035 days ago
                      I'm glad you stand on principle. There are many on the left who would gladly shut down Fox news, future consequences be damned.

                      The issue is not the government shutting down media. It's with big tech shutting down small mom & pop media. If it's wrong for the government to censor, we shouldn't let the authoritarians skirt the constitution by gathering the commensurate power (in the form of a monopoly) to do just as much.

                      "Or tell them what to say." Is there anyone who actually thinks that what some random YouTuber says is the official word of YouTube? They probably exist and comprise only a sliver of a fraction of a percent of the population. Censorship on a media platform should not be a form of speech. The fact that this is such a sticky issue probably indicates that another category is needed.

                      • tbabb 2035 days ago
                        > Is there anyone who actually thinks that what some random YouTuber says is the official word of YouTube?

                        If the government tells YouTube which YouTube videos to suppress, no matter how "unimportant" the "random YouTuber", then the government is restricting both the YouTubers' speech, and YouTube's right to prioritize information as it sees fit. Just the same as if the government told newspapers which articles were allowed to appear on the front page, or which op-eds it could select.

                        Let's turn your criticism right back around: Would that kind of regulation be tolerable to you if we were talking about conservative publications/websites, and it were a liberal government telling them what to do?

          • jayd16 2036 days ago
            It really blows my mind that people can think Google would spend the time to do this when they automate literally everything else. They don't even have humans looking at app submissions,let alone some liberal censorship team.

            How is this not just more conservative persecution syndrome?

            • stcredzero 2036 days ago
              It really blows my mind that people can think Google would spend the time to do this when they automate literally everything else.

              Fact: Google has hired humans to moderate. They've even spoken to the press about how it went a bit wrong at first.

              How is this not just more conservative persecution syndrome?

              Note that it's you who has the facts wrong here.

          • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
            You're gonna have to show some evidence for your accusations, and show how those examples are not against the ToS of those services.
            • stcredzero 2036 days ago
              Is simply being a mainstream Republican against the ToS? Since those things are worded so they can mean anything, it's probably technically correct to say so. However, it's petty and dishonest to use that to suppress speech on what's supposedly just a media publishing platform.
              • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
                You were asked to provide evidence for your assertion, and you have failed to do so. Please do so, otherwise everyone will have to conclude that you are not discussing the topic in good faith.
                • stcredzero 2035 days ago
                  Using logic based on a ToS isn't good faith.
                  • s73v3r_ 2035 days ago
                    Again, you've been asked to show the examples that support your point, and you have failed. Either you actually link the examples, or I have to conclude that you don't actually have any, or you know that none of the people you're talking about were banned for "mainstream conservative views".

                    Put up or shut up. Show what you were referring to, or admit that you don't have anything to complain about.

                    • stcredzero 2035 days ago
                      Again, you've been asked to show the examples that support your point, and you have failed.

                      There is no failure. I reject your premise that logic on a ToS is empty and idiotic, as most other people would.

                      • s73v3r_ 2035 days ago
                        Yes, there's a failure. You've not provided any evidence that someone was banned because of "conservative views". Not a single shred. Thus, you're clearly not wanting to discuss in good faith, and you just want to feed your conservative persecution complex. Good day.
        • fvdessen 2036 days ago
          It violates the spirit, but not the letter of the law. This is why supporting Free Speech as a value is important.
          • hn_throwaway_99 2036 days ago
            As another commenter posted, many court decisions have concluded violating the "spirit" as you put it is still unconstitutional.
          • komali2 2036 days ago
            See above, supreme Court has wrestled with this before, thus it does violate the letter of the law.
          • ur-whale 2036 days ago
            IANAL, but the little insight I have had over the years in the US legal system tells me the spirit of the law is rather rarely the heart of the discussion.
        • creaghpatr 2036 days ago
          Sure, but that's a dishonest straw man argument you've just made.
          • komali2 2036 days ago
            Why is it only GOP lawmakers meeting with Google, after the GOP president complained about anti-gop bias?
            • manfredo 2036 days ago
              Because if Google is biased against conservatives, Democracts don't stand to benefit from helping point it out. Pointing out that complainers disproportionately come from a certain demographic does not automatically invalidate the complaint. Why is it mostly left wing people complaining about fake news or hate speech on these platforms, why do most complaints about misogyny come from women? Is it because the complaints in question are fabricated, or because one portion of the population is disproportionately affected?
            • creaghpatr 2036 days ago
              Sounds like you answered your own question.
              • komali2 2036 days ago
                So how is it a strawman that the GOP is using governmental power to pressure Google (which does not censor conservative content) to show more conservative content?

                As Google does not censor conservative content, what else would only GOP officials be upset about? If it was general election integrity, the other major issue cross tech/politics right now, why aren't isn't it a bipartisan meeting? Actually, the GOP has downplayed election integrity issues, which further convinces me that it is not a strawman argument to claim the GOP is pressuring tech companies to show more pro-conservative content.

                • zaroth 2036 days ago
                  > As Google does not censor conservative content...

                  There are certainly many anecdotal complaints about Google censoring or demonetizing conservatives on YouTube.

                  There have been a few notable instances where Google has promoted incendiary content against conservatives in their search results “answers” — although those cases seemed to algorithms picking up tainted UGC. [1]

                  Also anecdotally, Google News seems to present a highly scewed viewpoint (browsing logged off with no cookies, only inferred location from IP).

                  I’m not aware of rigorous studies, but by no means would I take it as a foregone conclusion that Google is not censoring conservative content.

                  [1] - https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trudy-wade-google-search-result...

                  • komali2 2036 days ago
                    In the case of Trudy Wade, it was because a student blog was biased against her, which doesn't surprise or upset me. Because Google took it down and apologized, I surmise that this is evidence that they are not biased against conservatives.

                    I appreciate your genuine approach here. The reason I'm being so militant on actual evidence is due to excellent coaching from many people I admire in my life to challenge assumptions and anecdote. Trust me, I'm great fun in design meetings.

