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Google Government The Courts Businesses United States Technology

Department of Labor Sues Google Over Compensation Data (cnn.com) 350

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNNMoney: The Department of Labor filed a lawsuit against Google on Wednesday to get the Internet company to turn over compensation data on its employees. The data request is part of a routine audit into Google's equal opportunity hiring practices, which is required because of the company's role as a federal contractor. Google provides cloud computing services to various federal agencies and the military. Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more. According to the lawsuit, Google has repeatedly refused to provide names, contact information, job history and salary history details that the government has requested for its employees. The Labor Department is now requesting that a judge order all of Google's federal contracts canceled unless it complies with the data request. "Despite many opportunities to produce this information voluntarily, Google has refused to do so," Thomas M. Dowd, acting director for the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, said in a statement. "We filed this lawsuit so we can obtain the information we need to complete our evaluation."
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Department of Labor Sues Google Over Compensation Data

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  • TFA missed two. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday January 04, 2017 @11:43PM (#53608257) Journal

    Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more.

    Missed two biggies:

    Age.
    National origin.

    • I guess those fit under "AND MORE".

    • Presumably those could be covered under "and more" ?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      New data reveals that 86% of the total H1B visas issued in 2014 for technology firms was used to hire IT professionals from India. The data accessed by Computerworld through Right of Information Act, reveals that a lion share of visas issued for computer jobs are claimed by Indians.

      So obviously there is categorical information for national origin and the H1B programs need more diversity...

      If CEOs insist that middle class Americans compete with cheap foreign labor, why not outsource the jobs of CEOs? If b

    • by asylumx ( 881307 )
      "and more." seems to cover all of that.
  • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Wednesday January 04, 2017 @11:45PM (#53608263) Homepage Journal

    Can't they?

    Google, the company running the most all-pervasive surveillance system in all of human history, is fighting to protect their own privacy?

    Not that I needed another belly laugh, after the last election, but dude, that's funny.

    • by WaywardGeek ( 1480513 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @02:39AM (#53608677) Journal

      I've work for Google for 2 years now. Without a court order, why does the government get to have my name, contact info, salary history, and God knows what else? Google fights harder than any company I know of against government over-reach and invasion of privacy (though kudos to Apple recently, other than that NYT app in China thing). I don't know any details, and IANAL, but this feels to me like Google is looking out for our privacy rather than trying to hide hiring practices. Do you want to give your details to these investigators? Why not anonymize the data? I see almost zero non-anonymous data at Google. The government should learn a few of these tricks.

      As for "all-pervasive surveillance", Google does collect huge amounts of data, but after two years of trying pretty hard to test Google's defenses against internal employee hacking, I have to give Google an A+. I can't help but to poke at every weakness I see - it's a personality flaw. I personally have not seen 1 byte of user data that I did not need to do my job, and I am easily in the top 1% of nosy Googlers. My son told me once, "You love to be evil for good". That's how I feel about testing defenses. There is always room for improvement, and I think we're trying hard to improve, but no other company on earth comes close to protecting user data like Google does today.

      As for discriminating against women, older folks, etc... well, we're a company made up of humans, just like the rest. There's room for improvement. Before working here, I worked primarily in FPGA place and route algorithms, which is a field with AFAIK exactly zero women. Please let me know if I'm wrong, and managers don't count, I mean the actual algorithms geeks. I read somewhere that we only employ something close to 15% women in engineering/software jobs, but when I look around, I see closer to 30% women. It might just be my group, but I think we try pretty hard to expunge 1960's Star Trek inspired sexist attitudes. As a 53-year-old, I have to try pretty hard to try and eliminate unconscious biases - which is hard! I don't know of any other company that demands this of older engineers like me. It's a very good thing.

      Anyway, I'm guessing you don't really know what goes on at Google, but this is Slashdot. Stating strong opinions about that which we know nothing about is what we do here...

      • by LetterRip ( 30937 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @03:08AM (#53608713)

        I've work for Google for 2 years now. Without a court order, why does the government get to have my name, contact info, salary history, and God knows what else?

        It is a legal requirement to in order to get any federal contracts. As part of the contract they are required to prove compliance with equal opportunity laws. They have the contracts, so they are required to abide by the terms.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          I seriously doubt it is that simple. Google lawyers don't talk generally to anyone outside Google, but when I get upset at them for something that seems incredibly stupid to me (most recently, their rejection of software with a CC0 license), I get an earful of detail and justifications that would make your head spin. AFAIK, it's not Google lawyers that are messed up, but the system in which they have to do their jobs. From what I can tell, most of them are trying to fight the good fight, and not be evil.

          • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 05, 2017 @03:50AM (#53608793)
            For most federal government contracts, it is indeed that simple. A clause in the contract stipulates that you'll allow an audit for compliance with labor laws. It's pretty universal. I obviously haven't seen Google's contract, but it would be strange to not have it.
            • I started ViASIC in 2000, and I am proud to have had the Air Force Reasarch Labs and Sandia as two of my favorite clients, as well as the smaller Mission Reserch (MRDC) that does some outstanding R&D. In short, I've had a lot of government contracts, and sure, the super-long forms we all have to sign include all kinds of rights for the government. They're worse than the worst EULA you ever did not read and then clicked "I have read and agree to the terms and conditions."

              Here's one that really pissed m

              • s/AMS Semiconductor/AMI Semiconductor/. AMS is a great company - Austria Micro Systems, IIRC. AMI Semiconductor, or AMIS, was the company that screwed VASIC big-time. Chris King was CEO at the time. I've found that weak leadership leads to companies that behave as the combination of their worst elements.

            • This stuff is like inviting a vampire into your house. Companies that want to do business with the government create entire shell companies owned and or run by indian women lesbian disabled etc.... just to get through this crap. It's cancer.
          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            I do federal contracting. This is a standard, non-negotiable clause. If Google wanted the money, they agreed to the clause. I'm glad you've had bad luck with the legal team and CC0 licenses, but this had to do with federal contracts worth billions. Money speaks.

          • I seriously doubt it is that simple.

            Well, you're seriously incorrect.

          • I seriously don't doubt it's that simple, as the Department of Labor is saying it is exactly that in TFS:

            The Labor Department is now requesting that a judge order all of Google's federal contracts canceled unless it complies with the data request. "Despite many opportunities to produce this information voluntarily, Google has refused to do so," Thomas M. Dowd, acting director for the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, said in a statement. "We filed this lawsuit so we can obtain the information we need to complete our evaluation."

            Now, it's possible that Google said they wouldn't produce it without a proper subpoena for records, just to limit their own liabilities. In which case, once a federal judge issues a court order to produce records or have the contracts terminated (with whatever termination clauses may be in the contracts), Google happily hands over the data.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Thursday January 05, 2017 @03:21AM (#53608737)

        I've work for Google for 2 years now. Without a court order, why does the government get to have my name, contact info, salary history, and God knows what else? Google fights harder than any company I know of against government over-reach and invasion of privacy (though kudos to Apple recently, other than that NYT app in China thing). I don't know any details, and IANAL, but this feels to me like Google is looking out for our privacy rather than trying to hide hiring practices. Do you want to give your details to these investigators? Why not anonymize the data? I see almost zero non-anonymous data at Google. The government should learn a few of these tricks.

        Easy. The contract demands it. Google sells their services to the government (cloud services, it seems like). However, to do that, the government doesn't just go "Sign Up" for an account. They're actually not allowed to just use a solution without contest - they must procure the service through a competition.

        So they put out a RFP for what services they need, and in those quotes, they then select a proposal and then send out a whole set of contract documents that you have to agree to. And one of those would to be provide a whole pile of personnel information on demand.

        Since Google refuses to abide by the contract, the DoL has the right to request a contract termination because Google has technically breached it.

        The "right" of the government to get the data was given by Google when Google signed the contract.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Since Google refuses to abide by the contract, the DoL has the right to request a contract termination because Google has technically breached it.

          They Dept of labor is not suing to terminate the contract though. They are suing to get private information which, after it is in their hands, can be used by any government department. And this information is MORE than what the IRS would get. Getting salary history and career history essentially means information on how people moved from position to position. This would give the government information on which projects each Google employee ever worked on and their phone numbers (which IRS may not have),

          • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @09:39AM (#53609691) Journal

            from the fucking summary:

            The Labor Department is now requesting that a judge order all of Google's federal contracts canceled unless it complies with the data request. "Despite many opportunities to produce this information voluntarily, Google has refused to do so," Thomas M. Dowd, acting director for the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, said in a statement. "We filed this lawsuit so we can obtain the information we need to complete our evaluation."

            Don't be an apologist.

