Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Businesses Government The Almighty Buck United States

Investors Ask How Much Google Spends On Lobbying 81

Taco Cowboy writes: It has been estimated that Google has spent over $60 million on lobbying in Washington D.C. this year alone, and that figure does not include the money that Google gives to various trade organizations and "third party" groups. According to CNN: "On its website, Google lists 43 trade associations that it belongs to, such as the Ad Council and National Cyber Security Alliance, although it says that is a 'representative listing' and Google doesn't indicate how much money it gives these organizations. Google also has links to over 100 third-party groups like the AARP, Heritage Foundation and iKeepSafe that it 'provides support to.'" A group of Google investors are demanding that Google owns up to what they spend on and how much, and their push stems from one thing, and that thing is mainly connected to political correctness. It's public knowledge that Google contributes to the US Chamber of Commerce, and to some quarters, "the Chamber" is suffering from "Climate Change Denial Symptom" and they are doing their best to cut off any funding to "the Chamber" from Google.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Investors Ask How Much Google Spends On Lobbying

Comments Filter:
  • by OutOnARock ( 935713 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @06:31PM (#49835255)
    When you need your investors to show you how to "do no evil" , wouldn't that mean it doesn't apply any longer?
    • Yeah, everyone knows Google is a bastion of right-wing lobbying and giving. Why, you can just look at all their strictly traditional holiday search page images and their complete lack of focus on left-wing causes in their news releases, promotional materials and spending.

      Good thing we have groups like these "investors" who are concerned not that they're making money, but that Google isn't contributing anything to any group which may in some way not agree with progressives to keep Google "correct" politically.

    • I'm surprised that Google would stoop to involvement in what appears to be a giant system of bribery for favorable government action and attention.

      Neither Democrabs or Repukelicants are willing to seriously abolish what appears to be a illegal system of money worship that circumvents ordinary citizens ability to ask similar favors of our government. And that fucking does NOT rock, bros.

    • When you need your investors to show you how to "do no evil" , wouldn't that mean it doesn't apply any longer?

      Google doesn't get to exist in a system where votes aren't for sale. Perhaps they should just allow the truly psychopathic to buy all the influence? That would be "less Evil", right? Hrmmm?

      Eric Schmidt's debate with Peter Thiel actually goes into some of this strategy a bit, if you want to find out fer reals. I think he probably even said too much, but it's out there.

      • The Koch brothers have spent hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying and received tens of billions of dollars in tax breaks and corporate welfare as a result

        If you consider that the Kochs received close to a hundred to one return on investment, then Google would be stupid NOT to spend the money in a similar effort

        B'sides, they just might convince some of the Luddites that science actually works

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      You do realize that anytime you call up your representative, you're lobbying, right? Voting is a form of indirect lobbying. Essentially, attempting to affect how politicians think is lobbying.
  • by mitgib ( 1156957 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @06:41PM (#49835299) Homepage Journal
    Unless you are a class b share holder, forget about forcing Google to do anything, and most class b stock is in founder hands and does not trade
  • Bribery (Score:5, Insightful)

    by labnet ( 457441 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @06:43PM (#49835305)

    Actually, Google could add a lot of value here.
    They could create a vote buying system, much like their reverse auction ad bid system.

    Have each senator put up the issues they are happy swing vote on and then have all the interest groups bid away.
    It's probably the next logical step in what is effectively now a bribe based system of legislation.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Oh, you mean like this system [ipaidabribe.com] for India (which didn't need Google to create it).

      • Re:Bribery (Score:4, Funny)

        by chihowa ( 366380 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @10:12PM (#49836457)

        Not at all. That's some populist nonsense that's supposed to end bribery. It's no wonder Google had no hand in it.

        What Google needs to make is a system that streamlines bribery, synergizing capitalism and Web 3.0.

    • Actually, Google could add a lot of value here. They could create a vote buying system, much like their reverse auction ad bid system.

      Ahhh..yes - a Google Bank you mean, right?