                    In this case, I'd agree with you that Google News presents generally liberal news. Generally I'd say this is because there is 1 conservative media conglomerate (Fox) vs so many liberal ones (CNN, NBC, etc), and meanwhile the many ones I would consider "fair" (Al Jazeera, BBC, NPR, NYTimes, WaPo, NHK) seem so anti-conservative because, well, conservative politicians keep doing some pretty shitty things. That being said, Fox is a default source on my uncookied google news, and I've seen Breitbart and other extraordinarily conservative sources, so I don't think there is a Google-level explicit bias, rather a failure on the part of conservative-leaning media to present a perspective as level-headed as, say, NPR. When the best it has to offer is Fox, Breitbart, and InfoWars, I'm not surprised it gets churned.

                    Just checking through sources I had to block due to simply terribly ham-fisted propaganda attempts, here's other ones that show up on google news by default:

                    Investor's Business Daily

                    New York Post

                    RealClearPolitics

                    Screen Rant

                    The Hill

                    Washington Times

                    nationalreview

          • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
            But that's the exact situation at hand.
        • 0x8BADF00D 2036 days ago
          Those are two separate and unrelated issues. One issue is the perceived bias against conservatives on their platform, the other issue is whether or not Google is in violation of anti-trust laws. Both issues can be debated, but the way you’ve framed it is extremely unhelpful and uncharitable.
      • andylei 2036 days ago
        > Well, freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences

        When the government is the agent of "consequences", that's exactly what freedom of speech is.

        • ardy42 2036 days ago
          >> Well, freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences

          > When the government is the agent of "consequences", that's exactly what freedom of speech is.

          You're talking about the First Amendment, not freedom of speech.

          • x220 2036 days ago
            And that's what we are talking about. We're talking about lawmakers and regulations. If you want to attack liberal values from that direction, please do it when it is actually relevant.
      • x220 2036 days ago
        > freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences

        And that's where you're wrong. The federal government at least in principle guarantees no consequences from itself for merely communicating or publishing ideas.

        • ardy42 2036 days ago
          > And that's where you're wrong. The federal government at least in principle guarantees no consequences from itself for merely communicating or publishing ideas.

          They key word there is merely. The government can still punish you for your other actions. For instance, if you use your free speech rights to brag that you're dumping a pollutant into a river, which is unregulated and therefore legal, and the scrutiny you invited with your speech leads the government learn that you're also drug dealer, they can still prosecute you.

          • x220 2036 days ago
            >the government learn that you're also drug dealer, they can still prosecute you

            Yes, but that's not punishment for communicating or publishing ideas. You can admit things that can be used against you in a prosecution for a different crime, but you cannot be legally punished for merely communicating or publishing ideas. To use such an example as evidence that you are not free from consequence legitimizes the common sentiment that freedom of speech is a soft right that can be violated if we feel like it very strongly.

            • ardy42 2035 days ago
              > Yes, but that's not punishment for communicating or publishing ideas.

              Exactly my point. The government has been overlooking Google's antitrust issues, and Google doesn't get immunity from that scrutiny because some GOP congressmen don't like its First Amendment-protected actions. The antitrust scrutiny (and especially its timing) may seem like a "punishment for communicating or publishing ideas," but it's really not.

      • bradford 2036 days ago
        Eh... there's a specific legal bar that needs to be met in order to invoke anti-monopoly laws. Whether or not that bar is met is an entirely different matter from a companies freedom to speech.
        • MaysonL 2036 days ago
          And that bar is: approval by the prosecutorial authority and judiciary. If the right judges are chosen, the executive branch can prosecute and convict a ham sandwich.
      • magnetic 2036 days ago
        Wouldn't it do that for reasons that are independent from the political nature of the results they provide?
      • wavefarer 2036 days ago
        So censorship through legislation? Not sure what point you're trying to make here...
    • User23 2036 days ago
      Government represents the people, and the people have a right to have their concerns about bias voiced by their elected representatives. Obviously those representatives are still bound by the constitution with regards to legislative actions they can take.
    • dgudkov 2036 days ago
      >Their position should be a very firm "don't tell us what to f*cking do."

      Then this position should also extend to gender/diversity quotas and similar things pushed by the government.

    • PurpleBoxDragon 2036 days ago
      >the first amendment should protect them

      The First Amendment has had many exceptions made for cases the founding fathers could not foresee and even cases they could but didn't consider the long term implications of. This could be just as valid as other exceptions. It'll be up the Supreme Court to decide.

    • mbostleman 2036 days ago
      Not disagreeing with your defense of first principles, but how does that square with the concern about (social) tech that was used to influence elections? I just wish there wasn't a monopoly. Then we wouldn't even have to waste our time dealing with this.
    • trothamel 2036 days ago
      I'd imagine ever since campaign finance laws tried to limit corporate involvement in the political process. At what point does bias become a donation?
    • bcheung 2036 days ago
      Is it ideological speech though? The issue is more subtle than that. What Google is doing seems much closer to a public service IMO.

      The question in my mind is, based on Google's positioning in the market how much does "common carrier" and "net neutrality" apply? They seem to be in a bit of a grey area.

      If they are an opinion site, yeah, 1st Amendment, no doubt. If they want to come out and communicate something completely separate from the search engine like a manifesto, that's also 1st Amendment.

      But the messaging and expectation from users is that the search engine is a machine without bias. Presenting something as unbiased when it is biased could be considered fraud.

      Also, is Google a curator of information or a generic provider that merely connects multiple parties like the postal system, ISPs, etc? If so, should net neutrality apply?

      One approach they could take is that the algorithms just reflect the information that is available and merely mirrors any bias in society. Then again, that raises the question of whether AI is racist, sexist, left/right wing, etc; and whether something should be done about it.

    • anony555 2036 days ago
      US communications act 230[1].

      Tech companies aren't liable for user content on their sites as long as they act as the equivalent of a digital public square. The minute they start selectively editing content they become a "publisher" and can be sued into oblivion for any illegal content they host.

      Google search is probably safe but Youtube, Facebook, and Twitter could be argued to be in violation with their policing of conservative content in the past year or so. Social media companies would basically cease to exist without the protections from US communications act 230

      1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Section_230_of_the_Communicati...

    • thwy12321 2036 days ago
      Somehow you've been corralled into thinking that extremely large corporations are different than government entities. Both pose the same threats to society, and in some cases where corporations control the flow of information, they can hold huge amounts of power.
    • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
      Google, Facebook, Twitter etc are profoundly different from any information medium that has existed in the past. As such, we must define new ways of thinking about their behavior, of considering the legality of their censorship.