        • and this is why we pay so much for shit done for the government.
      • by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @04:02AM (#53608813)

        As for "all-pervasive surveillance", Google does collect huge amounts of data, but after two years of trying pretty hard to test Google's defenses against internal employee hacking, I have to give Google an A+. I can't help but to poke at every weakness I see - it's a personality flaw. I personally have not seen 1 byte of user data that I did not need to do my job, and I am easily in the top 1% of nosy Googlers. My son told me once, "You love to be evil for good". That's how I feel about testing defenses. There is always room for improvement, and I think we're trying hard to improve, but no other company on earth comes close to protecting user data like Google does today.

        NSA offers roughly the same message only they claim collecting data doesn't actually count as "collecting" until it has been used. They are basically asserting it isn't what you have it is what you do with what you take that counts.

        This doesn't work for money stolen in bank heists or scams, exfiltration of confidential data such as trade and government secrets. It doesn't seem rational to believe any judge anywhere would accept the line of argument you didn't use what you took as a defense...

        NSA brass even makes public statements about all of their safeguards and red tape... at least when they are not undermining themselves by publically gloating about their power and exploits.

        Anyway, I'm guessing you don't really know what goes on at Google, but this is Slashdot. Stating strong opinions about that which we know nothing about is what we do here...

        Personally speaking for myself I just don't care. Just like NSA collecting data domestically such assertions of being careful and self-limiting completely misses the point it's simply none of Google's business in the first place.

        Massive corporations (especially ones with a defacto monopoly) and governments always try to sell the idea they are somehow different or special insulated from historical examples of human nature. They want us to believe they won't overreach or leverage themselves in pursuit of their objective functions. I am not interested in debating this point or characterizing anyone as good or evil.

        I am only interested in promotion of structures which hold EVERYONES feet to the fire. This means a few massive companies like Google don't get to go ape shit and read everyone's email and track everyone's every move across virtually every website on the planet whether Google is their search engine or not.

        This behind the scenes industrial scale spying relies mostly on ignorance and lack of choice. All of this data ultimately isn't being used for everyone's benefit it is being used to give corporations an upper hand over consumers -- an unfair advantage, an unfair playing field. They don't want *their* feet burnt.

        Hopefully soon with increasing public awareness, certain hidden technological changes and possibly legislation there will be adjustments to better balance things out. The status quo is unsustainable and Google is at the forefront of being the problem.

        • NSA offers roughly the same message only they claim collecting data doesn't actually count as "collecting" until it has been used.

          This is slashdot, so I should not get worked up, but are you kidding me? The NSA tapped our data cables between data centers, and since we backup data between data centers, that gave them nearly everything, without a warrant or any kind of legal right to steal America's data. They used that data to figure out who was having affairs with whom, among other invasive programs they wrote. The NSA's problem is they don't have enough humans to examine all the data they take illegally, while even as a quite nosy employee at Google, I've not seen one byte of private data other than some HTTP headers I needed for debugging (with the rest of the requests redacted).

          I do think the NSA as an organization believes in fighting the good fight, but without strong leadership, they've helped prove my theory that organizations without strong leadership will behave as badly as the sum of their worst parts.

        • it's simply none of Google's business in the first place.

          Correction: It's Google's business if you choose to use their services, because your eyeballs and the information needed to target the right ads to them are the "fee" you pay for the use of the services. If you don't like that, you can choose not to use the services. Of course, there are Google ads on lots of third-party sites, but Google makes it easy for you to ensure that Google doesn't track you on those sites as well if you want, including browser plug-ins that ensure your don't-track-me preferences do

      • Google is infamous for age discrimination and you're an outlier.

        • by WaywardGeek ( 1480513 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @04:57AM (#53608943) Journal

          Yep. It isn't so bad in Mountain View, but have you been to SF lately? It isn't just Google. The entire SF hipster startup culture in SF is highly youth-oriented, and I worry that the culture may be more sexist than what we've seen in the Bay Area since the 1960s. What happens when you give a bunch of 20-year-old men a lot of money, and a great dating scene with far more single women then men?

          In any case, there are some good reasons for Google's preference for hiring people right out of college. I am still recovering from culture-shock. It would have been far easier for me to have gone to work for Google without having worked for startups for 25 years. When I see stupid stuff that I can fix, I feel compelled to fix it. That works well in small companies, but it will only piss off people at Google, and ensure you get a poor review. I advise nooglers with experience like me to try and ignore what that they learned before.

      • by paulhar ( 652995 )

        > why does the government get to have my name, contact info, salary history, and God knows what else?

        IANAA, but I assume your government already knows your name, address, phone number, salary history, etc. Isn't that how they tax you?
        The other stuff, I think, is things like promotions, which they *could* infer from salary, but that's probably not as accurate as they want it to be.

