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“If you want positive search results, do positive things. If you don’t want negative search results, don’t do negative things.”
“To some of my colleagues across the aisle, if you’re getting bad press articles and bad search results, don’t blame Google or Facebook or Twitter, consider blaming yourself.”
—Rep. Ted Lieu
That’s what Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) told his Republican colleagues on the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday during a hearing that featured testimony from Google CEO Sundar Pichai and amid ongoing, yet unfounded, complaints by right-wing lawmakers and commentators that the search giant is biased against them.
To make his point, Lieu used the example of Google news searches he did on two House Republicans named Steve: one was Steve Scalise of Louisiana, and the other was Steve King of Iowa.
After reading aloud headlines from each set of results—the Scalise articles were generally positive, while the King results noted his record of racists remarks and retweets—and asking Pichai to confirm that the algorithms of the search engine don’t order results based on ideological leanings, the congressman offered some advice.
“To some of my colleagues across the aisle, if you’re getting bad press articles and bad search results,” Lieu said, “don’t blame Google or Facebook or Twitter, consider blaming yourself.”
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