    • The US Chamber of Commerce is pro bribery [huffingtonpost.com].

      The Chamber is not overtly taking a pro-bribery position. Rather, its lobbying blitz couches the proposed changes as tune-ups, a few safeguards needed to protect against overzealous prosecutors.

      "Our proposals are aimed at preserving existing law enforcement tools so that the government can pursue the bad actors while ensuring that the good actors have clarity and more certainty under the law, which is clearly lacking today," said Harold Kim, a senior vice presiden

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @07:29PM (#49835613)

    Seriously, has this term devolved to the point where it means promoting ANY idea that could be loosely considered left-leaning by the right wing fringe?

    We're talking climate change. It's not an agenda--it's just science, it's neutral. If your policies stem from actively avoiding scientific data, your policies aren't going to be very good. Claiming that science has a leftist bias basically implies that there's no conservative way to deal with reality, and that's simply untrue.

    And even IF we were talking about a liberal agenda, like, I dunno, single-payer healthcare or something... politically correct? Really? That's not the right term at all. Politically correct is about talking politely, using respectful terms for people, so that political discourse can happen without the discussion devolving into name-calling. Since the beginning, it's been a bit of a conservative boogeyman, some sort of proto-government-censorship (different only in that the government doesn't, you know, actually censor anything). To some degree, the demonization of the concept worked. People now no longer seem to spend much time before spouting an epithet or three, and political conversation goes nowhere fast.

    So you're saying supporting policies that are informed by sound science is... er, politeness. No, really, maybe you should keep the political correctness boogeyman and the climate change boogeyman in separate corners, never to mingle again.

  • What is this another case of beat up random people that you can because you can't get the ones you want ?

    http://www.ucsusa.org/sites/de... [ucsusa.org]

    There you go, as of 2011 China is at 27% of the emissions and still growing in both percentage and absolute amount.

    Maybe these people need to disinvest in China and stop buying Chinese products ? Or maybe they just have some sort of a grudge they are pursuing by other means.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      What is this another case of beat up random people that you can because you can't get the ones you want ?

      http://www.ucsusa.org/sites/de... [ucsusa.org]

      There you go, as of 2011 China is at 27% of the emissions and still growing in both percentage and absolute amount.

      Maybe these people need to disinvest in China and stop buying Chinese products ? Or maybe they just have some sort of a grudge they are pursuing by other means.

      Can't do that. China is, at this point, decades ahead of the US in renewable energy tech. There's no way we can address climate change in any reasonable timeframe without using Chinese products, at least in the near term. I don't know if China's huge investment in renewable tech is related to the fact that they don't have a Chamber of Commerce over there, I'll leave that for you to consider.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Crashmarik ( 635988 )

        http://imgur.com/dXHWhNr [imgur.com]

        Do you see the red in that picture ? That's the CO2 mankind has added to the atmosphere. Color me unworried.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          http://imgur.com/dXHWhNr [imgur.com]

          Do you see the red in that picture ? That's the CO2 mankind has added to the atmosphere. Color me unworried.

          What an excellent standard for whether something is a problem! So, if, for example, the ocean levels rose 30 meters, inundating nearly every coastal city and displacing a majority of the human population, I could whip up a chart showing that the volume of water we added to the oceans is really actually just a tiny, barely noticeable red sliver compared to the rest of the water on the planet, and therefore my fellow refugees and I have nothing at all to worry about--almost as if it's not happening at all!

          • 18 years 5 months no warming

            https://wattsupwiththat.files.... [wordpress.com]

            CO2 above the worst case scenario from the IPCC
            Warming Below the best case scenario. from the IPCC

            I applaud your ability to get hysterical and while still believing people who are repeatedly wrong.

