Scott ID: 59e5b4 'UK Foreign Minister Attacks Google Over Child Abuse Content Aug. 30, 2018, 7:10 p.m. No.2810012   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0269 >>0442

British foreign minister Jeremy Hunt accused Google (GOOGL.O) on Thursday of abandoning its moral values by failing to remove child abuse content while launching a version of its search engine in China that will block some websites.

 

UK Foreign Minister Attacks Google Over Child Abuse Content

 

By Reuters

August 30, 2018

 

British Foreign Minister Jeremy Hunt accused Google on Aug. 30 of abandoning its moral values by failing to remove child abuse content while launching a version of its search engine in China that will block some websites.

 

The British government has repeatedly criticized online platforms such as Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook for failing to remove abusive material or sexual content posted online even after they were notified.

 

“Seems extraordinary that Google is considering censoring its content to get into China but won’t cooperate with UK, U.S. … in removing child abuse content,” Hunt said on Twitter. “They used to be so proud of being values-driven.”

 

Alphabet’s Google plans a search engine in China that will block some search terms and websites, two sources told Reuters earlier this month, in a move that could mark its return to a market it abandoned eight years ago on censorship concerns.

 

Google said in a statement it agreed with Hunt that child sexual abuse was “abhorrent and must be removed, that’s why we cooperate with governments to fight child sexual abuse online.”

 

Britain, the United States, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand invited major technology companies to attend a meeting on tackling child abuse and extremism on their websites, but the firms declined to attend, the Daily Mail reported on Aug. 30.

 

Google said it did offer to send an executive to the conference.

 

In January, Prime Minister Theresa May used an address at the World Economic Forum in Davos to say investors should use their financial power to force internet firms into taking more responsibility for stopping militants and pedophiles using their platforms.

 

Google, which quit China’s search engine market in 2010, has been actively seeking ways to re-enter China where many of its products are blocked by regulators.

 

Leading human rights groups, including Amnesty International, have urged Google not to bow to censorship demands in China because by doing so, it alleges, the company would be complicit in the repression of freedom of speech.

 

Search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protests will be among the words blacklisted in the search engine app, which The Intercept website said had already been demonstrated to the Chinese government.

 

The project, code-named “Dragonfly,” has been under way since the spring of 2017, the news website said.

 

By Andrew MacAskill.

Scott ID: 59e5b4 Republican senator asks FTC to examine Google ads Aug. 30, 2018, 7:30 p.m. No.2810442   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0554

>>2810012

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch on Thursday added to the growing push in Washington to have the Federal Trade Commission rekindle an antitrust investigation of Alphabet Inc’s Google.

 

Hatch, the Republican chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, sent a letter to FTC Chairman Joseph Simons recounting several news reports that identified complaints about Google’s anticompetitive conduct and privacy practices.

 

Alphabet shares were little changed after the release of the letter.

 

The company declined to comment.

 

Lawmakers from both major parties and Google’s rivals have said this year they see an opening for increased regulation of large technology companies under the FTC’s new slate of commissioners.

 

Google’s critics say that ongoing European antitrust action against the web search leader and this year’s data privacy scandal involving Facebook Inc and political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica demonstrate their concerns about the unchecked power of the tech heavyweights. About 90 percent of search engine queries in the United States flow through Google.

 

Facebook and Twitter executives are expected to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Sept. 5 about their efforts to deter foreign campaigns from spreading misinformation online ahead November’s midterm elections. Lawmakers have criticized Alphabet for not scheduling a top executive, such as Chief Executive Larry Page, for the hearings.

 

In 2013, the FTC closed a lengthy investigation of Google after finding insufficient evidence that consumers were harmed by how the company displayed search results from rivals.

 

President Donald Trump accused Google’s search engine on Tuesday of promoting negative news articles and hiding “fair media” coverage of him.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-antitrust-google/republican-senator-asks-ftc-to-examine-google-ads-idUSKCN1LF275