      • by rastos1 ( 601318 )

        As for "all-pervasive surveillance", Google does collect huge amounts of data, but after two years of trying pretty hard to test Google's defenses against internal employee hacking, I have to give Google an A+. .... I personally have not seen 1 byte of user data that I did not need to do my job, and I am easily in the top 1% of nosy Googlers.

        So what are you saying? That Google collects the data and then promptly throws it into a black hole? Or Google collects the data but there is no human intervention an

      • Because Google chose to pursue being a US Government contractor, and the US Government has rules (read: laws) duly passed by the Congress about how it conducts business. Don't want to have the US Government opening up your books and peeking around to that degree? Don't work for a government contractor.

        Oh, and like the US Government doesn't already have your name, contact info, salary history, etc. See: the IRS. You file all that shit every year.

      • by Keick ( 252453 )

        "Without a court order, why does the government get to have my name, contact info, salary history, and God knows what else?"

        You already have to give the government this data every year, its called 'paying your taxes'. You don't get to wait until the government gets a court order for you to disclose your W-2 do you?

  • Remember when the Obama administration summoned the CEOs of the big 5 banks to Washington and they didn't show up? That must've stung, no? Well, now Google's trying the same thing with big gubbermint. Can't wait to see what happens. I can smell the testosterone from the other side of the border!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 04, 2017 @11:49PM (#53608271)

    I do not understand why google has not complied. I get it if they do not like the request, I wouldn't like it either, but they signed for those contracts and agreed to these terms so they could get paid.

    Quite frankly at a certain point an example needs to be made.

    I see this kind of disregard for the law and for contracts etc and it's getting much worse. We need to publicly kill a large corporation, and we need to do it in a very messy painful way. We need to do this to bring the others into line.

    Sun Tsu's art of war dictates that a general must publicly execute one of his men so the others fall in line. We need to kill sony for infecting multiple countries with rootkits, or subway for poisoning our population, or walmart for actively encouraging child slave labor, or google for failing to comply with legal contractual obligations.

    One must die that we may all live, this is the way of the harvest and we know it, now we just have to pick one to kill by revoking their corporate charter and disassembling their physical business structures.

    • Sun Tsu's art of war dictates that a general must publicly execute one of his men so the others fall in line. We need to kill ... subway for poisoning our population ...

      Huh? Poison?

      Subway is one of the more nutritious purveyors of fast food out there. (A bit bland, and not as good a nutritional deal, by a long shot, as Extreme Pita, but nutritious nonetheless.)

      Just get your sandwich (such as a philly cheesesteak) "as a salad" and add a bunch of veggies, including peppers to spice it up.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Sun Tsu's art of war dictates that a general must publicly execute one of his men so the others fall in line. We need to kill sony for infecting multiple countries with rootkits....

      I vote we start with AT&T. Is it about due to be broken up, again. It is worse than the terminator.

    • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @07:31AM (#53609259)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Sun Tsu's art of war dictates that a general must publicly execute one of his men so the others fall in line.

        ... Hold the executive(s) responsible personally. Pierce the corporate veil and go after them directly for ordering non-compliance.

        So what I'm hearing is public execution of CEO's. Seems a bit barbaric, but I bet it would get companies to shape up.

  • ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @12:02AM (#53608299)

    Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more

    I think it is utterly ridiculous for the government to force companies to keep track of race, religion, sexual orientation, and gender identity. That is personal information that is neither the employer's business nor the federal government's.

    People should either refuse to answer such questions or simply make up answers.

    • Re: ridiculous (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's required per terms of the contract they agreed to when they took on Federal IT contracts. You take my money, you have to abide by the contract. SIMPLE. Google thinks they are above anybody else's rules.

    • Re:ridiculous (Score:4, Informative)

      by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @12:18AM (#53608349)

      Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more

      I think it is utterly ridiculous for the government to force companies to keep track of race, religion, sexual orientation, and gender identity. That is personal information that is neither the employer's business nor the federal government's.

      People should either refuse to answer such questions or simply make up answers.

      If the government doesn't require companies to track on report on these, then how can the government prevent discrimination based on those attributes? It's exceptionally hard for an employee who feels he was discriminated against to prove such discrimination, especially if, as you suggest, employers aren't even required to track it.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 )

        As we so often read on slashdot, correlation is not causation. Even with access to records, the government can't prevent or prove discrimination based on protected attributes.

