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Google's Evil NDA

Posted by kdawson on Thu May 03, 2007 09:36 AM
from the not-to-be-confused-with-DNA dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Google's motto is "Don't Be Evil" — but they sure have an evil non-disclosure agreement! In order to be considered for employment there, you must sign an agreement that forbids you to 'mention or imply the name of Google' in public ever again. Further, you can't tell anyone you interviewed there, or what they offered you, and you possibly sign away your rights to reverse-engineer any of Google's code, ever. And this NDA never expires. Luckily, someone has posted excerpts from the NDA before he signed it and had to say silent forever." At the bottom of the posting are links to a few other comments on the Web about Google's NDA, including a ValleyWag post that reproduces it in its entirety.
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  • If you think that is evil by 2.7182 (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:38AM
  • MIght not be enforcable... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:39AM
  • Evil? by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:40AM
  • Open Source. by kraemate (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:41AM
    • Re:Open Source. by marcello_dl (Score:3) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:51AM
    • WTF? by CasperIV (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:12AM
    • Re:Open Source. by lintux (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:15AM
    • Re:Open Source. by slackmaster2000 (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:43AM
  • The first rule of fight club is you do NOT talk about fight club.
    The second rule of fight club is you do NOT talk about fight club.
    The third rule of fight club is you can NEVER reverse engineer meatloafs fake boobs....

  • I applied there (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:41AM (#18972399)
    What are they going to do? Kill m*BANG*

    [Yes, we are. We will however submit your Slashdot message as a warning for others.]
  • Things like this are easy to fix. (Score:5, Informative)

    by SpacePunk (17960) on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:42AM (#18972411)
    (http://slashdot.org/)
    Just line out, and initial the parts you want struck. Add the phrase to the effect that by accepting this NDA as modified that Google agrees to it in it's modified entirety. Then get a photocopy of it. Usually companies will accept the modified contract without even looking at it, they are that self-absorbed.

    Agreements and contracts can be modified by any party that accepts or signs them. Usually they also contain the phrase that it cannot be modified by you, but just line out and strike it first.
  • FUD by teknopurge (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:43AM
    • Re:FUD by KC7GR (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:31AM
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:43AM (#18972431)
    There's nothing in there that restricts you from disclosing your salary with others. It is, in fact, illegal for a U.S. company to prevent its non-management employees (even professional/exempt/salaried ones) from disclosing their compensation.
    • Re:You can't force people to keep salaries secret. by jandrese (Score:3) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:00AM
      • by slackmaster2000 (820067) on Thursday May 03 2007, @11:10AM (#18973941)
        Having been through this one before a few times, it's not just in the company's best interest to keep people in the dark, it's in the employees' best interest as well. No good can ever come from discussing your compensation with your coworkers. It will always turn into chaos because everyone feels important enough to be compensated more, but not every employee is equally important. When any group of employees starts getting pissed about money, it impacts everyone.

        It's much better to read up on what your position pays on average for your area, evaluate your own performance, and then try to negotiate more money on your own. And think about it, if you're management, and all your employees suddenly know what everyone else makes, do you rectify the situation in the future by paying everyone more? No, probably something closer to the opposite of that. Maybe you can rectify things by talking to everyone like adults until everybody is on the same page and walks away with a newfound respect for the way life works....yeah.

        Blabbing on about your compensation is a typical just-out-of-college-now-show-me-the-money mistake. It's amateur. Not only should a person never disclose what they make to their coworkers, but they should never disclose this information to anyone. This is one of the few parts of life that is actually very gamey. Keep your finances, religion, and (strong) politics closely guarded with only your most trusted family. It's personal encapsulation. Only expose what you need to expose and you'll have less people mucking in your business.

        If you want to be one of the people who get the larger yearly increases, and the bigger bonuses, then make yourself appear invaluable...which often means that you'll have to do more, and do more things that "wow" people. You can verify that you're being treated well by *paying attention.*
        [ Parent ]
        • by slamb (119285) * on Thursday May 03 2007, @11:45AM (#18974561)
          (http://www.slamb.org/)

          Having been through this one before a few times, it's not just in the company's best interest to keep people in the dark, it's in the employees' best interest as well. No good can ever come from discussing your compensation with your coworkers. It will always turn into chaos because everyone feels important enough to be compensated more, but not every employee is equally important. When any group of employees starts getting pissed about money, it impacts everyone.

          That's the party line, but it's wrong. What makes employees mad is being surprised by hearing through unofficial channels of huge pay imbalances. They're rightfully angry that this information has been concealed from them.

          I used to work for a hospital that was part of a state university. Like all government-run organizations, everyone there knows what everyone else is paid. Salaries are printed in the local newspaper every year. There's even a searchable website [goiowacity.com]. And yes, some people are paid a lot more than others. Yet somehow, the whole system does not come crashing down. The difference is universal, official disclosure. I sure wouldn't want to be the one guy whose salary everyone knows.

          [ Parent ]
        • Re:You can't force people to keep salaries secret. by wintermute42 (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:18PM
        • Re:You can't force people to keep salaries secret. by rossifer (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:47PM
    • Re:You can't force people to keep salaries secret. by 0racle (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:18AM
  • What's the problem? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by What Is Dot (792062) on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:43AM (#18972439)
    I don't see any problem with this kind of an agreement. The government has similar agreements, but theirs are far more strict. How does this hurt the potential employee anyway? When a company is trying to protect its interest in a highly competitive field, how much is too much?
  • by darthscsi (144954) on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:44AM (#18972457)
    What you are not allowed to do in the section mentioned there is use the fact that you had a meeting with google in your marketing or press releases. It does not say you can never mention google, as the summary indicates. For individuals, the most likely and probably only implication of the section is that you might not be able to use an employment offer from google as a bargening chip with other companies, but this isn't clear to me, as I don't know if that can be considered in the classes of things you cannot disclose from other sections (or if by nature a job offer to you does not ential a duty of confidentiality on your part since it isn't related to trade secrets or anything else explicitly mentioned).
  • Going to Google is like... by Howitzer86 (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:44AM
  • Seems like the lawyers have taken over there. Management asked lawyers the question: "Make a risk analysis and possible solution."

    Lawyers draft up some crazy-ass contract which is perfectly logical but doesn't take common sense into account. All risks mitigated, and at the same time, looks ridiculous.
  • kinda saw it first hand (Score:5, Informative)

    by TrippTDF (513419) <hiland AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:47AM (#18972499)
    I have a friend that works at Google in NYC, and I went to visit the office once. I had lunch with him and a couple of other people that worked there. They started talking about work-related things, and one of them turned to me and said "Are you a Goolger?" (Google employee) and I said no. All three of them suddenly became very careful not to use any terms that would give me a clue what they were talking about- using lots of pronouns and very general type of language as to not disclose any of what they were talking about.
  • ...or mentioning or implying the name of Google by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:47AM
  • don't even ask by gEvil (beta) (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:48AM
  • this story is only shocking and interesting to those who still believe google is somehow saintly amongst large companies. that's impossible. a large company is a large company is a large company. they're all the same amount of corporate evil (however small or large you imagine that necessary/ unnecessary evil to be, salt to your particular political inclinations)

    there is a certain prejudicial aura around google in the slashdot crowd. circa 2002, google was every geek's wet dream, powerhouse little startup bringing the big bad guys to their knees at their own game. however, since that time, google has morphed into just another 500 pound corporate gorilla, no better and no worse than microsoft, or walmart, or any other corporate bogeyman of your choice

    slashdot: google = microsoft. get it into your head. doubleclick and privacy, china censorship, this nda. take your pick. fall out of love. the fairy tale story is over

    in all of your prejudicial and stereotypical ways of thinking about microsoft, apply it to google, and then maybe ytou have a better understandning of that company (and of microsoft, while google is not as saintly as the presumed slashdot prejudice imagines, microsoft is not as rabidly evil as the presumed slashdot prejudice imagines)

    please update your circa 2002 prejudicial impressions of google to 2007. k thx

    • by gurps_npc (621217) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:29AM (#18973235)
      Believe that all large companies are equally evil is as stupid as beliveing that Goodle is not evil.

      Evilness is not only caused by the nature of having a large organziation, and . Large organizations encourage it by their nature, but it not the only cause.

      Enron was TRULY, FREAKIN EVIL.

      They intentionally gamed the system to raise energy prices, cheating their customers, the states, everyone. They encouraged employees to buy Enron stock despite many of them KNOWING they they were breaking the law. They lied about everything, and engaged in multiple criminal actions, including destoying documents.

      Google is no Enron. They are not as evil as all other companies.

      I would probably rank Google as one of the better companies. On a scale of evil from 0 being a one more store run by an honest priest, to 100 being Enron, they are probably a solid 70. Microsoft is around a 85-90 or so. They cheated their customers and clients, but never cheated their own employees and generally admitted their illegal activities instead of working as hard to cover them up as they did to do them in the first place.

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:when is slashdot going to fall out of love? by maxume (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:41AM
    • Re:when is slashdot going to fall out of love? by gad_zuki! (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:30AM
    • AMEN by pcause (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:35PM
      • Re:AMEN by drew (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @03:10PM
    • Speaking of nuance ... by Loundry (Score:3) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:19PM
    • Re:when is slashdot going to fall out of love? by mrmauiman (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @04:52PM
  • If you ANAL then... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:49AM (#18972567)
    ...do not try to interpret an NDA without one. This article is perfect proof as he misreads items and takes several others out of context. The lack of a "built-in" expiration is nothing new either, since Google is attempting to protect their current technologies and see no reason why they would be replaced in 5, 10 or 20 years. The built-in expiration is the public availability of the information.

    Really, this blog post is almost FUD, or maybe it is just downright stupidity. Like I said, if you are not a lawyer...then ask one to read your NDA, because legalese != English.
  • As a Google employee... by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:51AM
  • So? by Bandman (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:51AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Google's Evil DNA by ThirdPrize (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:57AM
  • Mention the name Google by Per Abrahamsen (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:00AM
  • Search harder! by SageinaRage (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:05AM
  • Google Hell by AragornSonOfArathorn (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:08AM
  • Work by martinelli (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:10AM
    • Re:Work by lintux (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:31AM
      • Re:Work by slothman32 (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:05AM
  • NDA for NDA by cenonce (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:10AM
  • It Don't Say That by Dresq (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:15AM
  • by twfry (266215) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:17AM (#18973015)
    IANAL, but I do know a bit about how far NDA's can extend in the US. Here courts will only enforce them for around 1 year, maybe 2 if you were very senior level and the NDA was tailored to exclusive points regarding your job. Courts will also not enforce NDAs that cover too much information (let alone everything). The NDA has to be limited in the information considered to be protected.

    In cases where companies made over extended NDAs, the courts generally view them as being too broad and unenforceable. A company can not limit an employee from competing against them for too long or limit the employee too much in what they can say/do in the limited restricted period.

    The courts in the US when faced with similar NDAs, have simply stated they are too broad and as a result nothing is enforceable. These NDAs are useless and you are free to do what you want even if you signed one. Have fun.
  • you don't have to sign the Google NDA by fubob (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:21AM
  • Copyright? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Rob T Firefly (844560) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:22AM (#18973089)
    (http://robvincent.net/ | Last Journal: Tuesday October 09, @01:55PM)
    The blogger (site seems dotted or squashed, here's the mirror) [mirrordot.org] wrote that "Since linking the entire NDA would likely violate Google's copyright on the document, I'll just quote sections of it below"

    IANAL, but I seem to remember hearing that contracts are specifically not eligible for copyright. Anyone know more about this issue?
  • Google caused my divorce! (Score:5, Funny)

    by minotaurcomputing (775084) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:23AM (#18973101)
    (http://www.earthvssoup.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday May 22, @11:16AM)
    I have remained silent too long and I must point out that in fact Google caused my divorce. I was contacted by them numerous times for technical phone screens and was eventually brought out to CA for an interview and received very positive feedback. However, because of the evil NDA I was forced to keep all of this information from my wife. To her I was acting strange by: 1) jumping up from the dinner table to take phone calls in the other room, 2) flying out to some unknown location for a couple days, 3) returning happy, and 4) refusing to explain any of these actions. Google and its insidious NDA have ruined my marriage... woe is me!

    -m
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Really? by MrMunkey (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:30AM
  • The joke is on them... by CaptainBJones (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:32AM
  • Evil by whisper_jeff (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:33AM
    • Re:Evil by chucklinart (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:01AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Best-effort. by headkase (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:33AM
  • NDA Clarification (Score:5, Insightful)

    by noirsoldats (944384) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:37AM (#18973405)
    Ok... let's deconstruct (reverse engineer?) the part of the NDA that most people seem to be getting their panties in a bunch over,

    4. Participant agrees not to do the following, except with the advanced review and written approval of Google: (a) issue or release any articles, advertising, publicity or other matter relating to this Agreement (including the fact that a meeting or discussion has taken place between the parties) or mentioning or implying the name of Google; (b) make copies of documents containing Confidential Information; or (c) reverse engineer, disassemble, decompile, translate, or attempt to discover any prototypes, software, algorithms, or underlying ideas which embody Google's Confidential Information.
    specifically Section 4a. Now, you know the legal-ese buzzwords in this are rather minimal so I'm not sure why you people are having SUCH a hard time reading this.. but let me break it down for you...

    (a) issue or release any articles, advertising, publicity or other matter relating to this Agreement (including the fact that a meeting or discussion has taken place between the parties) or mentioning or implying the name of Google;
    First let's take out the parenthetical un-needed junk.

    (a) issue or release any articles, advertising, publicity or other matter relating to this Agreement or mentioning or implying the name of Google;
    *points up* Is that any more clear without the 'thought bump' in the middle? Participant agrees not to 'issue or release any articles, advertising, publicity or other matter relating to this Agreement or mentioning or implying the name of Google'..... Meaning don't release news stories or make advertisements about something 'confidential' relating to Google of which you know nothing about. Ya know, like spreading rumors. Open your eyes folks, not a THING unusual about this NDA except for the wording.. And that in itself isn't unusual, it is just that Google seems to getting a lot more attention than any company before them. Side Note: Does this really deserve to be an article?
  • NDAs hurt your career. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Opportunist (166417) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:56AM (#18973667)
    I've had some time in the auditing sector. If you think Google's NDA is bad, don't ever go there. What I had to sign can be easily summed up with "You're not gonna talk about what you did here, when you did it, who you worked with or even that you did it, or we'll make sure you won't work again, ever".

    Now, when I movee away I got 5 years of thin air in my CV. Can't write anything sensible in there. Tops would be "5 years at $auditing". No job description, no work place, no reference, nada. The only thing I got was a quite bland, nondescript "Yeah, that guy worked for us for those 5 years and he did ... stuff" letter.

    You can't even violate that NDA and tell your future employee what you did. If you do, it shows him that you don't give a shit about NDAs and there goes your job opportunity, since, well, if you didn't even honor the NDA of a company that does actually have the muscle to make sure you won't work EVER again if they found out, how much do you care about the NDA of some smaller company?

    NDAs mean that you can't use your quite interesting experience in your CVs. Some of the things I did back then would have made my CV shine brilliantly for the job I got now. Luckily, I got it regardless, without having to break the NDAs I signed then.

    But I guess I could've asked for a few hundreds more, if I could've told him just what I know. I do have valuable knowledge for my employer that he would maybe honor with more money. I just can't talk about it.

    So, bottom line, I am lucky regardless. Many ain't, because they can't use their experience in their CV, due to NDAs. They can't say that they know, say, the flaws of online banking software when they start at a security company that was recently hired by some bank.

    Just as an example, of course...
  • not evil at all by AlgorithMan (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:19AM
  • You think that's evil? by fancycwabs (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:30AM
  • Almost as bad as Coca Cola (Score:3, Interesting)

    by gelfling (6534) on Thursday May 03 2007, @11:51AM (#18974687)
    (http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Monday October 29, @07:20AM)
    Oh I'm sorry, have you ever heard of a non tech company? Yeah there's this beverage company called Coca Cola where they have a frightening level of paranoia they check everyone going in and out and they really don't like it if you so much as utter the name 'Coca Cola'. Even if you don't work there, even if you're on a consulting gig and the company hasn't even signed a contract yet. And if you ever allude to having worked for any beverage company or, as a consultant, even in that sector, they don't want you on the account at all and will probably have you thrown off.
  • Wisdom by jawahar (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:53AM
  • Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple by Baldrson (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:53AM
  • There is no vil in Google- by badc0ffee (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @11:57AM
  • A non-evil NDA would be symmetrical by ribuck (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:01PM
  • Overreaction? by Vexorian (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:14PM
  • Perpetuity... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:15PM
  • Section 4 by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:17PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • violates NDA? by ncohafmuta (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:46PM
  • They sell ads, right? by Drunkulus (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @12:51PM
  • Way to ensure the best and brightest don't apply by ZWithaPGGB (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:04PM
  • rules... by SohCahToa (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:37PM
  • come on, guys, read it! by nanosquid (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:40PM
  • This is just for the interview? by -Neko- (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:41PM
  • Good news: you can mention Google by Scratch-O-Matic (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @02:01PM
  • Nothing to see here, move along by Weasel Boy (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @02:07PM
  • Google got confused by wesley78 (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @02:28PM
  • Mention Google in public ?!?!? by Toon Moene (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @02:42PM
  • Lucky escape indeed by owlstead (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @03:09PM
  • