Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Mobile
  4. Web
  5. Legacy Archives

Google chairman Schmidt to testify to Senate

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Google chairman Eric Schmidt has agreed to testify to lawmakers before the Senate Judiciary Committee’s antitrust subcommittee in September. The announcement comes in the wake of Google confirming it is the subject of a federal antitrust inquiry, even as the company works towards an antitrust settlement in the European Union and faces scrutiny in South Korea.

Schmidt, who until recently was Google’s chief executive, previously declined an invitation to testify to lawmakers. Google instead offered that its chief legal officer, David Drummond, would be happy to testify, but lawmakers insisted that top Google executives field questions about the company’s operations. Schmidt agreed, apparently stepping up for current Google CEO Larry Page.

Recommended Videos

The federal antitrust inquiry into Google currently centers on the company’s dominant position in the Internet search market, and whether the company is abusing that position to promote its own products and services and block out competitors.

Putting Schmidt in the Senate subcommittee hotseat could be a risky move for Google: Schmidt is known for making controversial public statements that seemingly contradict Google’s “don’t be evil” corporate motto. On a CNN program last year Schmidt suggested that anyone who wasn’t happy with Google Street View photographing their homes and places of business should “just move,” and on CNBC suggested that if people were engaging in any activities they didn’t want made available to the world online maybe “they shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.” Schmidt has also stated that Google aims to know what its users are thinking, through user profiling and monitoring locations and activities, and suggested perhaps people should get a free name change when they become adults so their irresponsible teenage online activities don’t follow them the rest of their lives.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra’s cool privacy display could appear on the next MacBook Pro
The feature that stops strangers from snooping on your screen is coming to the Mac, and sooner than anyone expected.
MacBoo Pro on table

Apple’s upcoming M6 Pro and M6 Max MacBook Pros are quietly turning into the best laptops the company has ever made. We already knew about the new chipset, OLED panels, a brand-new design, and more. And now, Apple is reportedly borrowing one of Samsung's coolest features for the next MacBook Pro, and it might arrive a lot sooner than previously thought.

If you have been following the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, you already know about its Privacy Display feature. For those who missed it, the feature can instantly darkens the screen from anyone looking at it from the side. The effect can cover the full screen or just a section of it. It is incredibly handy if you work in public spaces and handle sensitive information.

Read more
AI bots are a hit across the hotel biz, and if they feel creepy, you’re not alone: Study
Hotel booking chatbots are creeping out customers, but there's a simple fix that can make a difference.
Isometric Ai assistant and bubble speech, 3D illustration

If you have ever tried to book a hotel online and found yourself unsettled by the AI chatbot trying to help you, science has your back. New study from Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences confirms that hotel booking chatbots are genuinely creeping people out, and it is actually hurting bookings.

What is giving hotel chatbots their creep factor?

Read more
Pope says AI must be disarmed and shouldn’t dominate humanity. We’re going the opposite way.
The Pope just dropped his first encyclical, and AI companies should probably read it.
Pope Leo XIV signing his first encyclical

Pope Leo XIV signed his first encyclical on May 15, the 135th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII's Rerum novarum. The document, Magnifica humanitas, was published on May 25 and addresses one of the defining challenges of our time: artificial intelligence and its impact on humanity.

The core message isn't anti-technology. The Pope is clear that technology is neither a threat nor inherently evil. However, he does say that technology is never neutral, because it takes on the values of those who build, fund, and control it. That's where things get interesting.

Read more