      What's especially insidious about censorship online that forces us to think differently about it is that when users do a Google search, they generally don't expect political bias to influence search results. People are aware of the biases of different media outlets and can tailor their consumption of such media accordingly, but the black box of social media and internet search means the bias is invisible and we can't monitor it the way we can when we read the New York Times or watch Fox News.

      Yes these are private companies, but they monopolize what has become the public square and we must not allow the public square to be arbitrarily controlled by private entities.

      • bduerst 2036 days ago
        You could make the same argument about television broadcasts in the 70's, radio in the 30's, and newsprint in the 1900's.

        The medium of communication doesn't make speech suddenly exempt from the first amendment - especially when the government is actively questioning if the speech in context is legal because they don't like the search results they see.

        • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
          Newsprint, Radio and Television are completely different for two reasons. First, they never had the monopoly control over information that Google has.

          But a more important distinction is this: Google has control over what content produced by individuals is seen by other individuals. Television, radio and newspapers are much more limited in scope, in that they are private groups which produce content that I consume. Google, Twitter and Facebook instead provide platforms for individuals to share their own content, which is what makes them part of the "public square", and which is why - combined with their monopoly control of the internet - their politically biased attempts at controlling what we see is censorship and cannot be tolerated.

          • bduerst 2036 days ago
            >First, they never had the monopoly control over information that Google has.

            Google does not have a monopoly. Market dominance with accessible competition != monopoly. Having a consumer preferred or superior product != monopoly.

            >Google has control over what content produced by individuals is seen by other individuals

            And the television networks didn't? What you're describing is not different at all.

            • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
              Yes it has dominance of the market, whether it uses monopolistic practices is irrelevant.

              No, television spreads the product of companies, not the thought of individuals.

    • throwawy3589 2036 days ago
      US communications act 230[1].

      Tech companies aren't liable for user content on their sites as long as they act as the equivalent of a digital public square. The minute they start selectively editing content they become a "publisher" and can be sued into oblivion for any illegal content they host.

      Google search is probably safe but Youtube, Facebook, and Twitter could be argued to be in violation with their policing of conservative content in the past year or so. Social media companies would basically cease to exist without the protections from US communications act 230

      1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Section_230_of_the_Communicati...

    • geofft 2036 days ago
      Except that next time that the left-wing folks are in power, Google is certainly not going to be attempting to ensure fair representation of left-leaning ideas. No, the right wing will insist that Google give fair time to a minority viewpoint and stand up to the government.

      This isn't creating a precedent that the government can tell Google what to do. It's creating a precedent that the right wing can tell Google what to do.

      • travmatt 2036 days ago
        Recently Facebook, under the advisement of a conservative organization, censored the distribution of a thinkprogress article that argued Judge Kavanaughs opposition to roe v. wade, citing his legal work and his statements to that effect. This is the type fairness they’re looking to replicate:

        https://thinkprogress.org/facebook-weekly-standard-fact-chec...

    • yongjik 2036 days ago
      First, I'm no fan of Trump and I think GOP is full of shit. Also IANAL.

      But I don't think First Amendment protects Google, in principle. A corporation is not an individual, it's an artificial construction allowed by the society because its existence is useful to the society. It does not have human rights. And, frankly, I don't think Google's search results even qualify as "speech". (Again, IANAL.) You won't find a single Google employee (or executive) who will say "Yes, what you see on Google's search result represents my opinion."

      Besides, it's the fucking job of the government to "complain" about what corporations do. The government complains when a company overworks workers, pollutes a stream, or exercise their right to free speech by saying "This product is safe for baby!" when the government decides it is not.

      We can talk about whether this particular case is justified: reducing it into a 1st amendment issue is not very productive, IMHO.

    • barnesto 2036 days ago
      ideological speech? when did Google become a content creator? they are a search engine, among other things, and they skew results against conservatives. the fact Google owns the most used search engine, browser, and mobile OS means they can control the content distributed through those mediums.

      your 1A argument is moot. nobody is telling Google what they can say, which again, they don't produce content anyway. they are telling Google to make their platforms level for all points of view. speaking of 1A, InfoWars is all i have to say about that.

      last thing, if you don't think conservatives are being censored on FB, Twitter, and Google... well, there's no point arguing. it's happening. DuckDuckGo it.

      • root_axis 2036 days ago
        If conservatives don't like google search results they're free to use bing or any other search engine on the free market. Why would government need to step in when anyone is free to use any search engine they like?
        • roenxi 2036 days ago
          Because the bias isn't as obvious. If one of the media majors is pushing for something political that is known and sorta expected. Anyone who cares knows that your choice of media source is potentially politically motivated.

          When I browse through a blog post that speaks positively of a product, I know there is a pretty decent (double-digit percentages) chance that it is a well disguised paid ad. I can at least try to factor that in to my decision making.

          Now with Google there is very much an assumption that they have an algorithm that applies some linear or non-linear math and comes up with a rating, sans some by-hand filtering for pornography and some other stuff that should be non-controversial to 80% of the population. If that assumption is wrong, government absolutely has a role to step in and expose that.

          • root_axis 2035 days ago
            > If that assumption is wrong, government absolutely has a role to step in and expose that.

            Why? Why can't people who are unsatisfied with the product just use a different product?

    • ur-whale 2036 days ago
      I agree with everything you said.

      However, they are overtly claiming to be neutral and have no bias.

      If in practice they aren't neutral (and I don't event think they themselves can tell at this point, given how complex the search stack must be), they ought to be called on it.

    • paulddraper 2036 days ago
      The recent concerns about media biasing politics began in 2016.

      > Their position should be a very firm "don't tell us what to f-cking do."

      Makes complete sense to me. I assume that is the advice you have for others as well?

      Facebook's reaction to government concerns about "fake news":

      Don't tell us what to f-cking do!

      Facebook's reaction to running ads for Russians:

      Don't tell us what to f-cking do!

      Super PAC campaign ads:

      Don't tell us what to f-cking do!

      Donald Trump selecting who he sends Twitter messages to:

      Don't tell me what to f-cking do!

    • stcredzero 2036 days ago
      Since when does the government get to police ideological speech, or complain about "bias"?

