Monday, April 6, 2026
ADVT 
International

Google Sorry, Will Change Sexual Misconduct Policy

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Nov, 2018 08:24 PM
    Google is promising to be more forceful and open about its handling of sexual misconduct cases, a week after thousands of high-paid engineers and others walked out in protest over its male-dominated culture.
     
     
    Google bowed to one of the protesters’ main demands by dropping mandatory arbitration of all sexual misconduct cases. That will now be optional, so workers can choose to sue in court and present their case in front of a jury. 
     
     
    It mirrors a change made by ride-hailing service Uber after complaints from its female employees prompted an internal investigation. The probe concluded that its rank had been poisoned by rampant sexual harassment. “Google’s leaders and I have heard your feedback and have been moved by the stories you’ve shared,” CEO Sundar Pichai said in an email to Google employees.
     
     
    “We recognise that we have not always gotten everything right in the past and we are sincerely sorry for that. It’s clear we need to make some changes.”
     
     
    Last week, the tech giant’s workers left their cubicles in dozens of offices around the world to protest what they consider the management’s lax treatment of top executives and other male workers accused of sexual harassment and other misconduct.
     
     
    Google will provide more details about sexual misconduct cases in internal reports available to all employees. The company is also stepping up its training aimed at preventing misconduct.
     
     
    But Google didn’t address protesters’ demand for a commitment to pay women the same as men doing similar work. — AP
     
     
     
    Google got caught in the crosshairs two weeks ago after a US newspaper detailed allegations of sexual misconduct against the creator of Google's Android software, Andy Rubin. It said Rubin received a $90 million severance package in 2014 after Google concluded the accusations were credible. Rubin has denied the allegations.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Egypt Mosque Attack: At Least 235 Killed In Bomb Blast, Gunfire During Friday Prayers

    Egypt Mosque Attack: At Least 235 Killed In Bomb Blast, Gunfire During Friday Prayers
    At least 235 worshippers were killed and 109 others injured when heavily-armed militants bombed a mosque and opened fire on people attending Friday prayers in Egypt’s restive North Sinai region, in the deadliest terror attack in the country.

    Egypt Mosque Attack: At Least 235 Killed In Bomb Blast, Gunfire During Friday Prayers

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore
    Yelchur Sreenivas, 51, was robbed by Srinath Bari Ramdeo Bari and two accomplices near Towner Road as he was returning home on May 25 last year, the Strait Times reported on Thursday.  

    Indian Jailed For Robbing Compatriot Jeweller In Singapore

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer
    You are aware that there was a longstanding request from the mother of Kulbhushan Jadhav to visit Pakistan and meet her son

    Mother To Accompany Jadhav's Wife: India’s Condition To Pak Offer

    Pakistan Court Orders Release Of Hafiz Saeed

    A Pakistan court on Wednesday ordered the release of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Saeed, blamed for the horrific 2008 Mumbai terror attack, from house arrest that began in January this year.  

    Pakistan Court Orders Release Of Hafiz Saeed

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US
    Ajit Pai said the FCC will vote on December 14 to rescind the so-called net neutrality rules championed by Democratic former President Barack Obama.

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox
    US-based YouTube star Vidya Vox says that, while growing up, she tried to shun her Indian heritage as she was often bullied in school. But she is now "100 per cent" proud of her roots and feels it is great to be an Indian in the US right now.

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox