NLPC Shareholder Proposal Asks Alphabet to Disclose Gov’t Censorship Requests for Google, YouTube

NLPC’s efforts to force disclosure of big tech cooperation with Biden administration censorship requests is drawing increased media interest as the annual shareholder meeting of Google’s parent company draws near.

As a shareholder in Alphabet, NLPC has filed a resolution that, if passed at its spring meeting, would require such disclosure.

FoxBusiness.com reports:

An ethics watchdog is using shareholder activism to try to pry information about whether the Biden administration has been essentially outsourcing censorship to Google and YouTube.

 

“We have filed a proposal for consideration by the shareholders to require Alphabet to produce a report showing if anyone from the government asked them to remove content,” Peter Flaherty, chairman of the National Legal and Policy Center, told FOX Business.

 

In January, the National Legal and Policy Center filed a shareholder resolution calling on Alphabet Inc., the parent company of Google and YouTube, to disclose requests from the White House, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other federal agencies or entities about taking down information…

 

Flaherty said he expects Alphabet will ask the Securities and Exchange Commission for permission to omit the resolution from consideration by its shareholders. He said it’s clearly in the public interest to know if “the government is compelling censorship” on two of the most widely used venues on the Internet.

The Washington Free Beacon reported on NLPC’s resolution last month, as the White House continues to call upon Big Tech companies to censor ideas it doesn’t like. Last week’s plea by Biden press secretary Jen Psaki for Spotify to mute popular podcaster Joe Rogan is the most recent example.

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Tags: Alphabet, censorship, Google, Jen Psaki, Joe Biden, YouTube