Former Google Engineer: CEO Sundar Pichai Lied to Congress About Blacklists

Lucas Nolanby Lucas Nolan

Former Google engineer Mike Wacker claims that CEO Sundar Pichai lied to Congress when claiming that the company does not manually intervene on users search results.

In a Medium blog post titled “Google’s Manual Interventions in Search Results,” former Google engineer Mike Wacker alleges that Google CEO Sundar Pichai lied to Congres when he stated “We don’t manually intervene on any particular search result.” Wacker notes that Pichai’s comment was in answer to a question from Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) who asked why photos of President Trump were returned under image searches for the term “idiot.”

Pichai claimed that this was an automated process as Google ranked results based on thing such as “relevance, freshness, popularity,” etc. and outright stated that the company does nto intervene on particular search results. Wacker notes that a few days later, Slate writer April Glaser searcher for the term “abortion” on YouTube and was unhappy with the results returned, writing an article about the issue. Wacker writes:

She would later receive a response from a YouTube spokesperson. However, this answer was different from the answer that Sundar Pichai delivered to Rep. Lofgren. Instead of explaining how search works and how these results were produced by an objective, automated process, the spokesperson “stressed that the company is working to provide more credible news content from its search and discovery algorithms.”

Wacker began his own investigation into Google’s search algorithm where he made a discovery. “I eventually found the smoking gun: the exact change where Google had altered the search results for abortion. My initial reaction was a mix of excitement and shock.”

Wacker goes on to describe the full details of the evidence he found that shows that YouTube — a Google-owned company — actively manipulated user search results:

To reference the infamous phrase “alternative facts,” the change essentially used an alternative algorithm that delivers alternative search results. A special file named youtube_controversial_query_blacklist could be used to manually trigger this alternative algorithm. For any search or query that matched an entry on that blacklist, YouTube would blacklist the normal search results, switching over to the alternative search results instead.

The smoking gun I had discovered was a change that added two entries to that blacklist: “abortion” and “abortions”. As a result of this change, searches for those terms displayed the alternative search results. The change had been made at Dec 14, 2018, 3:17 PM PST, mere hours after April Glaser of Slate had emailed YouTube.

Wacker then goes on to give examples of some of the blacklists created by Google to suppress certain content:

It didn’t end there. Herein lies the key point: it’s not about where the blacklist begins, but where the blacklist ends. In this case, that contrast could not be more stark: the first entry on the blacklist was added because of a mass shooting, and the last entry was added because a Slate writer complained about search results for abortion.

full story at https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2019/07/02/former-google-engineer-ceo-sundar-pichai-lied-to-congress-about-blacklists/

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