Google Engineers Said to Refuse to Build Security Tool to Win Military Contracts

Advertisement
By Mark Bergen, Bloomberg | Updated: 22 June 2018 12:27 IST
Highlights
  • Some software engineers in cloud division refused to work on a feature
  • "Air gap" technology would have helped Google win military contracts
  • The act of rebellion ricocheted around the company
Google Engineers Said to Refuse to Build Security Tool to Win Military Contracts

Photo Credit: Bloomberg

Earlier this year, a group of influential software engineers in Google's cloud division surprised their superiors by refusing to work on a cutting-edge security feature. Known as "air gap," the technology would have helped Google win sensitive military contracts. The coders weren't persuaded their employer should be using its technological might to help the government wage war, according to four current and former employees. After hearing the engineers' objections, Urs Holzle, Google's top technical executive, said the air gap feature would be postponed, one of the people said. Another person familiar with the situation said the group was able to reduce the scope of the feature.

The act of rebellion ricocheted around the company, fueling a growing resistance among employees with a dim view of Google's yen for multi-million-dollar government contracts. The engineers became known as the "Group of Nine" and were lionised by like-minded staff. The current and former employees say the engineers' work boycott was a catalyst for larger protests that convulsed the company's Mountain View, California, campus and ultimately forced executives to let a lucrative Pentagon contract called Project Maven expire without renewal. They declined to name the engineers and requested anonymity to discuss a private matter.

Internal disputes are common at Alphabet's Google, which gives employees ample space to air grievances. But dissent is on the rise (as it is at other tech companies). Last month, in a highly unusual move, a Google employee proposed that executive compensation be tied to efforts to make the company more diverse and inclusive. That proposal was easily voted down by shareholders, but the engineers' boycott could actually hamper Google's ability to compete. Big federal contracts often require certification to handle sensitive data-authorisations that rivals Amazon.com and Microsoft Corp. have, but Google doesn't. Without certain measures including air gap technology, Google may struggle to win portions of the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, a Pentagon deal worth upwards of $10 billion (roughly Rs. 68,000 crores).

It's unclear if Google has abandoned air gap technology or is still planning to build it over employees' objections. The feature is not technically very difficult, so Google could easily find other engineers to do the work. While over 4,000 people at the company signed a petition against Project Maven, that's roughly 5 percent of total full-time staff. A company spokesperson declined to comment.

Advertisement

Google cloud chief Diane Greene has expressed continued interest in working with government. Federal agencies are among the largest spenders on corporate computing and starting to gravitate toward cloud services. In March, Greene and her deputies proudly touted Google's new approvals under FedRAMP, federal compliance standards for information technology. Google was approved FedRAMP "Moderate," a designation required for almost 80 percent of government cloud contracts. Google cloud staff said internally that the Project Maven deal was "fast-tracking" higher FedRAMP authorisation, according to a Gizmodo report.

For now, Google falls short of rivals. Both Microsoft's Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS) have "High" certificates that authorise them to hold sensitive or classified data and sell to bodies like the Central Intelligence Agency. To do so, both companies had to set up a separate service called a government cloud.

Advertisement

A critical component of that service is the air gap. Put simply, it physically separates computers from others on a network. So rather than store data from multiple companies on a single server or system, as the commercial cloud providers typically do, a company or agency can place its data and computing processes in isolation on a single piece of hardware. That separation is particularly desirable for agencies in national security, says Michael Carter, vice president of Coalfire, a cybersecurity firm. "Amazon and Azure can literally say, 'This is your rack,'" he says. "In the government, they want to know where their data is. So if you want to wipe it, go wipe it."

In sales pitches, Google touts the security features of its cloud service. In a March press briefing, company executives noted how their artificial intelligence software could spot cybersecurity attacks early. "We think that Google cloud is today the most secure cloud out there," Holzle said during the briefing.

Advertisement

The entities most likely to require air-gap security systems are government agencies or financial firms. While experts debate the technology's merits, it does give customers "psychological" comfort, according to Jim Reavis, who runs Cloud Security Alliance, an industry group. "They're used to having their own computer that they look at, their own blinking light," he says. "I do question whether or not that's useful security."

Greene and other Google executives will have to persuade employees it's possible to bid for government contracts without violating Google's new ethical standards. After pledging not to renew the Project Maven contract, which involves using artificial intelligence to analyse drone footage, the company issued a set of AI principles this month that prohibit weapons work. But they don't rule out selling to the military, and Google continues to pursue other Defense Department cloud contracts.

