A group of tech workers and community groups plan to protest Google's contract with the Israeli military and government at the company's Google Cloud Next conference tonight at Moscone Center. Why it matters: Amid the ongoing tensions between Israel and Palestine, protesters hope to use Google's cloud conference as an opportunity to bring awareness about Project Nimbus to the company's customers former Google employee Ariel Koren, told Axios.
Context: Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion artificial intelligence and computing services agreement among Google, Amazon Web Services and the Israeli government and military, went into effect in July 2021. What they're saying: "Google is sending a message that the ruthless pursuit of military contracts" and profits will be prioritized over its publicly stated values and ethics, Koren said. The other side: Google did not respond to requests for comment but last year said Google Cloud's work as part of Project Nimbus "is not directed at highly sensitive or classified military workloads," a spokesperson told Wired. Of note: Last fall, Koren resigned from Google after she said Google tried to retaliate against her for opposing Project Nimbus. What to watch: Koren expects a large turnout at tonight's rally of Google employees, tech workers and community groups, including the Palestinian Youth Movement and Jewish Voice for Peace Bay Area.