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Alphabet Draws Shareholder Ire Over Human Rights – Again

We’ve been writing for some time about digital privacy and how Google and the other Big Six (and some startups) threaten privacy and other fundamental human rights (see “Want to know more?” below). As consumers and governments are waking up to the risks of surveillance-based business models, Google/Alphabet has been at the center of this debate. Now Alphabet is facing a backlash from its shareholders over this issue, reports the Financial Times (FT).

Ten large Alphabet shareholders have co-filed a resolution which calls on the company to strengthen its oversight of the risks to human rights created by its business model. They are also concerned about bias and how Google reinforces, amplifies, and systematizes discrimination, disinformation, hate speech, and violence. The investors include AXA Investment Managers, Aviva Investors, the Church of England, and several others who preferred to be unnamed, all of them together owning more than US$2.4 trillion in assets.

The resolution calls on Alphabet to set up an independent committee at the board-of-director level to monitor human rights risks in its products and value chain, reports FT. It will be put to a vote at Alphabet’s annual meeting in June.

This is the culmination of an ongoing struggle with a wider group of Alphabet investors who voiced concerns last year. At that time, Alphabet dismissed them, forcing the activists to join forces.

Our Take

Alphabet can no longer afford to ignore this issue, not when its own shareholders – typically a more moderate contingent than, say, technology users or civil rights activists – start demanding that it pay attention. The overall climate has changed; different winds are blowing now. Regulators are actively working to rewrite privacy protection laws: from the Canadian Office of the Privacy Commissioner modernizing PIPEDA (the country’s law governing how businesses collect, use, and disclose personal information) to the proposed Algorithmic Accountability Act of 2019 in the US to European initiatives and many more. Will Alphabet listen this time? It remains to be seen, but we are hopeful.


Want to know more?

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Google Has Personal Medical Data of Up to 50 Million Americans: Project Nightingale

Google Moves Into Banking With Project Cache

Facebook Will Pay Illinois Users $550 Million Over Its Use of FRT

Clearview AI Demonstrates the Dangers of Facial Recognition

Google Founders Are Stepping Down

Dutch Court Halts Use of AI for Detecting Welfare Fraud

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