"We are still doing everything we can within these guidelines to support our government, the military and our veterans," Greene wrote in a blog on June 7. "For example, we will continue to work with government organisations on cybersecurity, productivity tools, healthcare, and other forms of cloud initiatives."

Several Googlers protesting Project Maven have complained about poor communication from senior leaders. Most staff outside the cloud unit were unaware of the contract until February-five months after it was signed-when questions about the deal began circulating more widely on internal message boards. At one point, Greene told staff the deal was worth a meagre $9 million (roughly Rs. 61 crores). Subsequent reports revealed Google expected the contract to rake in $15 million (roughly Rs. 101 crores) and grow to as much as $250 million (roughly Rs. 1,700 crores).

Google has yet to address these reports publicly. But on June 8, a day after the company issued its ethical charter, Greene addressed the discrepancy in an internal note. "In speaking about Maven, I did not always have accurate information," she wrote in an email viewed by Bloomberg News. "For example, I said the contract was $9 [million] when it actually was a different number."

Google employees have a history of objecting on ethical grounds. After the Edward Snowden revelations in 2013, several engineers confronted Holzle about allegations the company had assisted the government in its surveillance program. They threatened to resign, telling Holzle, "this isn't why we signed up for the company," according to a former senior executive who attended the meeting. Holzle voiced his support for the engineers, this person says.

The latest confrontation at Google coincides with growing concern about the entire industry's relationship with the US government. Civil rights groups have targeted Amazon for selling facial recognition tech to police departments. Microsoft faced similar heat for its work with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Some Google employees resigned over the Project Maven deal. Tyler Breisacher, a software developer on Google infrastructure who left in April, cited the lack of clear communications about the contract and how Google's software was being used. Management, he says, appeared surprised at the response from employees once they shared more about the program. "It seems like they weren't expecting it to be as controversial as it was," he says.

Breisacher, who joined Google in 2011, says the company has changed. Earlier, if employees felt a decision was bad for Google, its users or the broader world, they had their leaders' ears. "It felt like you were really listened to," he says.

Greene wrote in the internal email that she wanted to address the "trust issue that has developed" in the past five months. She said she regretted not emailing earlier to correct her misstatement about the size of the Project Maven deal. "In the past, I would have," Greene wrote, "but in the current climate of leaks, the sense was that it would be a mistake to do because the correction would leak and start another 'press cycle' that would not be good for any of us."

© 2018 Bloomberg LP

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Oppo Reno 14 Pro 5G Series Set to Launch in India on This Date
  2. Motorola Teases New Phone Launch in India; Could Be the Moto G96 5G
  3. Samsung Galaxy Buds Core With Galaxy AI Features Launched in India
  4. Tecno Pova 7 5G Series Confirmed to Launch in India on This Date
  5. WhatsApp Can Now Summarise Unread Messages for You Using Meta AI
  6. Samsung Smart Monitor M9 Launched Alongside Updated M8 and M7 Models
  7. Nothing Phone 3 Surfaces on Geekbench Ahead of Launch on July 1
  8. Diablo IV, the King of Fighters XV and Jusant Join PS Plus in July
  9. Upcoming Phones in July: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7, OnePlus Nord 5, More
  1. Nothing Phone 3 Confirmed to Feature 50-Megapixel Periscope Telephoto Camera
  2. Vodafone Idea Rolls Out New Max Family Plan with Bundled Netflix Subscription: Price, Benefits
  3. Samsung Galaxy Buds Core TWS With ANC, Galaxy AI Features Launched in India: Price, Specifications
  4. iPhone 16 Available at Rs. 68,400 With Cashback Offer, Making It a Great Deal
  5. Xiaomi Mix Flip 2 With Snapdragon 8 Elite SoC, 50W Wireless Charging Launched: Price, Specifications
  6. Anthropic Now Lets Claude Users Build and Share AI-Powered Interactive Apps
  7. Lumio Arc Projector Teased Ahead of Possible Amazon Prime Day Launch
  8. The Wild Robot Now on Streaming on JioHotstar: A Heartfelt Tale of a Machine Finding Home in the Wild
  9. Final Destination: Bloodlines Now Available on Rent on Prime Video
  10. Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything Available on JioHotstar: What You Need to Know About This American Documentary
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.