      Policing ideological speech: Laws against incitement. Fact: There are also laws about curbing private monopoly control of certain kinds of media in a given area.

      Government complaining about bias: Civil rights laws. Equal Opportunity Employment.

      When the actions of both powerful government organizations and powerful companies start to infringe on the speech of constituents, then the representatives elected to that government have taken action in the past.

      Google could in principle make its results insanely left-leaning and the first amendment should protect them.

      This has already happened. I don't think the first amendment would necessarily protect them. There is already a precedent for government to curb monopoly power in media.

      They must be very careful not to let the narrative become "we don't bias our results, we swear!"

      If "they" is Google, then the bird has already flown the coop in this case.

      Their position should be a very firm "don't tell us what to fcking do."*

      Should other companies start saying the same? Maybe having far less government would be far better across the board. When one concentrates power, someone figures out a way to abuse it. This applies as much to Google as it does to government.

      EDIT: No such thing as "Hate speech laws."

      • khuey 2036 days ago
        Hate speech is more or less legal in the United States.
      • magicalist 2036 days ago
        > There is already a precedent for government to curb monopoly power in media.

        Can you be specific? Because unless there's a tv or radio station involved, there's not a lot to stand on here in the last 50 years.

        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
          Because unless there's a tv or radio station involved, there's not a lot to stand on here in the last 50 years.

          Translation: We just fell through the cracks because of the technological specificity of older laws. Time for new laws.

          • magicalist 2036 days ago
            > Translation: We just fell through the cracks because of the technological specificity of older laws.

            The FCC is able to regulate cross-market ownership of media only when the ownership includes a license to broadcast within publicly owned spectrum. It's not technological specificity, it has to do with the root of each technology's ability to broadcast media.

            > Time for new laws.

            I was talking about the Supreme Court recognizing wider application of the First Amendment, like in Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson. New laws won't help there.

            • stcredzero 2036 days ago
              The FCC is able to regulate cross-market ownership of media only when the ownership includes a license to broadcast within publicly owned spectrum.

              The public didn't own that spectrum in 1812. Or at least no one knew. Again, the point is that laws (and regulations) are too technologically specific. It's time to update.

              • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
                The EM spectrum is a natural and effectively finite resource. Regulation was there to enforce standards and to build a market. The internet from its very inception has always been an interconnection of private property working over private property.

                This the same reason why the FCC can regulate content on the airwaves, but can’t over cable. There’s no public property involved.

                • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                  The EM spectrum is a natural and effectively finite resource. Regulation was there to enforce standards and to build a market.

                  Hopefully, constellations of satellites providing Internet can take over almost entirely, so public property in the forms of bandwidth and orbits can justify such regulation. I say hopefully, because the current big tech culture has shown that it lacks the ethics to create level playing fields and curb its own biases.

                  Ideologically biased actors in YouTube are basically engaging in ideological manipulation of the market within its walled garden.

              • magicalist 2036 days ago
                > Again, the point is that laws (and regulations) are too technologically specific. It's time to update.

                To what? Without a convincing basis for the government to regulate a type of speech (like a limiting resource that needs to be licensed), your new law isn't going to make it past the first supreme court challenge.

                • stcredzero 2036 days ago
                  (like a limiting resource that needs to be licensed)

                  Space on the recommended section and monetization is a limiting resource. Basically, human attention and the sum total of all available information are valuable and limited resources, and manipulation of access to those has potentially dangerous and far reaching consequences.

        • DenisM 2036 days ago
          Hence why the meeting with lawmakers. They can make laws, and it seems they to intend to, perhaps after consulting the parties affected.
      • thrmsforbfast 2036 days ago
        > Government complaining about bias: Civil rights laws. Equal Opportunity Employment.

        There's a large difference between political/religious bias and racial bias in employment/commerce. The former is explicitly constitutionally protected. The latter is not.

        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
          Both are government doing things about bias.
      • woofyman 2036 days ago
        >Policing ideological speech: Hate speech laws.

        Hate speech is protected by the 1st amendment.

        • stcredzero 2036 days ago
          Corrected. Thanks. I fell into the linguistic trap.
    • qubax 2036 days ago
      > Since when does the government get to police ideological speech, or complain about "bias"?

      It's the standard in most of the world. In parts of europe, you could go to jail for political speech and the media is tightly controlled.

      > They must be very careful not to let the narrative become "we don't bias our results, we swear!" (even if it's true)

      You know it's true.

      "Facebook, YouTube, and the like are publishers.

      As a society, we did not have qualms before the internet about publishers declining to amplify the views of people like Alex Jones. Even in the absence of YouTube's support, he arguably has far more of a voice now than he did in the pre-internet days, before he could host his own website. He has that on top of all the traditional means of communication he always had, which includes passing out flyers and yelling in the street.

      It is the responsibility of information disseminators to curate their content. Nobody is going to jail over these editorial choices, so the notion that this is a constitutional issue is pure hysteria. YouTube and Facebook are finally stepping up to the responsibility they have long owed us from the beginning."

      Why don't you have any principles or consistency? You support corporate censoring when people you dislike gets censored. You support government censorship when people you you gets censored. Is that a bit hypocritical?

  • Fede_V 2036 days ago
    You almost have to admire the total ruthlessness of republican operatives. By constantly playing on the offensive, they've put Facebook and Twitter on a constantly defensive posture worried about being called out as having 'liberal bias'.

    The fact that Jack had to personally intervene to stop his employees from banning Alex Jones (after numerous egregious violations) speaks to the power of this approach.

    • thrower123 2036 days ago
      Twitter at least is obvious and unapolagetic in their censoring. Alex Jones and Milo are trolls, sure. But it was enlightening seeing James Woods silenced this week.
    • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
      The profound issue here is that Alex Jones' supposed rule violations are far more tame than many things that liberal leaning individuals have shared on Twitter against Trump, Republicans, etc.

      There is not equal application of the rules, they are applied in a biased manner.

      • komali2 2036 days ago
        Do you have evidence for this?

        What I've seen is that typically a banned conservative will do something like target someone without the resources to defend themselves (for example, Alex Jones calling children that are victims of a mass shooting "crisis actors"), whereas hordes of liberal citizens voicing their distaste of Trump is just How It Be To Be President.

