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Google Businesses

Google Engineers Are Organizing A Walk Out To Protest The Company's Protection Of An Alleged Sexual Harasser (buzzfeednews.com) 400

In response to a story about Google paying and protecting former executive Andy Rubin following an investigation into sexual misconduct, a group of 200 Google employees are organizing a "women's walk." From a report: A group of more than two hundred engineers at Google are organizing a company-wide "women's walk" walkout for later this week to protest recent revelations about the search giant's protection of employees that had allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct, according to four people familiar with the situation inside Google. The protest, which is expected to happen on Thursday, comes in light of a story by the New York Times last week into the misbehavior of Android creator Andy Rubin and other executives at the company, some of whom still have positions of prominence at Google. Google gave Rubin a reported $90 million exit package in 2014, following an investigation into an allegation that he had coerced another employee to perform oral sex on him. That investigation reportedly found that allegation to be credible.
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Google Engineers Are Organizing A Walk Out To Protest The Company's Protection Of An Alleged Sexual Harasser

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  • Fire them all (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:10PM (#57557253)

    I'd be happy to take a position at Google. And I won't spend more time on SJW virtue signaling than I do on my job.

    • Re:Fire them all (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:16PM (#57557289) Journal

      I'd be happy to take a position at Google. And I won't spend...time on SJW virtue signaling

      Come on, they paid somebody $90m to receive a bj. Call me a SJW if you want, but that's just plain stupidity on Google's part in my book. It encourages more BS.

      • "Come on, they paid somebody $90m to receive a bj. Call me a SJW if you want, but that's just plain stupidity on Google's part in my book. It encourages more BJ."

        FTFY

      • Re:Fire them all (Score:4, Insightful)

        by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:51PM (#57557589)

        It's not like they had a choice.

        Andy Rubin sold Android to Google for 50 million dollars initially.

        But it's only with his continued leadership that Android became what it is today.

        And that continued leadership didn't come for free.

      • Re:Fire them all (Score:5, Informative)

        by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Monday October 29, 2018 @07:51PM (#57558809) Journal

        I'd be happy to take a position at Google. And I won't spend...time on SJW virtue signaling

        Come on, they paid somebody $90m to receive a bj. Call me a SJW if you want, but that's just plain stupidity on Google's part in my book. It encourages more BS.

        That's a deep mischaracterization. Google had already given Rubin $150M in stock that vested over time. By firing him, they effectively took that stock away, opening themselves up to a lawsuit in which they'd have had to prove that they had cause for firing Rubin. It would have been a circus. So instead they gave him $90M (effectively taking back $60M) in exchange for which he agreed to go quietly.

        I think they could and should have fired him with no parachute and dealt with the PR storm. But saying they paid him $90M to receive a BJ is ridiculous. It would be more accurate (though still not very) to say that they fined him $60M for it.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by lgw ( 121541 )

      This walk-out is great. I don't like the part where they come back, though.

      Still, this will make things much easier for the next round of layoffs. [dilbert.com]

    • by koavf ( 1099649 )
      What a brave stand, Anonymous Coward.
  • What protection? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:14PM (#57557275)
    Since the company essentially fired Rubin, I'm not sure what protection they gave him.

    The previous story made it sound as though the money was actually through stock options or some other benefits package that he'd previously negotiated in order to stay with the company. Unless Google had some kind of morals clause as a part of that, they wouldn't have any good reason to deprive him of what they had already negotiated.

    So the company investigated a report (i.e., they didn't just brush it off), removed Rubin after finding the allegation credible (i.e., merely likely enough to have happened), and paid him what he was owed based on previous negotiations. I'm not sure what Google did wrong in any of this to warrant a protest by anyone. Normally this is the type of shit that just gets covered up, so Google should be getting praised by the people protesting this if anything.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:20PM (#57557321)

      He was publicly decried to have committed a disapproved act by the moral outrage police. The fact that he hasn't been murdered in the street, and his family humiliated with public rapings and beatings is grounds enough for the protest.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I'm not sure what Google did wrong

      Pander to irrational SJWs. They created this shit show. They can suffer it.

    • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:53PM (#57557609) Homepage Journal

      According to the NYT, the Google wasn't obligated to pay him that money. It chose to do that and treat the whole thing as a normal amicable parting. They had the option to do the whole you come in to work and find your desk and a security guard out on the lawn.

      But, of course, that treatment is for peons.

      • They had the option to do the whole you come in to work and find your desk and a security guard out on the lawn.

