Name of the Registrant: Alphabet Inc.
Name of Person relying on exemption - Christina O’Connell
Written materials are submitted pursuant to Rule 14a-6(g) (1) promulgated
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Submission is not required of this filer under the terms of the Rule, but is made voluntarily
in the interest of public disclosure and consideration of these important issues.
The proponents urge you to vote FOR the Shareholder Proposal calling
for a Human Rights Assessment of Data Center Siting, Item 10 at the Alphabet Inc. Annual Meeting of Shareholders on June 2 2023
To Alphabet Shareholders:
SumOfUs urges you to vote FOR proposal 10 at the annual
meeting of Alphabet’s shareholders on June 2, 2023. The Proposal requests that the Board of Directors commission a report
assessing the human rights impact of siting of Google Cloud Data Centers in countries of significant human rights concern including Saudi
Arabia, and the Company’s strategies for mitigating the related impacts.
Data Operations in Human Rights Hotspots
Resolved: Shareholders request the
Board of Directors commission a report assessing the siting of Google Cloud Data Centers in countries of significant human rights concern,
and the Company’s strategies for mitigating the related impacts.
The report, prepared at reasonable
cost and omitting confidential and proprietary information, should be published on the Company’s website within six months of the
2023 shareholders meeting.
Supporting Statement:
Shareholders are concerned by Alphabet’s
announced plans1 to expand data center operations in locations reported by the US State Department’s Country Reports
on Human Rights Practices to present significant human rights violations.
These include Jakarta, Indonesia where
government opponents face prison for insulting the president or government officials online; Doha, Qatar where security forces interrogate
social media users for tweets critical of government officials; and Delhi, India where the government frequently orders internet shutdowns
and where Google’s Transparency report showed a 69% increase in government requests for user data in 2019 and an additional 50%
by 2021.
Of particular concern is the plan to
locate a Google Cloud Data Center in Saudi Arabia. The US State Department Country Report2 details the highly restrictive Saudi
control of all internet activities and pervasive government surveillance, arrest, and prosecution of online activity. Human rights activists
have reliably reported3 that “Saudi authorities went so far as to recruit internal Twitter employees in the US to
extract personal information and spy on private communications of exiled Saudi activists.” Given this history and use of spyware
to violate privacy rights of dissidents, the choice to locate here is particularly troubling4.
In response to human rights activists,
our company stated that “an independent human rights assessment was conducted for the Google Cloud Region in Saudi Arabia, and
Google took steps to address matters identified as part of that review.5” Despite our company’s declaration
that “Transparency is core to our commitment to respect human rights,” neither the Company’s human rights assessment
for Saudi Arabia nor the resulting actions have been made public.
Alphabet’s Human Rights Policy notes that:
In everything we do,
including launching new products and expanding our operations around the globe, we are guided by internationally recognized human rights
standards.
Yet, the company’s decisions
of siting cloud data centers in human rights hot spots occur behind closed doors, without the promised transparency. A report sufficient
to fulfill the proposal’s essential objectives would examine the scope, implementation, and robustness of the company’s human
rights due diligence processes on siting of cloud computing operations. It would assess, with an eye toward the the rights enshrined
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the standards established in the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights (UNGPs) and in the Global Network Initiative Principles (GNI Principles), the priorities and potential impacts on people, any
mitigating actions, any tracking of outcomes, and whether the company identifies and engages rights-holders to ensure its human rights
efforts are well informed.
| (1) | https://techcrunch.com/2020/03/04/google-cloud-announces-four-new-regions-as-it-expands-its-global-footprint/ |
| (2) | d-https://www.state.gov/reports/2020-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices/saudi-arabia/ |
| (3) | https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/05/26/saudi-arabia-google-should-halt-plans-establish-cloud-region |
| (4) | https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-charges-ex-twitter-employees-spying-for-saudi-arabia-royal-family/ |
| (5) | https://www.accessnow.org/cms/assets/uploads/2021/02/Google-Cloud-Response-to-Access-Now-anCIPPIC.pdf |
Analysis
One year ago, we raised this proposal with
Alphabet for a shareholder vote at the 2022 Annual Meeting. Independent investors like yourself (excluding dual share votes of Directors,
Officers and Mr. Schmidt) voted 57.60% in support, a dramatic showing of concern for the importance of transparency to stakeholders and
investors about the human rights implications of operating in locations in countries with highly problematic human rights records. We
appreciate that support and are pleased this year to be joined by Dana Investments, The Marianist and the Missionary Oblates of
Mary Immaculate-United States Province as co-filers.
Unfortunately, even with such overwhelming
support, Alphabet has taken no steps to address our concerns. There has been no increase in transparency or the disclosures required by
the very human rights standards our company points to in its response for the second (a few scant paragraphs in two blog posts which never
reference human rights, human rights standards or principles, or mitigations of human rights challenges at all). And still, not one of
the 39 human rights organizations which have requested a view of the company’s claimed assessment have received any information
at all.
The Proposal which we again file requests that
the Board of Directors commission a report assessing the siting of Google Cloud Data Centers in countries of significant human rights
concern, and the Company’s strategies for mitigating the related impacts.
The Company’s current level of disclosure
does not allow investors and other stakeholders to understand the content of Company assessments and deliberations on significant human
rights concerns as identified in the Proposal. It is essential for investors to have genuine transparency regarding impacts and mitigation
measures as opposed to the vague disclosures of commitments and processes described in existing Company disclosures.
Alphabet has not met its burden of providing
such transparency for the choice to locate new Cloud Data Centers in countries identified by the US State Department as locations of significant
human rights violations specifically tied to digital rights and governmental access of private data.
The Proposal does not probe too deeply or inappropriately
limit the discretion of the board and management. It does not limit board and management deliberation or options in addressing human rights
risks, or require the company to halt or modify any particular contracts or arrangements, but only to provide transparency on how it is
addressing human rights impacts and mitigation.
There are significant human rights concerns
that call for disclosure to shareholders
The Company has still not provided shareholders
with a Human Rights Impact Assessment report that adheres to standards set by the international community for these locations or provided
information on the planned mitigation of human rights vulnerabilities identified in such reports. The Company does claim to have such
a report for the Saudi Arabia location but has not identified the source or expertise of the assessors, has not published or shared this
report with primary stakeholders and has not published the resulting mitigation plan it claims to have implemented.
The
Company has refused to share the assessment with the 39 Human Rights organizations that have questioned the siting of this data center.
The Company has also not provided information on what organization undertook that “independent human rights assessment” and
it has not provided information on the “matters identified” or “steps [taken].” The
organizations have cited several human rights violations that they argue should give Google pause. Saudi Arabia has a documented history
of seeking to spy on and violate its citizen’s privacy, includingallegedly
recruiting Twitter employees1 to
spy on that company from within. Late last year one of these spies, who had not fled the US, was convicted and sentenced for this espionage2.
It’s also taken extreme and violent measures to silence dissent from people in positions to
criticize, most recently with the murder and dismemberment of Washington Post journalistJamal
Khashoggi in 2018.
_____________________________
1 Colin
Lecher, November 6, 2019, “Two former Twitter employees charged with spying for Saudi Arabia,” https://www.theverge.com/2019/11/6/20952335/twitter-employees-saudi-arabia-spying-arrests
2 Kevin Collier, December
14, 2022, “Former Twitter employee sentenced to more than three years in prison for spying for Saudi
Arabia, ”https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/former-twitter-employee-sentenced-three-years-prison-spying-saudi-arab-rcna61384
Not only will the company not disclose the
human rights assessment to leading human rights organizations, it has not agreed to provide it to journalists reporting on this issue.
News coverage in the May 2021 edition of the global data center trade publication, Data Center Dynamics3 noted that
the Company “did not publish the assessment, nor did it say what steps it took.”