        I would love to see evidence contrary. I report violent comments no matter the target and Twitter is good about sending a message back about action taken, and I've yet to notice a trend.

        • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
          Jones never even said that, that's the problem. The media created a false narrative and spread it. He specifically said that people who were interviewed after the shooting were crisis actors.

          Who cares the specifics of what he said though? It's distasteful, but if distasteful speech is grounds to ban someone then most of Twitter should be banned.

          And the evidence is that James Woods, Alex Jones and others have been banned because of political speech while similarly high profile Leftist commentators who post inflammatory things have not been banned.

          • komali2 2036 days ago
            He repeatedly argued that not only was the shooting a hoax, the victims (who include people interviewed), were crisis actors. He did this so much that the victims were getting stalked and receiving death threats.

            https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-us-canada-45358890

            I'm sorry, I'd love to participate in this discussion with you but "similarly high profile leftist commentators (who?) Who post inflammatory things (what?) is just not enough evidence to convince me of anything.

            • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
              Find the video of Jones saying that. He doesn't say what the BBC claims he does; BBC doesn't include video of him saying those things because such a video doesn't exist.

              It's not his fault the victims received death threats. He did not advocate for deranged people to send death threats.

              Just off the top of my head, Peter Fonda: "We should rip Barron Trump from his mother's arms and put him in a cage with pedophiles..."

              https://www.cnn.com/2018/06/20/politics/peter-fonda-baron-tr...

              He wasn't banned.

              Sarah Jeong, despicable racist now working at NYT: "oh man it's kind of sick how much joy I get out of being cruel to old white men".

              http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2018/08/02/new-york-tim...

              Also not banned.

              Please find me one example of a prominent Twitter Leftist being banned for saying something "hateful", whatever that means.

              • komali2 2036 days ago
                Both apologized. Sarah's were taken out of context.

                >“We hired Sarah Jeong because of the exceptional work she has done … her journalism and the fact that she is a young Asian woman have made her a subject of frequent online harassment. For a period of time she responded to that harassment by imitating the rhetoric of her harassers,” The Times said in a statement. “She regrets it, and The Times does not condone it.”

                https://youtu.be/MMcSXNKLY7I

                0:24

                https://youtu.be/To91BJGKr5I

                10:30

                >Please find me one example of a prominent Twitter Leftist being banned for saying something "hateful", whatever that means

                https://dailycaller.com/2018/02/28/antifa-banned-twitter-tex...

                Though as I guess someone on the left side of the political spectrum, I would be as offended to be associated with antifa as a fiscal conservative would be to be associated with Alex Jones.

                • goblekitepe 2036 days ago
                  Her tweets were taken out of context? No. She tried to justify her racism by saying white people had done mean things to her on the internet in the past. That's an incredibly broken mindset and accepting her attempted justification just perpetuates racism. But it's against white people so I guess that's not a big deal.

                  Also I said prominent, the conservatives I mentioned each had around 1 million followers. That Antifa student group, orders of magnitude less.

                  • komali2 2034 days ago
                    Out of curiosity, why is it always the pizzagate level conspiracy theorists that keep threatening to blow up youtube? https://www.thedailybeast.com/qanon-fan-arrested-for-threate...
                  • komali2 2035 days ago
                    Well, I don't have an answer for you for why prominent "leftists" (we may disagree on definition of this term) do not violate the Twitter ToS at quite the frequency of conservatives.
    • qubax 2036 days ago
      > By constantly playing on the offensive, they've put Facebook and Twitter on a constantly defensive posture worried about being called out as having 'liberal bias'.

      Jack Dorsey and Zuckerburg said their company had liberal bias. We know google does.

      > The fact that Jack had to personally intervene to stop his employees from banning Alex Jones (after numerous egregious violations) speaks to the power of this approach.

      Alex Jones got banned anyways. For things far more benign than say what sarah jeong wrote.

      Stop it. It's been proven that there is bias. The only question is what, if anything, should be done about it. What's with the blatant dishonesty here? How can there be an honest discussion when people outright lie?

      • dmix 2036 days ago
        For anyone needing a source regarding @Jack:

        > Twitter is so liberal that its conservative employees ‘don’t feel safe to express their opinions,’ says CEO Jack Dorsey

        https://www.recode.net/2018/9/14/17857622/twitter-liberal-em...

        There is no way this hasn't trickled down to their moderation and banning policies.

        • komali2 2036 days ago
          >“They do feel silenced by just the general swirl of what they perceive to be the broader percentage of leanings within the company, and I don’t think that’s fair or right.”

          I can't think of any reasonable solution to the problem as I see it: San Francisco is a city full of liberals, Twitter HQ is in San Francisco, therefore Twitter is full of liberals.

          I guess Twitter could try to import people from like Utah, but that may not work because they might just end up importing more liberals (tech workers willing to move to SF). Also, it's not necessarily Twitter's job to equalize the political beliefs of a city.

          They can't ask "are you liberal or conservative" on an application, it's currently comically illegal and also I'd say horribly unethical and therefore should not be made legal.

          Therefore, I think the only solution is the exact one that's in place - if a person at work feels threatened for any reason, they should be allowed to get a resolution, either via HR or the law if need be. That being said, "everyone else has a different political opinion than me" doesn't necessarily seem threatening to me, and I say that as a declared liberal that grew up in the deep South.

          I'd be very interested in learning more about why the Twitter employees that presumably reached out to Dorsey feel uncomfortable expressing their opinions.

          • Fede_V 2036 days ago
            Tech employees are, as a group:

            - Highly educated - Young - High % of foreign citizens - Urban - Wealthy

            If you take the general population and control for those covariates, you end up with a subpopulation that massively skews left. For example - the median age for people watching Fox news is nearly 70.

            • komali2 2036 days ago
              Right, so, not sure what exactly Twitter is supposed to do about it.

              I'm trying to think of some sort of affirmative action parallel, but unlike other protected classes, political disposition is a choice. The closest protected class I can think of is religion, which arguably is as much a choice as political disposition... But in any case, if someone is passed over for promotion or not hired or somehow damaged for their political leanings, they already can sue over it.

              I guess I'm having a hard time being conviced there's an actual problem here.

