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Comment by freedomben

5 years ago

Yes I agree with you (and thank you for your medium post by the way. Our only chance of ever improving the situation is to call attention to it. I fully believe Google leadership has to be aware of it at this point, but it clearly won't be a priority to them to fix until the public backlash/pressure is great enough that they have to).

Just to avoid any misreading, I didn't say I thought it was malice on Google's part. My opinion (as mentioned above, is):

> I still don't think it's outright malice, but the doubling down on these horrific practices (algorithmically and opaquely destroying people) is so egregious that it doesn't really matter.

So they are not (at least in my opinion without seeing evidence to the contrary) outright malicious. But from the perspective of a site owner, I think they should be considered as such and therefore mitigations and defense should be a part of your planning (disaster recovery, etc).

I do not trust management folks, whose paychecks and promotions are dependent on how successful such hostile actions are, to take the right decisions. I also do not think that they are deliberately ignorant/indifferent or that calling attention to it will do any good. These types of individuals got to where they are largely by knowing fully well that their actions are malicious and legal. I used to work under such people, and currently interact with and work with such people on a very regular basis (you could even consider me as part of them tbh). It is very much possible that the management level folks at Google don't have an ounce of goodness in them, and will always see such decisions from a zero-sum perspective.

To make it relatable, do you care so much for a mosquito if it's buzzing around you, disrupting your work and taking a toll on your patience? Because your SaaS is a mosquito to Google. After a certain point, you will want to kill the mosquito, and that's exactly what Google execs think so as to get to their next paycheck.