The
same global trade publication noted on December 3, 2021 in later reporting on the Company’s plans to go ahead with the data center
noted in an “Update” that “Google has confirmed that it conducted an assessment for the region. It will not make
the assessment public.”
The
seriousness of the potential risks and business impacts can be seen in the news media attention of the decision. Along
with risks related to security and data privacy, Bloomberg4 raised concerns about the impact on employees of Alphabet choosing
a site in Saudi Arabia, writing:
Google
will start selling its cloud-computing services in Saudi Arabia through a deal with oil producer
Aramco,
risking a backlash from staff who oppose doing business with the fossil fuel industry or regimes accused of human rights abuses.
The
partnership gives Alphabet
Inc.’s Google regulatory clearance to set up what
it calls a “cloud region” in the Kingdom, the companies
said
on Monday. Employees at Google have called on the company to abstain
from work in the oil and gas industry, citing environmental concerns, and work with authoritarian regimes…
Later that
year, Google released a set of public principles for its technology and artificial intelligence after staff protests over its work. That
included a prohibition on AI systems “whose purpose contravenes widely accepted principles of international law and human rights.”
CNN
Business5 reported:
Google
announced plans late last year to establish a "cloud region" in Saudi Arabia in partnership with
Saudi
Aramco. Google (GOOGL)
said that services offered as part of its agreement with the mammoth state oil company would allow businesses
in the region to "confidently grow and scale their offerings."
But
groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have criticized the deal, citing concerns raised following the 2018 killing
of journalist Jamal Khashoggi and allegations that Saudi Arabia uses cyber tools to spy on dissidents.
"There
are numerous potential human rights risks of establishing a Google Cloud region in Saudi Arabia that include violations of the rights
to privacy, freedom of expression and association, non-discrimination, and due process," the groups said in a
statement
on Wednesday…
_____________________________
3 Sebastian
Moss, December 3, 2021 "Google Cloud's Saudi Arabian data center will be built in Dammam" https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/google-clouds-saudi-arabian-data-center-will-be-built-in-dammam/
4 Bergen,
M. December 21, 2020 "Google’s Aramco Deal Risks Irking Staff Over Oil, Politics" https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-12-21/google-brings-its-cloud-business-to-saudi-arabia-with-aramco
5
Riley, C. May 26, 2021. "Google urged to abandon Saudi cloud project" https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/26/tech/google-saudi-arabia-cloud/index.html
The
rights groups want Google to engage in "meaningful consultation with potentially affected groups, including human rights organizations
from the region" as part of a review and to publish the findings. They also want Google to specify how it would handle any requests
from the Saudi government that are "inconsistent with human rights norms."
And Business Insider6
noted:
The
stated fear among campaigners is not that Google will directly assist Saudi authorities' attempts to silence dissent, but that those authorities
have shown no qualms about infiltrating technology companies — and demanding that they hand over user data. In at least one case,
the Saudi government appears to have placed spies within a US social media company,
Twitter,
to obtain information it could not get through legal
means.
This
reference to placing “spies” at Twitter refers to the Saudi’s alleged previous
recruitment and use of Twitter employees to spy on government opposition figures during their employment. As the Brooking Institute Senior
Fellow Wittes told the Washington Post7:
The case shows “just
how early” the pursuit of [Crown Prince] Mohammed [bin Salman Al Saud’s]
critics began as well as “a willingness to pursue these people even when it
involves the subversion of major American corporations and the targeting of people in friendly countries,” said Brookings Institution
senior fellow Tamara Cofman Wittes.
And as CBS8 reported:
In
the new indictment, the US government provides more detail on whose information was allegedly taken. According to the new indictment,
Abouammo and Alzabarah accessed information on the accounts of journalists, celebrities, and public interest and branded organizations
in the Middle East.
