https://www.newstatesman.com/business/sectors/2021/07/how-google-quietly-funds-europe-s-leading-tech-policy-institutes

How Google quietly funds Europe’s leading tech policy institutes
By Laurie Clarke, Oscar Williams and Katharine Swindels

The search giant has provided tens of millions of pounds of funding to 
academics investigating issues closely related to its business model.

(data visualisations with the financial data and connections to companies not 
copied here, look at the New Statesman website for more information)

A recent scientific paper proposed that, like Big Tobacco in the Seventies, Big 
Tech thrives on creating uncertainty around the impacts of its products and 
business model. One of the ways it does this is by cultivating pockets of 
friendly academics who can be relied on to echo Big Tech talking points, giving 
them added gravitas in the eyes of lawmakers.

Google highlighted working with favourable academics as a key aim in its 
strategy, leaked in October 2020 
<https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/14/technology/big-tech-lobbying-europe.html>, 
for lobbying the EU’s Digital Markets Act – sweeping legislation that could 
seriously undermine tech giants’ market dominance if it goes through. 

Now, a New Statesman investigation can reveal that over the last five years, 
six leading academic institutes in the EU have taken tens of millions of pounds 
of funding from Google, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft to research issues 
linked to the tech firms' business models, from privacy and data protection to 
AI ethics and competition in digital markets. While this funding tends to come 
with guarantees of academic independence, this creates an ethical quandary 
where the subject of research is also often the primary funder of it.

The New Statesman has also found evidence of an inconsistent approach to 
transparency, with some senior academics failing to disclose their industry 
funding. Other academics have warned that the growing dependence on funding 
from the industry raises questions about how tech firms influence the debate 
around the ethics of the markets they have created.

The Institute for Ethics in Artificial Intelligence at the Technical University 
of Munich (TUM), for example, received a $7.5m grant from Facebook in 2019 to 
fund five years of research, while the Humboldt Institute for Internet and 
Society in Berlin, has accepted almost €14m from Google since it was founded in 
2012, and the tech giant accounts for a third of the institute's third-party 
funding.
Researchers at Big Tech-funded institutions told the New Statesman they did not 
feel any outward pressure to be less critical of their university’s benefactors 
in their research.

But one, who wished to remain anonymous, said Big Tech wielded a subtle 
influence through such institutions. They said that the companies typically 
appeared to identify uncritical academics – preferably those with political 
connections – who perhaps already espoused beliefs aligned with Big Tech. 
Companies then cultivate relationships with them, sometimes incentivising 
academics by granting access to sought-after data.

Companies such as Google and Facebook sponsor universities for “outreach and 
what I would call ‘industrial presence’,” said Michel Bernard, a former Google 
academic outreach officer for France. He worked on developing relationships 
with universities on technical subjects, such as AI and internet and cloud 
computing, but said he was aware of policy-aligned topics gaining importance 
towards the end of his tenure in 2017. 

He said the company “would contact a professor or faculty, invite them to make 
a speech at Google and then explore some partnerships, then we would, of 
course, have many researchers attending and participating in conferences and 
events.”
Luciano Floridi, professor of philosophy and ethics of information at Oxford 
University’s Internet Institute, is one of the most high-profile and 
influential European tech policy experts, who has advised the European 
Commission, the Information Commissioner’s Office, the UK government’s Centre 
for Data Ethics and Innovation, the Foreign Office, the Financial Conduct 
Authority and the Vatican.
Floridi is one of the best-connected tech policy experts in Europe, and he is 
also one of the most highly funded. The ethicist has received funding from 
Google, DeepMind, Facebook, the Chinese tech giant Tencent and the Japanese IT 
firm Fujitsu, which developed the infrastructure involved in the Post Office’s 
Horizon IT scandal 
<https://www.newstatesman.com/business/companies/2021/04/2bn-question-how-did-fujitsu-emerge-unscathed-post-office-scandal>.
 

Although Floridi is connected to several of the world’s most valuable tech 
companies, he is especially close to Google. In the mid-2010s the academic was 
described 
<https://qz.com/451051/should-search-algorithms-be-moral-a-conversation-with-googles-in-house-philosopher/>
 as the company’s “in-house philosopher”, with his role on the company’s “right 
to be forgotten” committee. When the Silicon Valley giant launched a 
short-lived ethics committee to oversee its technology development in 2019, 
Floridi was among those enlisted.

