Mind Matters Natural and Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis
joey-nicotra-1092263-unsplash
Photo by Joey Nicotra on Unsplash

Google’s “Civil War” Is a First For the Big Tech Industry

Not the sort of first to rejoice market analysts’ hearts
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

Not the sort of first to rejoice market analysts’ hearts. If a recent longform article at Fortune is any guide, tech philosopher George Gilder was onto something when he told Steve Forbes recently that the whole Google culture is “kind of self-defeating and wrong.” The article describes the atmosphere as an internal “civil war.”

The “techlash” started with a 50-site worldwide walkout in early November 2018 over company handling of sexual harassment complaints:

It was the first time the world had seen such a massive worker protest erupt out of one of the giants of the technology industry—and certainly the first time outsiders got a glimpse at the depth of anger and frustration felt by some Google employees. But inside the Googleplex, the fuel that fed the walkout had been collecting for months. Tensions had been on the rise as employees clashed with management over allegations of controversial business decisions made in secret, treatment of marginalized groups of employees, and harassment and trolling of workers on the company’s internal platforms. “It’s the U.S. culture war playing out at micro-scale,” says Colin McMillen, an engineer who left the company in February…

At Old Google, employees say they had a voice in how the company was run. At New Google, the communication and trust between the rank and file and executives is in decline. Decision-making power, some say, is now concentrated at the very top of a company run by executives who are increasingly driven by conventional business metrics. Beth Kowitt, “Inside Google’s Civil War” at Fortune

It’s ironic that a company that the public associates with enlightened ideas is not only in conflict with employees but in just the sort of conflict that typefies stodgier outfits

In Life after Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy, Gilder argues that the future of computing is decentralized. Overwhelming size ceases to be an advantage and can, in fact, become a disadvantage. Instead of one walkout, there are fifty.

Steve Forbes and George Gilder discuss Google starting at 14:37 here.


Further reading: George Gilder: Google does not believe in life after Google He offers chilling insights into the ultimate visions of technocrats

George Gilder talks tech at World News Daily In a three-part interview, he elaborates on why he thinks Google is doomed.

and

Imagining Life after Google A compendium of comments from reviews of Life after Google


Mind Matters News

Breaking and noteworthy news from the exciting world of natural and artificial intelligence at MindMatters.ai.

Google’s “Civil War” Is a First For the Big Tech Industry