This
example of the Saudi Arabian government’s use of spies placed inside a similar US based technology platform in order to access the
private information of human rights activists has already had disastrous consequences9 and has led to litigation against Twitter:
In
a previous interview,
Ali Al-Ahmed
told Insider that the hack had led to his sources back in Saudi Arabia being killed, tortured, or disappeared.
_____________________________
6 Davis,
C. and Langley, H. Business Insider, "Google urged to halt cloud-computing project in Saudi Arabia over human rights concerns"
.May 25, 2021 https://www.businessinsider.com/google-urged-to-halt-cloud-computing-project-in-saudi-arabia-2021-5
7 Ellen Nakashima
and Greg Bensinger. November4 6, 2019 "Former Twitter employees charged with spying for Saudi Arabia by digging into the accounts
of kingdom critics" https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/former-twitter-employees-charged-with-spying-for-saudi-arabia-by-digging-into-the-accounts-of-kingdom-critics/2019/11/06/2e9593da-00a0-11ea-8bab-0fc209e065a8_story.html
8 Kwan, C.
July 29, 2020 "US expands charges against ex-Twitter employees accused of spying for Saudi Arabia" https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-charges-ex-twitter-employees-spying-for-saudi-arabia-royal-family/
9 Bostock,
B. "A Saudi dissident sued Twitter for a 2nd time, saying spies at the firm hacked his account and leaked his contacts' names to
the kingdom" October 15, 2021. https://www.businessinsider.com/saudi-dissident-sues-twitter-second-time-account-hack-2021-10
"It
is very distressing and it really hurts me greatly because I know some of them have died, many have been tortured, and remain behind bars,"
al-Ahmed told Insider.
"The
difference between their being free, or not free, is our connection on Twitter."
One
of those killed, al-Ahmed told Insider, is Abdullah al-Hamid, the founder of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association, a human-rights
group in the kingdom. Al-Hamid died
in
Saudi state custody in April 2020.
This
case highlights the importance of a thorough and independent human rights assessment and an adequate mitigation plan for Alphabet in a
location with such a history of poor human rights. While in the Twitter case the Saudi government had to place spies inside Twitter operations,
Alphabet would be even more vulnerable with a data center located in the Kingdom, built by the Saudi government owned Aramco and staffed
primarily by Saudi staff hired by Aramco.
The need for transparency
these organizations requested is referenced in a May 2021 article on the siting decision in The Verge: 10
Even
more important, the letter writers state, is conducting that investigation in the open, actually consulting with the people Google could
inadvertently help Saudi Arabia to hurt, and speaking to groups in the country who can better understand the issues there.
In the Company’s opposition to our proposal,
Alphabet claims substantial implementation. As noted above, the Company still has not provided shareholders with a Human Rights Impact
Assessment report that adheres to standards set by the international community for these locations or provided information on the planned
mitigation of human rights vulnerabilities identified in such reports. The Company does claim to have such a report for the Saudi Arabia
location but has not identified the source or expertise of the assessors, has not published or shared this report with primary stakeholders
and has not published the resulting mitigation plan it claims to have implemented.
The essential purpose of the proposal, transparency
of outcomes, is made clear in the background section of the Proposal that despite the Company’s commitments:
… the company's decisions regarding
siting of cloud data centers in human rights hot spots are occurring behind closed doors and without the promised transparency. A report
sufficient to fulfill the essential objectives of this proposal would examine the scope, implementation, and robustness of the company’s
human rights due diligence processes on siting of cloud computing operations. It would assess, with an eye toward the the rights enshrined
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the standards established in the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights (UNGPs) and in the Global Network Initiative Principles (GNI Principles), the priorities and potential impacts on people, any mitigating
actions, any tracking of outcomes, and whether the company identifies and engages rights-holders to ensure that its human rights efforts
are well informed.