  • propman 2036 days ago
    The significant backlash from both left and right and the hubris is skipping the senate hearing combined with Trump’s executive order threatens to actually hurt Google, forcing him to show up. Google is the most powerful lobbyist in US history so they’re pretty immune to all this and control all legislation passed that pertains to them but with the public bipartisan backlash, maybe they feel threatened.
    • kyrra 2036 days ago
      Google had offered someone else to appear (their top lawyer). It's unclear when the senate committee decided to reject this person and require Sundar or Larry to show up. It's very possible he had other things already lined up that weren't easily changeable.
      • buboard 2036 days ago
        I wonder if they 'd offer to send their lawyer if the chinese had asked.
      • dba7dba 2036 days ago
        It's very possible he had other things already lined up that weren't easily changeable.

        That alone would piss off any congressman/senator. Pretty sure anyone telling US Congress/Senate that "I can't show up because I have something more important lined up" is making a big mistake.

        This is the lawmakers whose ego is rarely matched...

      • reaperducer 2036 days ago
        If every other tech CEO can show up, he can.

        "I have other things going on" is not an excuse to blow off a DC committee meeting. Unless it's a life-threatening condition, you go.

        And, no, your lawyer isn't the same thing. They want the head man to answer.

        You can be thrown in jail for contempt of Congress.

        Does anyone know if any CEO in the history of the nation has ever not shown up at one of these things?

        • gkoberger 2036 days ago
          In the US, we have rights and due process. Congress requested their presence, but it can't just force someone to show up for political theater out of nowhere. There's a process for subpoenas, and we have many laws protecting people (fifth amendment, sixth amendment, etc).

          You can't be held in contempt of Congress for simply declining to show up to a hearing you were requested to attend. And, if they planned for a lawyer to come and at the last minute things changed, lack of preparedness is certainly a reason to excuse yourself.

        • kyrra 2036 days ago
          Facebook sent their COO. Twitter sent their CEO. Kent Walker[0] is Google's CLO (legal officer) and SVP of Global Affairs.

          [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_Walker

          • ocdtrekkie 2036 days ago
            COO and CEO are both positions of people who make decisions about the direction and conduct of the company. Those are people useful to question.

            Kent Walker is their head lawyer ("CLO") and head of PR ("SVP of Global Affairs"). His sole job is to help the actual decisionmakers get away with whatever they decided to do. No matter how many titles they give him, offering to send him will never be more than a literal slap in the face.

            • tschwimmer 2036 days ago
              I don't think this argument is warranted. Corporate structure varies wildly among companies, especially among tech companies. You're right that General Counsel (here called Chief Legal Officer) isn't traditionally seen as on par with a C suite executive, but it may make sense for Google to send him especially if government affairs are handled by his reporting chain. By the way, I've never heard of PR being referred to as Global Affairs. In my experience that's typically a euphemism for a company's lobbying arm, which in this case would make a lot of sense, don't you think? PR at Google seems to be called "Communications" which is fairly standard in the Valley.
              • ocdtrekkie 2035 days ago
                I may have over-simplified "Global Affairs" to "PR", but essentially, it means he's supposed to smooth over relations diplomatically with organizations, governments, people, etc. around the globe. Sure, that does sound exactly like who would speak to Congress, but again, like being a lawyer, global affairs doesn't make decisions for the company, it sells those decisions to other people.

                Congress wanted to question the people who made decisions at these companies, and Google refused.

        • batbomb 2036 days ago
          Mark Zuckerberg didn’t show up
          • tareqak 2036 days ago
            He did show up to one earlier in the year when he and only he was asked to present himself. He didn't show up to the EU and/or UK hearings though.
            • ipsum2 2036 days ago
              iirc the CTO of FB showed up.
    • abrichr 2036 days ago
      > Google is the most powerful lobbyist in US history

      Interesting claim. Can you back it up?

      Off the top of my head I would posit that the most powerful lobbyist in US history was the United Fruit Company, who successfully lobbied the US government to overthrow the democratically elected government of Guatemala. From [1]:

      > Several historians have maintained that the lobbying of the UFC, and the expropriation of its lands, were the chief motivation for the U.S., strengthened by the financial ties of individuals within the Eisenhower administration to the UFC.

      I'm genuinely very interested in seeing evidence that Google has more influence than the UFC!

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1954_Guatemalan_coup_d%27%C3%A...

  • polskibus 2036 days ago
    Why a private meeting? Surely it's transparency Google needs to regain public trust?
    • antsar 2036 days ago
      Is "public trust" actually a problem for Google? In my experience, most people just don't care.
      • asdkhadsj 2036 days ago
        Very meaningful question. Echo chambers tend to think their influence is far greater than it is. Much of HN may be growing resentment, but that's far from reflective on the population as a whole.

        Even if it's considered the beginning of a trend, the question of what does the public actually think - do they actually care still stands.

        edit: I a word.

    • davidw 2036 days ago
      The GOP lawmakers aren't interested in public trust, but in gaining leverage - that would be my thought, at least.
      • reaperducer 2036 days ago
        The GOP lawmakers aren't interested in public trust, but in gaining leverage

        This isn't a GOP or DNC thing. All of Congress is peeved as Google's apparent contempt for how the nation works: https://www.cnet.com/news/google-is-a-no-show-at-the-washing...

        IME, the lawmakers agreed to go "private" with the meeting in order to get Google to even talk to them.

      • anoncoward2e20 2030 days ago
        History of this. Good read: "Divided We Stand". (author is an establishment, mainstream historian of Congress.) https://democracyjournal.org/magazine/50/divided-we-stand/
      • anoncoward111 2036 days ago
        This is correct. Yesterday I was downvoted for defending Alex Jones' right to free speech, and today I will be downvoted for defending Google from overzealous Republicans.

        shrugs

        • geodel 2036 days ago
          Just downvoted? Not provided strange arguments like "Right to free speech is not right free reach" or Google/FB/Apple/Twitter are private companies and do not owe anything to whom they don't like?
          • User23 2036 days ago
            I know you’re kidding and this is funny, because corporations couldn’t even exist without the state passing statutes allowing incorporation.
        • anoncoward2e20 2036 days ago
          Yes. For those who want a good read on history, check this out "Divided We Stand". (author is an establishment, mainstream historian of Congress.) https://democracyjournal.org/magazine/50/divided-we-stand/
        • nova22033 2036 days ago
          >shrugs

          reads the constitution. Fails to find the part where you have a right NOT to be downvoted.