            • by PatientZero ( 25929 ) on Thursday June 04, 2015 @02:39AM (#49837269)
              The surface temperature is still warming, just less so. Instead, the energy is being absorbed by the oceans. A warmer ocean still melts sea ice and increases evaporation--another greenhouse gas. The energy imbalance is still there, and the heat must go somewhere. Just because WUWT ignores that basic fact of physics and the data from the oceans doesn't change it.
        • Yeah why worry about tipping a balanced system. I mean, I look outside and I can't even see any CO2 at all! And did you know that it snowed at my house this past winter?! The scientists probably just made up CO2 so they can buy yachts and gold teeth.

      • "decades ahead of the US in renewable energy tech" Can you source this grandiose claim? The only Chinese renewable energy advances were flooding the market with cheap solar panels which were copies of the solar panels designed and manufactured in the US. I am not sure this puts China a decade ahead of the US.

      • What is this another case of beat up random people that you can because you can't get the ones you want ? http://www.ucsusa.org/sites/de... [ucsusa.org] There you go, as of 2011 China is at 27% of the emissions and still growing in both percentage and absolute amount. Maybe these people need to disinvest in China and stop buying Chinese products ? Or maybe they just have some sort of a grudge they are pursuing by other means.

        (I will point out that this large number is only because China has such a large population. In terms of emission per person, USA beats them hands down)

        Can't do that. China is, at this point, decades ahead of the US in renewable energy tech. There's no way we can address climate change in any reasonable timeframe without using Chinese products, at least in the near term. I don't know if China's huge investment in renewable tech is related to the fact that they don't have a Chamber of Commerce over there, I'll leave that for you to consider.

        That is why climate change is a wicked hard problem [ssireview.org]: you can't solve it on your own-- it has to be a collaborative solution involving multiple countries.

        And that, in turn, is why some people would rather deny that the problem exists rather than find a way to solve it: they have an ideology that says the US should never work in collaboration with other nations

    • That makes China drastically more efficient than the USA, since they have over 4 times as many people. Once the USA cuts it's emissions to 1/3 of the current level then maybe China will be the issue.

      • If you are seriously worried about CO2 China is the issue now. It's CO2 output is larger than the U.S. and will soon be larger than the combined output of the U.S. and the E.U. So the question is are you about the climate or are you just a tool of a cause you don't understand ?

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      China exports. The more fair measure of how much a country contributes is to measure consumption. And in that, China is so far behind the US that it doesn't matter. The CO2 they put in the air is for US companies for products on US shelves. If they stopped tomorrow, Apple et. al. would move to Africa or wherever else allows them to pollute with impunity.
  • by tlambert ( 566799 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @07:38PM (#49835659)

    It pretty much doesn't damn well matter. The investors can want whatever they want, and it won't matter.

    Between Sergey, Larry, and Eric, they control more than 50% of the voting stock, and therefore they control the board, and the investors can go pound sand for all of the real fiscal influence they have on the company. The can more or less just shut up and take their profits on the rise of the non-voting stock price, or they can sell their stock and let someone else take the profits.

    PS: I notice no one has mentioned the fact that a lot of the charitable organizations they are giving to are 501(c)(3)'s, and they represent matching contributions for contributions by employees:

    "Google will match employee donations from a minimum gift of $50 up to $6,000 per donor per year."

    https://doublethedonation.com/... [doublethedonation.com]

  • How much do other companies give, when you add it all up?

    I know Microsoft gives to so-called "think tanks" to scientifically prove their propaganda is true.

    Does Microsoft use it's money, and influence, to have smear campaigns published?

    When I see Google singled out like this, I suspect a smear campaign, rather than a neutral party trying to inform the public.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      When I see Google singled out like this, I suspect a smear campaign, rather than a neutral party trying to inform the public.

      This is Santa Claus, I'm making a list and checking it twice. Right now we're checking Google. Because 'G' comes before 'I' and 'M'. Apple is getting a lump of coal for Q4'15.

  • That sells marketing information and sort sometimes produces software. So totally Web 2.0.

  • So big companies corrupt politicians and organisations like FIFA, and nobody complains. Corruption flourishes because some entities propose money to people unable to say no. Both sides should be investigated by justice, but curiously little is done against big companies.

Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

Working...