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Related: About this forumThe Wall Street Journal.: Paying Professors: Inside Google's Academic Influence Campaign
Hat tip, The Washington Post (down toward the end): The Daily 202: Trump dysfunction follows family from the campaign to the White House
-- Wall Street Journal, Paying Professors: Inside Googles Academic Influence Campaign, by Brody Mullins and Jack Nicas: Google operates a little-known program to harness the brain power of university researchers to help sway opinion and public policy, cultivating financial relationships with professors at campuses from Harvard University to the University of California, Berkeley. Over the past decade, Google has helped finance hundreds of research papers to defend against regulatory challenges of its market dominance, paying $5,000 to $400,000 for the work, The Wall Street Journal found. Some researchers share their papers before publication and let Google give suggestions The professors dont always reveal Googles backing in their research, and few disclosed the financial ties in subsequent articles on the same or similar topics.
The untold story of Google's ambitious effort to fund academic research that backs its business. https://www.wsj.com/articles/paying-professors-inside-googles-academic-influence-campaign-1499785286
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HIDDEN INFLUENCE
Paying Professors: Inside Googles Academic Influence Campaign
Company paid $5,000 to $400,000 for research supporting business practices that face regulatory scrutiny; a wish list of topics.
By Brody Mullins and Jack Nicas
Google operates a little-known program to harness the brain power of university researchers to help sway opinion and public policy, cultivating financial relationships with professors at campuses from Harvard University to the University of California, Berkeley. ... Over the past decade, Google has helped finance hundreds of research papers to defend against regulatory challenges of its market dominance, paying $5,000 to $400,000 for the work, The Wall Street Journal found.
Some researchers share their papers before publication and let Google give suggestions, according to thousands of pages of emails obtained by the Journal in public-records requests of more than a dozen university professors. The professors dont always reveal Googles backing in their research, and few disclosed the financial ties in subsequent articles on the same or similar topics, the Journal found.
....
In some years, Google officials in Washington compiled wish lists of academic papers that included working titles, abstracts and budgets for each proposed paperthen they searched for willing authors, according to a former employee and a former Google lobbyist. ... Google promotes the research papers to government officials, and sometimes pays travel expenses for professors to meet with congressional aides and administration officials, according to the former lobbyist. The research has been used, for instance, to deflect antitrust accusations against Google by the Federal Trade Commission in 2012, according to a letter Google attorneys sent to the FTC chairman and viewed by the Journal.
....
The funding of favorable campus research to support Googles Washington, D.C.-based lobbying operation is part of a behind-the-scenes push in Silicon Valley to influence decision makers. The operation is an example of how lobbying has escaped the confines of Washingtons regulated environment and is increasingly difficult to spot.
....
Write to Brody Mullins at brody.mullins@wsj.com and Jack Nicas at jack.nicas@wsj.com
Paying Professors: Inside Googles Academic Influence Campaign
Company paid $5,000 to $400,000 for research supporting business practices that face regulatory scrutiny; a wish list of topics.
By Brody Mullins and Jack Nicas
Google operates a little-known program to harness the brain power of university researchers to help sway opinion and public policy, cultivating financial relationships with professors at campuses from Harvard University to the University of California, Berkeley. ... Over the past decade, Google has helped finance hundreds of research papers to defend against regulatory challenges of its market dominance, paying $5,000 to $400,000 for the work, The Wall Street Journal found.
Some researchers share their papers before publication and let Google give suggestions, according to thousands of pages of emails obtained by the Journal in public-records requests of more than a dozen university professors. The professors dont always reveal Googles backing in their research, and few disclosed the financial ties in subsequent articles on the same or similar topics, the Journal found.
....
In some years, Google officials in Washington compiled wish lists of academic papers that included working titles, abstracts and budgets for each proposed paperthen they searched for willing authors, according to a former employee and a former Google lobbyist. ... Google promotes the research papers to government officials, and sometimes pays travel expenses for professors to meet with congressional aides and administration officials, according to the former lobbyist. The research has been used, for instance, to deflect antitrust accusations against Google by the Federal Trade Commission in 2012, according to a letter Google attorneys sent to the FTC chairman and viewed by the Journal.
....
The funding of favorable campus research to support Googles Washington, D.C.-based lobbying operation is part of a behind-the-scenes push in Silicon Valley to influence decision makers. The operation is an example of how lobbying has escaped the confines of Washingtons regulated environment and is increasingly difficult to spot.
....
Write to Brody Mullins at brody.mullins@wsj.com and Jack Nicas at jack.nicas@wsj.com
Brody Mullins; Reporter, The Wall Street Journal.
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