Google’s Privacy Chief Is Out And Will Not Be Replaced (www.forbes.com)
from Stopthatgirl7@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 08:08
https://lemmy.world/post/16198596

Google’s chief privacy officer, Keith Enright, will depart the tech giant after 13 years, with no plans yet to replace him, as the company restructures its teams in charge of privacy and legal compliance.

Staff were informed of Enright’s departure in mid-May, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter. One told Forbes the news came as a shock to employees, as Enright was well-liked and respected, having steered Google’s privacy team through years in which its data handling practices were held under a microscope by lawmakers, regulators and civil courts.

Matthew Bye, Google’s head of competition law, will be leaving as well, after 15 years with the company and during a critical moment for Google when it comes to antitrust. Last month, the company wrapped up closing arguments in a landmark competition trialbrought on by the Department of Justice, over Google’s contracts with device manufacturers that push users to Google search. Bye did not respond to a request for comment.

#technology

threaded - newest

aniki@lemm.ee on 05 Jun 09:57 next collapse

Paywalled

demonsword@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 13:02 collapse
Alphane_Moon@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 10:58 next collapse

Google had a privacy chief?

What exactly was he doing? Jacking off Pichai?

xep@fedia.io on 05 Jun 12:09 next collapse

Google used to at least pretend to not be amoral, but I think this restructuring pretty much reveals them for what they are now.

1984@lemmy.today on 05 Jun 12:41 next collapse

Vest and rest I guess. :)

magikmw@lemm.ee on 05 Jun 13:08 next collapse

We can only assume he was doing a lot of work that made google just as evil as it is now compared to the alternative without him, which we’ll get now.

kirk781@discuss.tchncs.de on 05 Jun 13:58 next collapse

He was entrusted with protecting Google’s privacy; not it’s customers!

atrielienz@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 04:24 collapse

We know what he wasn’t doing. He wasn’t preventing the leak of internal documents detailing how search works. Which is probably why he’s fired. Someone has to take the fall. Kind of wonder if he’s got a golden parachute.

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 06 Jun 05:36 collapse

He’s ex-C-suite of IBM and Macy’s I’m sure he’s fine.

Exec@pawb.social on 05 Jun 11:32 next collapse

Matthew Bye, Google’s head of competition law, will be leaving as well

Bye Matthew

NutWrench@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 12:43 next collapse

20th century Google: “Don’t be evil.”

Wow. They sure let that motto slide, didn’t they?

eee@lemm.ee on 05 Jun 13:15 next collapse

Don’t don’t be evil

Empricorn@feddit.nl on 05 Jun 14:00 next collapse

I mean, it’s now the same as every massive corporation: “Quarterly profits.”

No single person will ever be as greedy as a Board filled with the fuckers. It will never be enough…

DandomRude@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 15:22 next collapse

They changed it to “do the right thing” around 2015 but never defined what “the right thing” might be - mostly shareholder value, I guess.

DoucheBagMcSwag@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 05 Jun 17:54 collapse

It’s definitely not Do Tha Right Thang

ArtVandelay@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 00:30 collapse

Do Tha Fiduciary Thang just doesn’t quite have the right sound

dinckelman@lemmy.world on 05 Jun 18:32 next collapse

Money always comes first, for most of these companies. The era where your data was private is truly over. Now most of these platforms only give you a choice between your data being sold, and your data being sold for like a 2% cut

Alphane_Moon@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 19:18 collapse

I was young in the 90s/2000s and it honestly felt like computing was a new stage for human progress.

I clearly wasn’t the only one. There was the “A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace” in 1996:

Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you of the past to leave us alone. You are not welcome among us. You have no sovereignty where we gather.

I think the moral of all this is that fundamentally technology doesn’t matter. If you don’t have the public structures to reign in the oligarchs, shills and liars, you’re not going to get anywhere.

SouthFresh@lemmy.ml on 05 Jun 13:06 next collapse

Privacy Schmivacy

MajorHavoc@programming.dev on 05 Jun 16:38 next collapse

In the past I have been surprised to encounter some genuinely privacy-minded folks working at Google.

It’s hard not to see this as an announcement that era is ending now…

I de-Googled awhile ago, based on my personal belief that Google wouldn’t keep those people. I’m not happy to feel like this verifies my worst expectations.

Marcumas@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 02:07 next collapse

Time to bring back AltaVista.

Kolanaki@yiffit.net on 06 Jun 04:29 next collapse

Matthew Bye is also leaving

Nominative determinism tells me he must leave a lot of jobs.

GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.ca on 06 Jun 05:33 collapse

Nominative determinism is pretty accurate. Steve Jobs did generate a lot of jobs. Bill Gates had a lot of gates to his name.

</joke> just in case it wasn’t obvious

Sam_Bass@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 04:34 next collapse

Since when has google been about privacy in any form?

JeffKerman1999@sopuli.xyz on 06 Jun 04:42 collapse

When they were a search engine 20+ years ago

Sam_Bass@lemmy.world on 06 Jun 09:25 collapse

Oh yeah i forgot heh

semitones@lemmy.ml on 06 Jun 05:15 next collapse

I hope this is not fallout from the 404 Media article

Whirlygirl9@kbin.melroy.org on 07 Jun 03:01 collapse

I'm trying my best to un-Google. i switched to firefox and ddg but the mapping... ugh. i cant quit the driving maps.

ruse8145@lemmy.sdf.org on 08 Jun 23:30 collapse

Magic earth is ok for nav but the problem with all openstreetmaps options remains the terrible search. This has been my experience for the past decade.

Recently the folks at jmp.chat released an alpha search which passes navigation intents in Android to the nav app of your choice, so I think we are getting close to a real alternative in the next few years.