http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/14/technology/14google.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&ref=technology&pagewanted=print

http://tinyurl.com/m78u4

September 14, 2006
Philanthropy Google's Way: Not the Usual
By KATIE HAFNER
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 13 — The ambitious founders of Google, the
popular search engine company, have set up a philanthropy, giving it
seed money of about $1 billion and a mandate to tackle poverty,
disease and global warming.

But unlike most charities, this one will be for-profit, allowing it to
fund start-up companies, form partnerships with venture capitalists
and even lobby Congress. It will also pay taxes.

One of its maiden projects reflects the philanthropy's nontraditional
approach. According to people briefed on the program, the
organization, called Google.org, plans to develop an
ultra-fuel-efficient plug-in hybrid car engine that runs on ethanol,
electricity and gasoline.

The philanthropy is consulting with hybrid-engine scientists and
automakers, and has arranged for the purchase of a small fleet of cars
with plans to convert the engines so that their gas mileage exceeds
100 miles per gallon. The goal of the project is to reduce dependence
on oil while alleviating the effects of global warming.

Google.org is drawing skeptics for both its structure and its
ambitions. It is a slingshot compared with the artillery of charities
established by older captains of industry. Its financing pales next to
the tens of billions that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will
have at its disposal, especially with the coming infusion of some $3
billion a year from Warren E. Buffett, the founder of Berkshire
Hathaway.

But Google's philanthropic work is coming early in the company's
lifetime. Microsoft was 25 years old before Bill Gates set up his
foundation, which is a tax-exempt organization and separate from
Microsoft.

By choosing for-profit status, Google will have to pay taxes if
company shares are sold at a profit — or if corporate earnings are
used — to finance Google.org. Any resulting venture that shows a
profit will also have to pay taxes. Shareholders may not like the fact
that the Google.org tax forms will not be made public, but kept
private as part of the tax filings of the parent, Google Inc.

Google's founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, believe for-profit
status will greatly increase their philanthropy's range and
flexibility. It could, for example, form a company to sell the
converted cars, finance that company in partnership with venture
capitalists, and even hire a lobbyist to pressure Congress to pass
legislation granting a tax credit to consumers who buy the cars.

The executive director whom Mr. Page and Mr. Brin have hired, Dr.
Larry Brilliant, is every bit as iconoclastic as Google's
philanthropic arm. Dr. Brilliant, a 61-year-old physician and public
health expert, has studied under a Hindu guru in a monastery at the
foothills of the Himalayas and worked as a Silicon Valley
entrepreneur.

In one project, which Dr. Brilliant brought with him to the job,
Google.org will try to develop a system to detect disease outbreaks
early.

Dr. Brilliant likens the traditional structure of corporate
foundations to a musician confined to playing only the high register
on a piano. "Google.org can play on the entire keyboard," Dr.
Brilliant said in an interview. "It can start companies, build
industries, pay consultants, lobby, give money to individuals and make
a profit."

While declining to comment on the car project specifically, Dr.
Brilliant said he would hope to see such ventures make a profit. "But
if they didn't, we wouldn't care," he said. "We're not doing it for
the profit. And if we didn't get our capital back, so what? The
emphasis is on social returns, not economic returns."

Development of ultra-high-mileage cars is under way at a number of
companies, from Toyota to tiny start-ups. Making an engine that uses
E85 — a mixture of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline — is not
difficult, but the lack of availability of the fuel presents a
challenge, said Brett Smith, a senior industry analyst at the Center
for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Another barrier, Mr. Smith said, lies in the batteries for so-called
plug-in hybrids, which require more powerful batteries that charge
more quickly than the current generation of hybrid batteries.

There are skeptics, too, among tax lawyers and other pragmatists
familiar with the world of philanthropy. They wonder whether Google's
directors might be tempted to take back some of the largess in an
economic downturn.

"The money is at the beck and call of the board of directors and
shareholders," said Marcus S. Owens, a tax lawyer in Washington who
spent a decade as director of the exempt organizations division of the
Internal Revenue Service. "It's possible the shareholders of Google
might someday object, especially if we go into an economic depression
and that money is needed to shore up the company."

And there is the question of how many of the planet's problems can
truly be addressed by a single corporate entity.

But even while expressing reservations about Google's approach, Mr.
Owens said that the structure of Google.org "eliminates all the
constraints that might otherwise apply."

The only conventional part of Google.org is the Google Foundation, a
nonprofit with an endowment of $90 million that is constrained in how
it spends by the 501(c)(3) section of the Internal Revenue Service
code.

Google's big philanthropic experiment lies in the part of Google.org
where the bulk of the funding now resides. This part of Google.org
will be fully taxable, with the ability to invest in a full spectrum
of programs and companies.

All of Google.org's spending, Dr. Brilliant said, will be in keeping
with its mission, and there is to be no "blowback." That is, should
Google.org make a profit with one of its ventures, those funds will
not go to the search engine business, but will stay within Google.org.

Google had existed for only six years, when, in advance of the
company's initial public offering in August 2004, Mr. Page and Mr.
Brin told potential investors that they planned to set aside 1 percent
of the company's stock and an equal percentage of profits for
philanthropy. By the end of 2004, Google.org was formed.

The company has said it plans to spend the money over the next 20
years, and the Google board recently approved a more rapid
disbursement rate, $175 million over the next two years.

"Poor people can't wait," Dr. Brilliant said. "Dying people can't wait
for some 20-year plan. It's not what we're doing here."

Ventures that grow out of Google.org could be seen to have a
competitive edge because they do not need to show a financial profit.
But financial returns from a project like the high-mileage car are not
necessarily the aim.

"I think how you count profit is the issue here," said Peter Hero,
president of the Community Foundation of Silicon Valley, a charitable
foundation with about $1 billion in assets. "Google.org is measuring
return on cleaner air and quality of life. Their bottom line isn't
just financial. It's environmental and social."

Once Google.org was formed, the company spent months searching for an
executive director. There was no lack of interest in the job.

"Literally thousands of people worldwide got in touch with us," said
Sheryl Sandberg, the Google vice president who led the search. "We'd
get someone who was an amazing technology entrepreneur but who didn't
know anything about the developing world."

Then along came Dr. Brilliant, an affable man generous with bearhugs
and self-deprecating humor whose unlikely résumé looks like a
composite career summary of multiple high achievers.

After receiving his medical degree, Dr. Brilliant studied for two
years with Neem Karoli Baba, a famous Hindu guru.

As Dr. Brilliant tells the story, in 1973, shortly before the guru's
death, he told Dr. Brilliant to "take off the ashram whites" and use
his skills as a physician to help eradicate smallpox, which was
devastating India at the time.

Dr. Brilliant joined a team of United Nations workers who
painstakingly worked their way through India inoculating people
against the disease. In 1980, the World Health Organization declared
that smallpox had been eradicated.

In 1978, Dr. Brilliant started the Seva Foundation, which focuses on
preventing and curing blindness throughout Asia and Latin America. In
1985, Dr. Brilliant was a co-founder of the Well, a seminal online
community. Throughout the 1990's and early 2000's, he ran several
high-tech companies in Silicon Valley.

Dr. Brilliant first heard about Google.org in early 2005 while lying
in bed in India, sick with dysentery. He had gone there to work with
the polio eradication program of the United Nations and, while
recovering, he saw news of Google.org in a local newspaper.

He sent an inquiry to the only e-mail address he could find:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] He got no response.

This year, Dr. Brilliant was awarded the TED Prize, an award given at
the annual Technology, Entertainment and Design conference, a
gathering of leaders from the technology and entertainment industries.
The prize awards three recipients $100,000, and a "wish" for how to
change world.

Dr. Brilliant's wish was for the creation of an "early detection,
rapid response" system for disease outbreaks. The idea would be an
open-source, nongovernmental, public access network for detecting,
reporting and responding to pandemics.

Some Google insiders heard about the award and invited Dr. Brilliant
to give a talk at the company. Mr. Page and Eric E. Schmidt, Google's
chief executive, were in the audience as Dr. Brilliant described the
polio eradication efforts of the United Nations. They agreed they had
found their director and began to recruit him.

At first, Dr. Brilliant said, he was thrilled. But then he turned
skeptical, largely because of the for-profit structure of the
organization.

"I got weak knees," he said. "It was weird. It was precedent setting."
After several lengthy conversations with executives at Google, Dr.
Brilliant changed his mind. Six months into the job, he has traveled
to India to visit eye clinics and polio vaccination projects with Mr.
Page, and to China to discuss clean energy alternatives. Next week, he
leaves for Africa to visit Google grant recipients in Ghana.

Dr. Brilliant said he had no desire to "reinvent the wheel" by working
on projects others are already involved in. And although Google is a
high-tech company, that does not mean that Google.org will be throwing
around high-tech solutions.

"Why would we put Wi-Fi in a place where what they need is food and
clean water?" he said.

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