The institute’s director Victoria Nash said “receiving support from a diverse 
range of sources is in line with government’s preferred funding model for 
higher education institutions”. She added: “External funding does not 
compromise the value or integrity of research output. Indeed many of our 
faculty and students have been the strongest critics of the practices of tech 
firms.”

The academic who spoke anonymously to the New Statesman added: “These firms 
aren’t trying to erase all criticism, they’re trying to amplify the criticism 
they prefer – the criticism they can structurally live with.”

A spokesperson denied that the OII is “dependent on any one source of funding”, 
adding that funding from postgraduate programmes had contributed at least a 
third of the OII’s income since 2018 and that “the majority” of research 
funding comes from research councils, charities and foundations.

A Google spokesperson said: “We’re proud of the support we provide to 
researchers at academic institutions, universities and research institutes. 
These researchers are undertaking world-leading work to examine the effects of 
technology on society. We maintain rigorous measures to ensure independence and 
are transparent about the researchers and organisations that we support.”

In 2014, the law professors Christopher Kuner and Paul De Hert founded the 
Brussels Privacy Hub (BPH), a primarily Google-funded entity of the Vrije 
Universiteit Brussel (VUB) set up with “the aim of becoming the first European 
academic privacy research platform of global stature”.

The centre says it “uses its location in Brussels, the capital of Europe, to 
engage EU policymakers, data protection regulators, the private sector, and 
NGOs”. It hosts dozens of events a year, many of which feature high-profile 
figures from the European Commission, whose headquarters are two miles away.
Kuner and De Hert are co-directors of the BPH and now hold chair positions 
there. A 2019 VUB marketing brochure 
<http://www.vub.be/sites/vub/files/nieuws/users/ergultek/brochure_leerstoelen_eng_3.pdf>
 stated that Google was the official “partner” for Kuner’s position and a VUB 
spokesperson told the New Statesman that Google continues to fund the chair. A 
member of the Google EU policy team also currently sits on the BPH advisory 
board. 

However, Kuner’s profile page 
<https://lsts.research.vub.be/en/christopher-kuner> and the page 
<https://www.vub.be/foundation/leerstoel/international-and-european-data-privacy-and-security-law#international-and-european-data-privacy-and-security-law>
 for the chair position he holds on the VUB’s website do not currently disclose 
support from Google. When asked about this, VUB told the New Statesman: “We are 
updating our policies to provide increased transparency, and will post more 
information on our web site shortly.”
Kuner told the New Statesman: “I have to disagree with what [the] brochure, 
which I have never seen before, says... The chair was not established by 
Google, it couldn’t have been, since my time at VUB predates any funding by 
Google.”

Kuner said the hub's expenses, including his position, were covered by funding 
from a range of sources not limited to industry. “That is why my web page and 
that of the chair do not mention any support from specific sources, which 
however is disclosed on the governance page cited above,” said Kuner, referring 
to this page <https://brusselsprivacyhub.eu/home-2/governance.html>.
Kuner did not deny that Google partly funds the position. While the Brussels 
Privacy 

Hub’s website acknowledges that “historically the largest private donor has 
been, and remains, Google”, the university did not respond to several requests 
for details of how much funding it had received from the tech giant. But a 
spokesperson did confirm that, like other industry partners, Google had 
provided at least €50,000 a year to help establish and maintain the position.

The academic who spoke anonymously to the New Statesman said: “All academics 
should be declaring their funding prominently.”

In addition to managing the BPH, Kuner works as a senior privacy counsel at the 
international law firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, whose clients include 
Google and other major tech firms. In his more than 30 years practising data 
protection law at various firms, Kuner has represented a number of clients. He 
said he could not disclose which companies he had represented due to legal 
regulations, and that he had turned down offers of all personal work, including 
for tech companies.

The VUB marketing brochure 
<https://www.vub.be/sites/vub/files/nieuws/users/ergultek/brochure_leerstoelen_eng_3.pdf>
 on chairs with external partners says that chairs are “a way of supporting 
independent research at the VUB”, but also represent “a partnership”. “We 
involve the partners and the employees in guest lectures, workshops and 
symposiums,” reads the brochure. “The partner participates in the community 
debate and stimulates research and development in their name.” Kuner said he 
had not been consulted on the brochure and that it didn’t reflect the BPH’s 
governance policies.

