Given Google’s strong ties to Democrats, there is reason to suspect
that if Google or its employees intervene to favor their candidates, it
will be to adjust the search algorithm to favor Hillary Clinton. In
2012, Google and its top executives
donated more than $800,000 to Obama but only $37,000 to Romney. At least
six top tech officials in the Obama administration, including
Megan Smith, the country’s chief technology officer, are former Google employees. According to a recent
report by the
Wall Street Journal,
since Obama took office, Google representatives have visited the White
House ten times as frequently as representatives from comparable
companies—once a week, on average.
Hillary Clinton clearly has Google’s support and is well aware of Google’s value in elections. In April of this year, she
hired a
top Google executive, Stephanie Hannon, to serve as her chief
technology officer. I don’t have any reason to suspect Hannon would use
her old connections to aid her candidate, but the fact that she—or any
other individual with sufficient clout at Google—has the power to decide
elections threatens to undermine the legitimacy of our electoral
system, particularly in close elections.
This is, in any case,
the most implausible scenario. What company would risk the public
outrage and corporate punishment that would follow from being caught
manipulating an election?
Second, there is the Marius Milner Scenario: A rogue employee at
Google who has sufficient password authority or hacking skills makes a
few tweaks in the rankings (perhaps after receiving a text message from
some old friend who now works on a campaign), and the deed is done. In
2010, when Google got caught sweeping up personal information from
unprotected Wi-Fi networks in more than 30 countries using its Street
View vehicles, the entire operation was
blamed on
one Google employee: software engineer Marius Milner. So they fired
him, right? Nope. He’s still there, and on LinkedIn he currently
identifies his
profession as “hacker.” If, somehow, you have gotten the impression
that at least a few of Google’s 37,000 employees are every bit as smart
as Milner and possess a certain mischievousness—well, you are probably
right, which is why the rogue employee scenario isn’t as far-fetched as
it might seem.
And third—and this is the scariest
possibility—there is the Algorithm Scenario: Under this scenario, all of
Google’s employees are innocent little lambs, but the
software is
evil. Google’s search algorithm is pushing one candidate to the top of
rankings because of what the company coyly dismisses as “organic” search
activity by users; it’s harmless, you see, because it’s all natural.
Under this scenario, a
computer program is picking our elected officials.
To put this another way, our research suggests that no matter how innocent or disinterested Google’s employees may be,
Google’s
search algorithm, propelled by user activity, has been determining the
outcomes of close elections worldwide for years, with increasing impact
every year because of increasing Internet penetration.
SEME
is powerful precisely because Google is so good at what it does; its
search results are generally superb. Having learned that fact over time,
we have come to trust those results to a high degree. We have also
learned that higher rankings mean better material, which is why 50
percent of our clicks go to the first two items, with more than 90
percent of all clicks going to that precious first search page.
Unfortunately, when it comes to elections, that extreme trust we have
developed makes us vulnerable to manipulation.
In the final days
of a campaign, fortunes are spent on media blitzes directed at a handful
of counties where swing voters will determine the winners in the
all-important swing states. What a waste of resources! The right person
at Google could influence those key voters more than any stump speech
could; there is no cheaper, more efficient or subtler way to turn swing
voters than SEME. SEME also has one eerie advantage over billboards:
when people are unaware of a source of influence, they believe they
weren’t being influenced at all; they believe they made up their own
minds.
Republicans, take note: A manipulation on Hillary
Clinton’s behalf would be particularly easy for Google to carry out,
because of all the demographic groups we have looked at so far, no group
has been more vulnerable to SEME—in other words, so blindly trusting of
search rankings—than moderate Republicans. In a national experiment we
conducted in the United States, we were able to shift a whopping 80
percent of moderate Republicans in any direction we chose just by
varying search rankings.
There are many ways to influence
voters—more ways than ever these days, thanks to cable television,
mobile devices and the Internet. Why be so afraid of Google’s search
engine? If rankings are so influential, won’t all the candidates be
using the latest SEO techniques to make sure they rank high?
SEO
is competitive, as are billboards and TV commercials. No problem there.
The problem is that for all practical purposes, there is just one search
engine. More than 75 percent of online search in the United States is
conducted on Google, and in most other countries that proportion is 90
percent. That means that if Google’s CEO, a rogue employee or even just
the search algorithm itself favors one candidate,
there is no way to counteract that influence.
It would be as if Fox News were the only television channel in the
country. As Internet penetration grows and more people get their
information about candidates online, SEME will become an increasingly
powerful form of influence, which means that the programmers and
executives who control search engines will also become more powerful.
Worse still, our research shows that even when people
do notice they are seeing biased search rankings, their voting preferences
still shift in the desired directions—even
more than
the preferences of people who are oblivious to the bias. In our
national study in the United States, 36 percent of people who were
unaware of the rankings bias shifted toward the candidate we chose for
them, but 45 percent of those who
were aware of the bias also
shifted. It’s as if the bias was serving as a form of social proof; the
search engine clearly prefers one candidate, so that candidate
must be the best. (Search results are
supposed to be biased, after all; they’re supposed to show us what’s best, second best, and so on.)
Biased
rankings are hard for individuals to detect, but what about regulators
or election watchdogs? Unfortunately, SEME is easy to hide. The best way
to wield this type of influence is to do what Google is becoming better
at doing every day: send out customized search results. If search
results favoring one candidate were sent only to vulnerable individuals,
regulators and watchdogs would be especially hard pressed to find them.
For
the record, by the way, our experiments meet the gold standards of
research in the behavioral sciences: They are randomized (which means
people are randomly assigned to different groups), controlled (which
means they include groups in which interventions are either present or
absent), counterbalanced (which means critical details, such as names,
are presented to half the participants in one order and to half in the
opposite order) and double-blind (which means that neither the subjects
nor anyone who interacts with them has any idea what the hypotheses are
or what groups people are assigned to). Our subject pools are diverse,
matched as closely as possible to characteristics of a country’s
electorate. Finally, our recent report in PNAS included four
replications; in other words, we showed repeatedly—under different
conditions and with different groups—that SEME is real.
Our
newest research on SEME, conducted with nearly 4,000 people just before
the national elections in the UK this past spring, is looking at ways we
might be able to protect people from the manipulation. We found the
monster; now we’re trying to figure out how to kill it. What we have
learned so far is that the only way to protect people from biased search
rankings is to break the trust Google has worked so hard to build. When
we deliberately mix rankings up, or when we display various kinds of
alerts that identify bias, we can suppress SEME to some extent.
It’s
hard to imagine Google ever degrading its product and undermining its
credibility in such ways, however. To protect the free and fair
election, that might leave only one option, as unpalatable at it might
seem: government regulation.
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