      • If the government doesn't require companies to track on report on these, then how can the government prevent discrimination based on those attributes?

        How can the government prove discrimination with this data? What percentage of African Americans at Google, or what gender pay gap, actually proves discrimination?

        (Of course, it isn't the job of the government to prevent private discrimination in the first place, and attempts to do so often ends up harming the very people it is supposed to help.)

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      I thought "libertarians" were suppose to be keen on running things by sticking to terms of contracts.

      Google could have chosen to have the conditions of the contract changed before they signed it.
      They didn't.

      So what exactly is your problem here? Is your problem that the government was party to the contract? Does that somehow make the contract void in the name of your personal view of "liberty"?
      • So what exactly is your problem here? Is your problem that the government was party to the contract? Does that somehow make the contract void in the name of your personal view of "liberty"?

        I made no comment on the validity of the contract or whether Google should or should not comply with it.

        What I am saying is that it is morally and politically wrong for governments to enquire about, or keep track of, the race, religion, or sexual orientation of citizens. Fascist and racist countries do that, free countrie

        • Sadly it's not politically wrong due to historical factors. If a government is going to have a policy about racist hiring practices it's going to be entirely useless without keeping track of information about employees races.
          It's not a perfect world full of perfect people, and if you want to be able to get a job without having to belong to the correct Church (a problem with an employment agency near me a while back who were rejecting Catholics, Mormons and non-Christians despite taking government money) th
          • If a government is going to have a policy about racist hiring practices

            Government shouldn't have such policies because they aren't necessary, they are ineffective, and they are frequently abused.

        • Tell that to the people who think a good government should proactively try to prevent illegal discrimination, especially in companies that it hires -- and in some cases pays billions of dollars.

          • Tell that to the people who think a good government should proactively try to prevent illegal discrimination

            I am telling it to those people: while you may have good intentions, you are dangerously wrong. Government cannot prevent discrimination, but it can massively abuse this kind of data.

    • "...hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more..."

      What's the "and more" part? Can I get me one of those cushy jobs reserved for old farts? Would I have to be gay, or at least pretend to be? Is there a test?
    • The government doesn't force anyone to do this. What they do is make it part of any government contract, if you want to work for the government you must agree to these regulations (that were put in place by congress long before Obama took office) and the agency in question is required by law to audit contractors to ensure their compliance with the contract provisions.

      If Google refuses to provide this they will see every government contract terminated and will be bared from providing services to the governme

      • Re:ridiculous (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @01:49AM (#53608593)

        The government doesn't force anyone to do this. What they do is make it part of any government contract, if you want to work for the government you must agree to these regulations

        Yes, and I am saying that it is wrong for government to collect this data on anybody. It simply isn't the government's business who I like to sleep with or what "race" I am. And storing that information in government databases is creepy and dangerous.

        (that were put in place by congress long before Obama took office)

        Did I mention Obama anywhere? The American obsession with categorizing people by race obviously goes back to the founding of the US. People have always found rationalizations for it, how it is good for everybody, how it is necessary for justice and the correct functioning of society. But in the end, these categorizations are, have always been, and will always be racist, discriminatory, and harmful to everybody.

        • They could just correlate the census data with the IRS database to figure it out, I suppose, but isn't that even more Big Government Boogeyman? Some government contracts require security clearances, which his a lot more information than the Dept of Labor is asking for. If Google doesn't want to play the government contractor game than they shouldn't.
  • I wonder what other contracts the government has with Google...

    This lawsuit lists only one, the GSA's "Advertising and Integrated Marketing Solutions Contract", number GS07F227BA. Since it gives a contract number, we can actually reference it on a few [insidegov.com] different websites. [fpds.gov] I guess we can use the FPDS website [fpds.gov] to search for more contracts awarded to Google. ...

    There's a million dollar contract for Google AdWords for the FDA [fpds.gov], $250K awarded by the State Department [fpds.gov] for marketing its "Programs and Products", A lo

  • Google's response (Score:5, Informative)

    by SnowZero ( 92219 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @12:12AM (#53608333)

    TFS should have included Google's response (already in TFA):

    “We’ve worked hard to comply with the OFCCP’s current audit. However, the handful of OFCCP requests that are the subject of the complaint are overbroad in scope, or reveal confidential data, and we've made this clear to the OFCCP, to no avail. These requests include thousands of employees’ private contact information which we safeguard rigorously. We hope to continue working with OFCCP to resolve this matter.”