In 2014 Kuner told IAPP 
<https://iapp.org/news/a/a-new-privacy-voice-in-europe-the-brussels-privacy-hub/>,
 one of the funding bodies of BPH, that the hub would avoid any kind of 
“lobbying”. But the BPH was founded with an intention to influence 
policymaking. “We’d like to bridge that gap [between academic researchers and 
policymakers],” Kuner told IAPP, “and get outside of the formal process of 
doing studies… When I speak to people in the EU institutions, they say, ‘We get 
all these papers from companies and business associations. Why can’t they be 
more objective?’ So I feel like there’s a need for what we’re doing. I think if 
we can get the two worlds talking to each other, that would be a victory.”

Kuner told the New Statesman: “So far, we have never received allegations of 
any kind that our work has supported the Big Tech agenda. Many of our greatest 
achievements, such as working for the last three years with the International 
Committee of the Red Cross to produce two handbooks on data protection and 
humanitarian action, have nothing to do with Big Tech. Moreover, it has won the 
acclaim of human rights and legal scholars around the world.”

A brochure 
<http://vublsts.files.wordpress.com/2014/10/bprh-brochure-version-1-1.pdf> on 
the BPH at the time of its launch in 2014, which Kuner also said he was not 
familiar with, states that “while decisions will be made by the management 
board to ensure independence, sponsors will have input into the work of the 
[BPH]”. Its website currently reads that the BPH “is committed to full 
impartiality and independence in our research, as well as intellectual rigour 
and transparency”.

In February 2019 the Italian economist Emilio Calvano met a friend in Rome who 
worked as a competition lawyer at Google. Calvano wanted to set up a network of 
high-profile European economists who specialised in digital markets. His 
contact at Google had also been tasked with establishing an academic outreach 
programme. Together, they arranged for Google to provide four years of funding 
to a chair at Belgium’s UCLouvain that distributes the financial support to 
researchers.

Calvano said this arrangement protects the network’s independence, but refused 
to reveal how much Google had donated to UCLouvain to support the network, 
which now involves some of the continent’s most prominent economists. The 
research grants were worth €8,000 in 2019-20 and €16,000 in 2020-21. While 
Calvano said these were small sums in comparison with some of the public grants 
awarded to members of the group, his colleague Neil Gandal said they helped to 
top up academics’ low salaries and discourage them from seeking consulting work.

Calvano said Google does not interfere in the network’s research or influence 
who receives its funding. Gandal, an economics professor at Tel Aviv University 
who helps manage the network, said the company sometimes makes suggestions 
about policy discussions that researchers should investigate. “The only thing 
they’ve told us is that they want us to work on things that are relevant,” he 
told the New Statesman. “So from time to time, they’ll send us things that are 
being debated... [such as] the Digital Markets Act.” 

This act has been drawn up to increase competition in digital markets and may 
pose a threat to Google’s business model.

Michael Veale, a lecturer in law at University College London, said that beyond 
influencing independent academics, there are other motives for firms such as 
Google to fund policy research. “By funding very pedantic academics in an area 
to investigate the nuances of economics online, you can heighten the amount of 
perceived uncertainty in things that are currently taken for granted in 
regulatory spheres,” he told the New Statesman.

Tommaso Valletti, a professor of economics at Imperial College Business School 
and the former chief competition economist of the European Commission, adds 
that the field of competition economics was stymied for years because there was 
no data available from Big Tech. Now that data is becoming available, he sees 
that Big Tech is increasingly interested in economists with “contrarian views”. 

This appears to be the case within competition law as well. “I have noticed 
several common techniques used by academics who have been funded by Big Tech 
companies,” said Oles Andriychuk, a senior lecturer in law at Strathclyde 
University. “They discuss technicalities – very technical arguments which are 
not wrong, but they either slow down the process, or redirect the focus to 
issues which are less important, or which blur clarity.” 

It is difficult to measure the impact of Big Tech on European academia, but 
Valletti adds that a possible outcome is to make research less about the 
details, and more about framing. “Influence is not just distorting the result 
in favour of [Big Tech],” he said, “but the kind of questions you ask yourself.”


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