        But did they really have that option when no formal charges were ever fired, and Rubin himself disputes the whole thing (claiming it was something his Ex-Wife made up to improve her position in divorce proceedings).

        I'd say Google did what it reasonably could, got rid of him while at the same time allowing for the possibility the charges were false.

        • Such contracts typically do not require a criminal conviction to fire someone for cause. And typically it's firing for cause that stops golden parachutes.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          Many professionals get that treatment without even an allegation of wrong doing.

      • According to the NYT, the Google wasn't obligated to pay him that money. It chose to do that and treat the whole thing as a normal amicable parting. They had the option to do the whole you come in to work and find your desk and a security guard out on the lawn.

        But, of course, that treatment is for peons.

        I'm sure they had other options as well. The most important thing was to remove the person in a reasonable amount of time (once they established the charge was credible) to prevent recurrence. Any option that did not include paying the contracted obligation would naturally result in a lengthy, costly, and ugly legal battle, possibly even bringing the victim back into the mix. So they cut bait and ran.

      • Or they treated the whole thing as a "We're not quite sure if this was actually abuse of power or merely a somewhat inappropriate office dalliance, but in either case you should have known better. So we are firing you but we're giving you some benefit of the doubt, and we're not taking your golden parachute as well". That sentiment, that there is something between innocence and the maximum possible penalty, seems to be lost on the #metoo crowd.
      • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Monday October 29, 2018 @07:56PM (#57558843) Journal

        According to the NYT, the Google wasn't obligated to pay him that money.

        Sort of. By firing him they took away $150M in unvested stock that they'd given him just weeks before. Without an agreement he could have sued for that money, unless they could prove the termination was justified. I have no idea if he'd have gotten it, but he might have... and created a PR firestorm in the process. It's possible that the $90M payout saved Google money.

      • According to the NYT, the Google wasn't obligated to pay him that money.

        The NYT is retarded; nobody gives that kind of money away for free.

    • I make it a policy to never sh** where I eat.

      You would think that anyone successful enough to have negotiated such a large pay out would know better. It doesn't matter who started what in the end it's he said she said and no one wins. Unless they where recording it and that's an entirely different problem if it ever reaches the public.

  • What's going on? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:16PM (#57557287) Homepage

    Probably gonna be downvoted to hell but I don't care.

    What's with all this witch-hunting nowadays? Notice how many things in this story are nothing but a pure speculation: "allegedly engaged", "a reported $90 million exit package", "an allegation", "reportedly found that allegation to be credible".

    Nothing in this story has been proven. There's never been a lawsuit. Nothing has officially been revealed.

    First, it was Hollywood actors and even directors. Now, CEOs or high ranking officers. Can anyone name a single instance of relatively recent sexual harassment allegation to be conclusively proven in the court of law?

    I'm not trying to downplay this story or say that women are never oppressed/sexually harassed at work. I just want such stories to become a tad more factual than they've been so far. Someone said something to someone and now the whole Internet is buzzing about it. What the hell?

    I'm not a woman, of course, but why on Earth at least a number of rape victims seek legal counsel, press charges and somehow act on the harassment in a provable manner while this recent witch-hunting has been fueled by pure speculations and seemingly nothing else?

    • by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:21PM (#57557333)
      The only witch hunts are against straight white males, especially those in positions of power. Similar actions by others are ignored. The extreme left doesn't want equality, they want special rules and privileges that that only apply to their chosen team members.
      • by HeckRuler ( 1369601 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @06:04PM (#57558155)

        The wing-nuts specifically want equity over equality [github.com]. That is, they don't want equality of opportunity, they want equality of outcome. That post is also a perfect example of the Motte and Bailey strategy [paul-m-jones.com]. The first part is the actual goal, the bailey. Inequal treatment in their favor. The second part is what they defend, the motte, which looks entirely reasonable. They are also against meritocracy. [postmeritocracy.org] It is horrific. I can't believe that this got into the linux kernel and that people are standing by this sort of drivel.

        But people get swept up in movements. It becomes a tribalism thing of us vs them. You know it's a bad witch-hunt when any call for moderation gets you labeled as a witch. Democrats need to self-police and protest the protection and acceptance of these sort of hate-filled racist and sexist bigots. Otherwise our party is going to get as crazy as the TEA-partiers.

        (But Cosby is black. You too also need to tone down the racist rhetoric)

      • Perhaps people in positions of power are the ones most likely to manipulate them for nefarious purposes, and that's why straight white males seem to be caught doing this kind of stuff more so than others?

