I have a tremendous number of
thoughts about the various revelations about the NSA's domestic
espionage programs revealed this week. But first and foremost, I wanted
to share this message from
+Larry Page and our Chief Legal Officer
+David Drummond. Google had no involvement in the PRISM program and the first we heard of it was when Greenwald's article hit the press.
I'm not sure what the details of this PRISM program are, but I can tell you that the
only
way in which Google reveals information about users are when we receive
lawful, specific orders about individuals -- things like search
warrants. And we continue to stand firm against any attempts to do so
broadly or without genuine, individualized suspicion, and publicize the
results as much as possible in our Transparency Report. Having seen much
of the internals of how we do this, I can tell you that it is a point
of pride, both for the company and for many of us, personally, that we
stand up to governments that demand people's information.
I can
also tell you that the suggestion that PRISM involved anything happening
directly inside our datacenters surprised me a great deal; owing to the
nature of my work at Google over the past decade, it would have been
challenging -- not impossible, but definitely a major surprise -- if
something like this could have been done without my ever hearing of it.
And I can categorically state that
nothing resembling the mass surveillance of individuals by governments within our systems has ever crossed my plate.
If it had, even if I couldn't talk about it, in all likelihood I would no longer be working at Google: the fact that we
do
stand up for individual users' privacy and protection, for their right
to have a personal life which is not ever shared with other people
without their consent, even when governments come knocking at our door
with guns, is one of the two most important reasons that I am at this
company: the other being a chance to build systems which fundamentally
change and improve the lives of billions of people by turning the
abstract power of computing into something which amplifies and expands
their individual, mental life.
Whatever the NSA was doing
involving the mass harvesting of information, it did not involve being
on the inside of Google. And I, personally, am by now disgusted with
their conduct: the national security apparatus has convinced itself and
the rest of the government that the only way it can do its job is to
know everything about everyone. That's not how you protect a country. We
didn't fight the Cold War just so we could rebuild the Stasi ourselves.