          shrugs

        • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
          Those two situations are completely and utterly different. Apples and lug wrenches, as it were.
    • neonate 2036 days ago
      FTA: "and again at a public hearing this year".
      • polskibus 2036 days ago
        Having a private meeting before that looks like they wanted to establish a secret deal first and do the PR later. I'm not saying that's what Google wants to do, just that it's bad PR imho.
    • oh-kumudo 2036 days ago
      Even US government doesn't have public trust right now. I don't think Americans trust anyone/anything under current political climate.
    • natch 2036 days ago
      The GOP is not big on transparency and accountability so it's no surprise.
  • neonate 2036 days ago
  • root_axis 2036 days ago
    If some people consider google search results to be biased why don't they just use another search engine? It seems contradictory to claim that something is fundamentally wrong with google's search results but also claim that the results are so good that the alternatives are unacceptable.
    • Cyclone_ 2036 days ago
      They could be good in some ways but bad in other ways(e.g. censoring information to help a candidate Google favors)
      • root_axis 2035 days ago
        Ok. So like any product, the consumer can weigh the good against the bad and then make the choice to use the product that they prefer the most. This is especially true in the case of search engines which cost no money for the consumer thus there is no risk to considering alternatives.
  • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
    There was never any evidence whatsoever that Google was doing anything to conservative sources. The only thing this is going to lead to is the same thing it lead to on Twitter: policing leftist sources that much harder so they can say, "See? We're not biased!"
  • jonathankoren 2036 days ago
    There’s a delightful irony of those that loudly advocate for small government, laissez faire regulation, and claim to support free speech, to want a large government bureaucracy to tell a private company on what they should be compelled publish.
  • oh-kumudo 2036 days ago
    They have to, the current admin is threatening to break them up. Google isn't sworn to a political ideology, even its employees are overwhelmingly concentrated at the end of the spectrum.
  • techntoke 2036 days ago
    Where is the P2P decentralized search engine to rescue the world? Why is everyone set on cloud hosting, when we should be looking at ways to federate cloud resources and distribute them.
  • buboard 2036 days ago
    no talk about antitrust/ breaking it up?
  • ronilan 2036 days ago
    Why was the WSJ title edited and the “U.S.” qualifier added? Does Google have any other CEOs beside Sundar?
    • hcnews 2036 days ago
      It seems like a copy-paste mistake. The wsj page has US just before the title. Someone should edit this title.
    • tlb 2036 days ago
      Fixed, thanks.
  • a_hypotehsis 2036 days ago
    The right way POLITICALLY to interpret recent claims of "bias" against Google is as a preparation of the battlefield for successful anti-trust action down the road. i.e., it's just "politics".

    ...but then again, the Google Doodle I see today is: "register to vote!"

    That's clearly an attempt to put a thumb on the scales, against a party and administration that is threatening anti-trust action against Google.

    I'm already voting the way Google wants me to, but a shovel is a shovel.

    • travmatt 2036 days ago
      You believe providing citizens information on how to vote is putting a thumb of the scales and biasing voters, and instructing you on how to vote?
      • a_hypotehsis 2036 days ago
        Thanks for the comment! I did not and would not classify this as an "instruction".

        However, given what we know about voter demographics and turnout in the United States during "mid-term" elections (low turnout among young people, with much "green field" to expand into)... it's clearly an attempt to influence the election, in the favor of Google shareholders' interest.

        I'd cite references, but they are too easy to Google (heh).

        It's a shovel all right.

        (PS -- don't get me wrong or reflexively downvote me for perceived partisanship -- my party interests align with Google's in this matter, outside of anti-trust issues)

        EDIT: to add, Google ran no such Doodle for National Voter Registration day last year, according to their archives. HMMMMM.

    • archagon 2036 days ago
      I mean, if broadcasting an innocuous "register to vote" is taken as bias against the party in power, then maybe it says something about that party.
      • a_hypotehsis 2036 days ago
        I agree with you, though it's specific to the US Republican party (not just whatever party is in power). It's definitely saying something. Their key demographics are relatively more registered to vote and relatively more likely to vote.

        General "get out the vote" and "register to vote" campaigns favor the Democrats.

        I'm in favor of such campaigns generally, but in this case it's quite self-serving.

  • PHGamer 2036 days ago
    I dont think google should be regulated, they are free to censor. on the other hand i wouldnt cry if the GOP broke them all social sites up as it really is just an oligarchy. If only google blocked alex jones and he stayed on FB then i wouldnt see an issue because competition. However, i think its fair to say they are following the exact same policies so theres no competition.
    • prolikewh0a 2036 days ago
      >I dont think google should be regulated, they are free to censor.

      Why do we willingly allow private governments, especially those with an enormous amount of power over people? Who would ever want these companies with hundreds of millions to a billion+ users to be allowed to censor other than complying with local laws?

      In my opinion, Google, Facebook, and other large corporations are a threat to our democracy & elections in a much larger way than any Russia claim that could be made. Censorship on the level that Google could and probably does pull off is a major concern and could swing elections that directly effect Americans negatively at the benefit of Google.

      • ardy42 2036 days ago
        > Why do we willingly allow private governments, especially those with an enormous amount of power over people? Who would ever want these companies with hundreds of millions to a billion+ users to be allowed to censor other than complying with local laws?

        It's because people confuse the law with the principles it was meant to implement, so they stop their analysis after they've determined legality/illegality.

        Hypothetically, you could engineer away freedom of speech and freedom of assembly without changing the Constitution at all, if one corporation owned all the land and all the communication facilities in the US. It could enact a draconian, ideological censorship regime just by exercising its property rights, and that would be Constitutionally kosher because it's not an organization classified as "government." Antitrust law, etc. is not part of the Constitution and could Constitutionally be repealed or gutted. The Constitution was written to prevent many particular forms of tyranny and violations of rights, but it doesn't protect from all of them. That's why you can't stop with it; oftentimes you have to look deeper.

        • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
          Or it's because we recognize that others also have freedom of speech, and freedom of association. If YouTube doesn't want Alex Jones spreading his unfounded conspiracies and saying that Sandy Hook victims are crisis actors, then why should they be obligated to associate with that?
      • bduerst 2036 days ago
        >Who would ever want these companies with hundreds of millions to a billion+ users to be allowed to censor other than complying with local laws?

