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cee_el123 | 3 years ago
the most frustrating question I have - Why isn't Google restoring his account despite him being cleared by the police ? Why are they not even explaining this ?
cee_el123 | 3 years ago
the most frustrating question I have - Why isn't Google restoring his account despite him being cleared by the police ? Why are they not even explaining this ?
crazygringo|3 years ago
It's one thing to get the attention of some Googlers on the front page of HN, it's a whole other order of magnitude for the front page of the NYT.
I cannot imagine how this hasn't become an urgent priority for Sundar himself to make sure this gets fixed and fast, at a minimum in these known situations. What could they possibly still be debating or deciding inside there at Google...? Police determined no charges, so restore the accounts. I don't see any potential risk, legal/reputational/otherwise, this would open up. Google's inaction here boggles the mind.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/issue/todayspaper/2022/08/22/todays-...
codefreeordie|3 years ago
When I was at Google, I was continuously amazed at how hard it was to stop this kind of own-goal when we knew it was happening. (Based on where I was inside Google, I came across (dramatically-less-sensational) obviously dumb decisions of this sort).
It was always shockingly hard as a Googler to get traction on fixing some customer's bureaucracy-navigation problem -- but usually it getting into the press finally got someone through the bureaucracy.
bogwog|3 years ago
Rather than improve their AI to avoid more of these types of false positives, or invest in their customer support teams to deal with these situations, they can eliminate this entire class of false positives by scaring people with articles like this.
EDIT: which if true, is kind of extra fucked up when you consider the potential consequences of delaying medical treatment for a child.
wswope|3 years ago
gumby|3 years ago
As the last paragraph of this essay points out: tough. Google needs to step up and deal with the consequences of its own size.
golemotron|3 years ago
This is where regulation can help.
Tangurena2|3 years ago
We saw similar stuff when banks were getting bailed out because they were "too big to fail". That meant that their very size was a threat to the financial system - they were really too big to allow to exist.