      • by _merlin ( 160982 )

        They came after Bill Cosby (black), Kevin Spacey (gay), and John "Cap'n Crunch" Draper (gay). They're all men, but not all white and straight.

    • by tsqr ( 808554 )

      Can anyone name a single instance of relatively recent sexual harassment allegation to be conclusively proven in the court of law?

      If your definition of "recent" includes "anything within the statute of limitations period, I guess you could point to the recent conviction of Bill Cosby. We'll have to wait and see with Harvey Weinstein, where despite things getting murky lately, he's still facing criminal charges for rape and "performing a forcible sex act".

    • It's a witch hunt for the sake of hunting witches - it gives them a chance to give others their opinion. No one really cares about women, not even women. I feel like if there was a rich white guy that went on television and openly talked about abusing power over women, no one would say anything. They might even vote him into the position of US president.

      I'm a white male, and I fully understand that women rule the universe. However, women in the US have traded in their own sense of worth, for whateve
    • Can anyone name a single instance of relatively recent sexual harassment allegation to be conclusively proven in the court of law?

      Cosby has been mentioned. Others (e.g. Kevin Spacey, Morgan Spurlock, Louis CK) have admitted it.

      US courts only work fast when poor people are involved. For rich people, justice is slow.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by jeff4747 ( 256583 )

      Nothing in this story has been proven. There's never been a lawsuit. Nothing has officially been revealed.

      See the smoking crater that used to be known as Gawker? That's what happened. So now coverage has to be mealy-mouthed.

      Including referring to someone as a "convicted " instead of just using the common name for that crime. That way the publication can claim it is just deferring to the courts.

      So no, this is not a new creeping SJW witch hunt on totally innocent men. This is a shift in news coverage to add more butt-covering. If this was 10 years ago, "alleged" would not be so liberally used in the article

    • Many victims hesitate because in the end, most cases kind of devolve into a he-said-she-said situation, and that goes nowhere since the accused is innocent until proven guilty. Very few of such cases are straight up rape, i.e. guy pulls woman into the bushes and violates her forcibly. Sometimes the guy spikes her drink or gets her good and drunk and then takes advantage. Sometimes the guy and girl are seen to leave the bar together happily, they go back to his place for a night cap and then he goes a bit
  • Mob justice (Score:5, Insightful)

    by johannesg ( 664142 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:19PM (#57557315)

    No innocent until proven guilty, no jury of equals, no rule of law, only mob justice. And that's supposed to hold the moral high ground? Why don't they just walk to his house and lynch him, if it's so bad...

    • Re:Mob justice (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Jfetjunky ( 4359471 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:39PM (#57557475)
      First it was trial by jury, then it was trial by media, now it's trial by social network and media.
    • Re:Mob justice (Score:5, Insightful)

      by geek ( 5680 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:42PM (#57557503)

      Nothing new. Been going on for centuries. Its either shit like Salem or the Red Scare or the 24 hour news cycle going after OJ or Scott Peterson for weeks/months/years.

      Our system of justice was specifically designed to move slowly to reduce the chances of mistakes and failures. That is in direct contrast to the instant gratification society we've become and the needs/desires of the media to get instant ratings. It's one outrage/tragedy after another.

      • Our system of justice was specifically designed to move slowly to reduce the chances of mistakes and failures.

        Yes, but the problem is that this careful approach has been subverted with those able to afford large legal teams. That in no way makes the current mob-justice in any way acceptable but if the outcome of a trial depends significantly on the size of your bank account that is in no sense justice.

        What we need to do is fix the justice system to maintain the care but remove the bias towards wealth before people get so angry with it that it gets torn down and replaced by something a lot less careful.

    • Re:Mob justice (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Torodung ( 31985 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @05:07PM (#57557745) Journal

      An HR department is not a criminal court. They don't have to presume innocence.

      If the HR department were to lynch the guy, they would be in criminal court PDQ. In this case, they fired the guy, and people don't like that Google had to abide by his employment agreement and give him his termination compensation.

      Guess what, folks? They do, therefore, given a contract and a legal obligation to honor that contract, he gets the money.

      He was fired. That's all you're gettin'. March all you want. It's stupid.

      • An HR department is not a criminal court. They don't have to presume innocence.

        If the HR department were to lynch the guy, they would be in criminal court PDQ. In this case, they fired the guy, and people don't like that Google had to abide by his employment agreement and give him his termination compensation.

        Guess what, folks? They do, therefore, given a contract and a legal obligation to honor that contract, he gets the money.

        He was fired. That's all you're gettin'. March all you want. It's stupid.

        Exactly this... If he had been found guilty in a court of law they might have a clause in the contract that would allow them to terminate his employment without having to pay a dime. But since it was only an allegation, it has no bearing on the contract and their only option is to fire him and pay the termination amount.

    • I'm sorry, I seem to have missed the part where he was incarcerated for this. Could you point it out to me?

      Oh wait...he wasn't.

      Well, then perhaps you could point out the part where he was forced to pay restitution.

      Oh wait...he wasn't.

      Huh....it turns out this isn't a trial at all, and it also turns out there is no Constitutional right to a job at Google.

  • by L_R_Shaw ( 5544684 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:20PM (#57557323)

    Absolutely no one should be surprised when China quickly takes over the United States as world tech leader.

    To quote/paraphrase a vile and toxic SJW:

    "you made your SJW bed. Now get fucked in it" Google.

    • Things were looking really good over there for a while. But then they got a communist dictator for life, the social credit score turned out to be as horrific as the fear-mongers said, and they've had decades of explosive growth that's come to an end. They have a new middle class that wants to get paid for their labor. They've made strides in air pollution at least, but it was straight-up killing people at crazy-bad levels.

      Oppression comes in a lot of different forms. Moving to china would not improve your

  • by russotto ( 537200 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:50PM (#57557583) Journal

    Google's got over 85,000 employees. Probably half of them in the various south bay campuses. Two hundred being gone for a day isn't going to be noticed. Though I imagine eng-misc@ and industryinfo@ and memegen might be a little quieter.

    • The money paid may have been a contract buy out. We may never know since facts are no longer important in SJW America. I agree that 200 engineers won't make a dent. It shouldn't even be news, other than the story seems intended to make men in power look bad.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Depending on who decides to walk out, productivity might even go UP. I know I get more done when I'm not being constantly bugged by engineers who are more concerned about talking politics.

  • Allegations (Score:4, Insightful)

    by scourfish ( 573542 ) <scourfish@ y a h o o.com> on Monday October 29, 2018 @04:52PM (#57557601)
    If the guy is found to be actually a piece of shit who sexually harasses women, and the company protects him, then I would support these people. If they are protesting with just allegations, then they should be fired.
  • Sheesh! We old hippies would have held a sit-in instead of a walk-out.
    At least there's a cafeteria with free stuff inside.

  • Other than putting their employer in bad light this makes no sense to me. How about writing an internal letter to Sundar Pitchai or the board, if there are reasons to be upset? Or just quit citing the problem. That would gain some effective PR. This just seems silly and childish as many hashtag (pseudo) feminist actions these days. I honestly don't get it.

    Our is it just some teenie service personnel looking for attention?

  • Many comments here only prove one thing, people have double standards, and when someone of a group people here believe they belong to get accused they call the accuser SWJ and lair. Then state the person being accused should continue in his position of power.

    But when a Priest is accused of the same thing, the very same people who are defending these other abusers are out there with pitch forks and torches looking for him.

    It is time we start taking the accuser seriously instead of defending the accused, may

    • by shess ( 31691 ) on Monday October 29, 2018 @06:37PM (#57558403) Homepage

      Many comments here only prove one thing,

      That slashdot has been overrun by Anonymous Coward Snowflakes who can't stand for something to happen without labelling it a conspiracy of the SJWs?

      I mean, don't get me wrong, slashdot has not been a go-to place for intelligent discussion for a very long time, but now it's becoming #gamergate enough that I'm kind of thinking I should go elsewhere for news. I don't even care if they're trolls or if they really believe this, because it's like debating whether you'd rather swim in a pool of vomit or a pool of shit.

    • by malkavian ( 9512 )

      You'll find most of the comments, if a priest is convicted of something, they'll come out with the torches. If they're accused, you'll see a lot of "show us what you got".
      And to me the "Show us what evidence you have" is a good way to start anything. If you don't have evidence, you only have conjecture. Or an assertion or accusation.
      The reason we have courts of law are so that people who have really bad things happen have recourse, and people accused of something also have a chance of being cleared of th

  • And do NOT vote for Gavin Newsom who has sexual misconduct [sacbee.com] in his own past. Nah, who am I kidding, it's SJWs in the Bay, they'll ignore that because he's the "correct" kind of guy...

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