    • As my reply above noted these restrictions were put in place by congress a long time ago. They are a requirement of every single government contract, if you want to work for the government you must by law comply. The information gathering is extensive, often includes information on all employee's not just the ones working on government contracts and is one of the reasons federal work is specialty in the contracting world that requires people knowledgeable with the process and requirements. The agency in que

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 05, 2017 @12:23AM (#53608357)

    The Department of Labor filed a lawsuit against Google on Wednesday to get the Internet company to turn over compensation data on its employees. [...] Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more.

    And how exactly does providing data on employees prove that they do not discriminate against applicants? Oh, that's right, it isn't about equality of opportunity, it's about equality of results. I forgot.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      The Department of Labor filed a lawsuit against Google on Wednesday to get the Internet company to turn over compensation data on its employees. [...] Google is obligated to let the government access records that show its hiring doesn't discriminate based on race, religion, sexual orientation, gender and more.

      And how exactly does providing data on employees prove that they do not discriminate against applicants? Oh, that's right, it isn't about equality of opportunity, it's about equality of results. I forg

  • When Trump is in this will get canned,
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Waffle Iron ( 339739 )

      When Trump is in this will get canned,

      Not after they tell Trump that Google is discriminating by hiring furrinors in preference to natural born umericans.

      • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @06:35AM (#53609145)

        You're making jokes about this, but how do we know that this isn't exactly what Google is most worried about?

        I mean, if you were going to just hazard a wild guess based on the usual stereotypes you'd figure Google skews young and male in engineering but does better overall in gender when marketing and other soft skills positions are included. You could talk to anyone in technology and get this same mix described to you like the people involved were talking about the weather or the sun rising in the East. Just the way it is.

        But when it comes to race and national origin, I'd guess they skew heavily Indian and Asian but extremely light on blacks.

        That's a bad combination for this zeitgeist. Not hiring enough blacks exposes you to all the usual discrimination claims and I'm sure BLM would love a target like Google.

        But the real zinger will be the heavy hiring of Indians and Chinese and they don't want Trump ranting on Twitter (a competing service!) about how they're not hiring Americans.

        And if Trump had half a brain, he'd say that part of why blacks are doing poorly was that Google was hiring Indians over them. It's ludicrous, I know, but it's political genius because it deflects Trump's alt-right image and it pits blacks against Indians. It's classic divide and conquer.

    • You apparently believe he will rewrite the entire federal code in 2 weeks. Your wrong. They couldn't change 10% of the federal code in 4 years.

  • It's the right time! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Thursday January 05, 2017 @01:24AM (#53608527)
    If you're over 50 years old and looking for a job at Google , apply now!
    • Most people I know who found jobs at Google did so mid-career (so they were past the 40-years-of-age starting point of qualifying for age-discrimination protections). You must have Google confused with Facebook. It was Facebook's CEO who famously claimed that "young people are just smarter."
      • You must have Google confused with Facebook.

        Nope [slashdot.org].

        • Ok, so there is a law suit. But I am fairly sure it will fail. I don't work for Google, but I do know a number of people who do. And, as I mentioned, most of them joined the company mid-career. And quite a few of them were past 50 when they joined. So I have problems believing what the suit alleges. It hasn't been resolved yet. Anyone can file a law suit in the US in the hopes that the company would settle to avoid the cost of litigation, but there isn't even news of that in your link. There is only
    • If you're over 50 years old and looking for a job at Google , apply now!

      Well, year-after next I'll be 50. But I'm already working for Google. What should I do?

      • Well, year-after next I'll be 50. But I'm already working for Google. What should I do?

        Train/choose better the newbies. Google did great stuff a few years ago, but over time the pioneers were promoted, and the newer generations are not as innovative and code efficient as their elders.

        • over time the pioneers were promoted, and the newer generations are not as innovative and code efficient as their elders.

          I disagree. What's changed isn't the quality of the people, it's the nature (mainly, size) of the company and the expectations users have of its products, which changes the sort of work that can be done.

          • I didn't say it's the quality of the people (Google is very selective, and that's a good thing). However, and it's certainly related to your reply, Google topology changed a lot, and due to this it seems (will not elaborate on the impact of such a structure becoming gigantic) the recent developments are less refined and innovative as they used to be.
    • They (govmt) don't care about old people, just minority women etc....
  • This article is incredibly one-sided and the quote from google isn't very detailed. What is the DoL looking for that google considers so overly broad? What about the contracts are they asserting should be kept private? Maybe google's argument is perfectly reasonable and the DoL's request isn't. Hard to tell with only one side of the argument.

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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