        Because local laws are about creating level playing fields, not quality control.

        A billion-user for-profit organization is going to optimize value for their billion users, not for their re-election campaign. This is why we have the first amendment.

      • seventhtiger 2036 days ago
        Because they won't make a law that only affects these big corps. We can't have laws that legally require you to host any viewpoint.

        Should famous theaters be legally required to host all political views? Must a church host all religions?

        Freedom of speech is freedom from government oppression, but you could still get kicked out of someone's house.

  • spbaar 2036 days ago
    He better have the chuptzpah to come out of the meeting telling the truth that Google results do not have an ideological bias and consider his civic duty complete after showing lawmakers evidence of such. We've seen what happens at Facebook when they try to make sure the range of opinions published is "neutral". I've seen people complain that the little 'i' symbol next to news stories on Facebook that details the viewpoint and credibility of the linked site is discriminatory.

    There will always be a constituency for people who love to play victims to social media companies. That should not affect their decisions.

    • colordrops 2036 days ago
      Google search results and news absolutely have a bias. These services aren't made in a vacuum. They are made and tuned by people with biases. Technology doesn't have some special ability to sort out ground truth from human bias. It just reflects our biases.

      As mentioned elsewhere in the comments, the question shouldn't be whether google is biased or not, but whether the government should be getting involved at all.

      • komali2 2036 days ago
        Do you have evidence for this claim (that Google search results are biased)? I'd love to read more.
        • colordrops 2036 days ago
          You are misreading my comment. I am not stating that Google has a particular bias, but that technology is inherently biased.
          • komali2 2036 days ago
            I apologise for misreading your comment. I read it as speaking about Google in particular because of the first line:

            >Google search results and news absolutely have a bias.

            That, and the context of this post, "Google CEO... To meet with top GOP lawmakers..." made me believe we were talking about Google.

            I think "technology is biased" is an interesting discussion, depending on definitions of technology, but given the context I'd prefer to focus on Google: do you believe Google search results and news are biased, and if so, is this a belief you support with evidence that I could also learn about, or is it more due to your general "technology is biased" philosophy?

      • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
        You'd be extremely hard pressed to prove that it's an anti-right wing bias, though.
        • jerf 2036 days ago
          It's pretty easy. Hacker News seems to think Google seems pretty fair, since we're all "everything is biased and the filter bubble is inescapable, oh, wait, are we talking about Google? Things are great and the government is persecuting them." Hacker News is on the left side of the US as a whole and extremely hostile to Republicans in general and Trump specifically. If HN thinks Google is fair, that's nearly ipso facto proof it's quite substantially biased.

          Silicon Valley's lack of ideological diversity is a big problem for them. I don't mean from the point of view of being right or wrong in that ideology, I mean from the point of view of looking out at the rest of the world and modeling their reactions and what they're going to do. Even if the ideology embodied by Silicon Valley is the universe's sole, shining example of true truth and nothing else is even close, they're still going to find themselves having an increasingly difficult time navigating or even understanding the rest of the world, if they can't tolerate any other ideologies within themselves to give them those other perspectives on the world. Diversity really is important.

          • nova22033 2036 days ago
            > Hacker News seems to think

            Solid data driven analysis is what I'm here for...

          • komali2 2036 days ago
            I appreciate your reply. Do you have evidence that Google search results are anti republican biased?
            • firemancoder 2036 days ago
              I can tell someone's political leanings just by whether or not they think Google is biased.

              A lot of people are ok with the way things are. Will they be ok when they have an opinion that's not whitelisted by tech?

              • komali2 2036 days ago
                >I can tell someone's political leanings just by whether or not they think Google is biased.

                If someone described my political leanings they would certainly use the words "liberal," as well as "socialist," "communist," and maybe even sometimes "anarchist." Just to save you from having to engage in Strawman or false assumptions. I'm curious what my political leanings have to do with your claim.

                Do you have evidence that Google search/news/other products are "biased?" I have never seen evidence of actual evidence by the company itself demonstrating bias against conservative ideologies. I have seen plenty of evidence that for example the internet as a whole is biased against conservatives, or even really reality, but never google. I would definitely agree that the majority of employees can be described as liberal, but then again, Google's headquarters are in the Bay Area, so that's hardly Google's fault.

                Here's a writeup, I am genuinely trying to find evidence of this, because nobody that believes google is censoring conservatives has been able to get it for me: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_by_Google . Check discussion and sources for lots more info.

                • firemancoder 2035 days ago
                  > I have seen plenty of evidence that for example the internet as a whole is biased against conservatives, or even really reality,

                  This is where I stop having the conversation.

                  You've lost sight of what an "opinion" is and what it means. You're not alone in the world, but it's not a discussion I care to have. No amount of evidence will convince you of anything.

                  • s73v3r_ 2035 days ago
                    No, you don't get to pull that. You have not provided a shred of evidence of anything, so of course no one is going to be convinced by your ranting.
                    • firemancoder 2034 days ago
                      I do get to pull that. I choose not to engage with people locked on to their ideas, so I don't have to. Complete waste of time. The worst thing you can do me is downvote my comments.

                      That's all the power you have. Have at it bub.

            • beenBoutIT 2036 days ago
              I'm inclined to think that if republicans/conservatives are seeing less republican/conservative results in their respective republican/conservative Google searches, it's probably the result of republican/conservative webmasters who don't fully understand SEO.
          • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
            "Silicon Valley's lack of ideological diversity is a big problem for them. "

            I've never seen a claim of this that didn't boil down to accepting bigotry or trying to do backflips to make it seem "logical" that women or other minorities are inferior at coding.

            • manfredo 2036 days ago
              And the claims that Silicon Valley _doesn't_ have a ideological diversity problem I've seen have invariably boiled down either aggressively expanding the umbrella of what is considered "bigotry" (conspicuously to the benefit of one side of the political spectrum), or just outright advocating political discrimination - which is not actually all that uncommon, Reddit for instance openly admitted to making sure hires are "on-board politically" during Pao's tenture as CEO.
              • s73v3r_ 2036 days ago
                If you've got evidence, feel free to share it.