_____________________________
10 Campbell, I. The Verge
-May 26, 2021 "Amnesty International Calls for Google to halt cloud business in Saudi Arabia" https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/26/22453351/amnesty-international-halt-google-cloud-datacenters-saudi-arabia
Instead of providing the transparency promised
by the UNGP and GNI, the company’s disclosures amount to repetitive declarations of commitments without the disclosures contemplated
by those guiding principles.
The Company
is not meeting its own commitments to shareholders regarding human rights
The Company has committed to this series of
robust human rights standards “when expanding operations into new locations.” The Company’s argument that this commitment
substantially implements the Proposal is misleading, because the Company’s existing actions do not comport with the referenced standards.
The Company’s claims that its existing disclosures provide implementation of the proposal, or meet the essential purpose, would
be misleading to investors given the gap between the Company’s actions to date and the standards it has committed to.
One of the human rights standards cited as
a sign the Company has substantially implemented our request is the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
Human Rights Watch, in May 2021, noted an important
area of business concern as well as the Company’s lack of implementation of a core feature of that standard, writing:
Human
Rights Watch
wrote
to Google in February 2021 highlighting these and
related concerns, including asking how Google will vet employees who will have access to information stored in the Saudi Arabia Cloud
region and how they will respond to authorities’ requests for user data that are legal under Saudi law but do not comply with international
human rights standards.
In
separate
replies,
Google reiterated its commitment to human rights, stated that an independent human rights assessment for
the Google Cloud region in Saudi Arabia had been conducted, and that the company took steps to address matters that were identified, but
Google did not specify what those steps were.
The UNGPs specify
that human rights due diligence should involve meaningful consultation with potentially affected groups and other relevant stakeholders,
and that companies should communicate how impacts are being addressed.
As Human Rights Watch notes,
the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights11 which
Alphabet has affirmed as a sign of its substantial implementation includes transparency standards
which Alphabet has not met. These include, according to a commentary on UNGP section 21:
Formal reporting
by enterprises is expected where risks of severe human rights impacts exist, whether this is due to the nature of the business operations
or operating contexts. The reporting should cover topics and indicators concerning how enterprises identify and address adverse impacts
on human rights. Independent verification of human rights reporting can strengthen its content and credibility. Sector-specific indicators
can provide helpful additional detail. (emphasis added)
_____________________________
11 https://www.ohchr.org/documents/publications/guidingprinciplesbusinesshr_en.pdf
Alphabet also notes, in its policy statements
on Human Rights and in its responses to the Human Rights organizations such as Access Now who have asked for an assessment and information
on mitigation related to our Company’s plans for a Data Center in Saudi Arabia that it is a signatory of the Global Network Initiative
(GNI). The GNI Core Principles12 require:
| ● | Participants will be held accountable through a system of (a) transparency with the public
and (b) independent assessment and evaluation of the implementation of these Principles. |
The
GNI further notes:
Transparency
about a company’s approach to these issues, including communication with other stakeholders, sends a valuable message to users about
how the company implements its commitments to freedom of expression and privacy rights.
The
Company has done no such thing.
This lack of transparency clearly contravenes
the standards detailed above which the company has cited as the basis of their implementation.
This is in line with the Company’s 2022 rating
of only 47% from Ranking Digital Rights13 which is down 1 point and notes the decision to move ahead in Saudi Arabia which
it describes as a country known for ‘proven weaponization of digital surveillance against marginalized groups and political activists.’
Our Proposal requests a Human
Rights Impact Assessment and its publication to shareholders along with the Company’s mitigation plan for locations of significant
human rights risk. The company has not provided the “independent human rights assessment” it references, has not identified
who conducted such an assessment or whether it complied with the various standards’ requirements for assessments to involve stakeholders
and it has not provided any information on the mitigation steps the Company says were taken due to the information uncovered in that human
rights assessment.
As
noted, our Proposal does not ask the Company to go beyond the agreements Alphabet itself identified as central to its human rights policy.
_____________________________
12 https://globalnetworkinitiative.org/gni-principles/
13 https://rankingdigitalrights.org/bts22/companies/Google
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