2 Şubat 2016 Salı

No, Google Is Not Going To Create Fake Search Results For ISIS

The Google internet homepage is displayed on a product at a store in London last month.

Neil Hall / Reuters

SAN FRANCISCO — Reports that Google would send intentionally wrong search results to would-be jihadis are incorrect, according to a Google spokesman who spoke to BuzzFeed News Tuesday night.

The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, and Huffington Post were among many outlets to mistakenly report on Tuesday that Google had launched a pilot program to re-direct the search results of terms associated with extremist groups. Reports described the program as taking search terms connected to jihadi groups such as ISIS or Al Qaeda and re-directing them to results for de-radicalization groups and messages instead.

The stories were all apparently based on a misinterpretation of remarks made by a Google executive at a U.K parliament committee hearing on countering extremism.

Yet Google Spokesman William Fitzgerald told BuzzFeed News Tuesday night that that the program Google is introducing has nothing to do with re-directing search results.

"What was referenced is a pilot Google AdWords Grants program that's in the works right now with a handful of eligible non-profit organizations. The program will enable NGOs to place counter-radicalization ads against search queries of their choosing," Fitzgerald wrote to BuzzFeed News in an email. He said the Google AdWords grants program was basically a program to allow non-profits to decide what search terms they wanted to run their ads against.

Google, Facebook, and Twitter are among dozens of Silicon Valley companies that have come under pressure in recent years to help fight jihadi propaganda online. Last month, senior White House officials visited San Francisco to meet with those companies to discuss ways to work together to counteract ISIS propaganda on the web.

The reports about the supposed new Google program emerged Tuesday after Anthony House, senior manager for public policy and communications at Google, appeared in London at a Home Affairs Select Committee hearing. House was in the U.K. alongside executives from Facebook and Twitter to discuss the ways in which ISIS and other jihadi groups recruit online.

“We are working on counter-narratives around the world,” House was quoted as telling the committee. "This year one of the things we’re looking at is we are running two pilot programs. One is to make sure these types of views are more discoverable. The other is to make sure when people put potentially damaging search terms into our search engine they also find these counter narratives.”



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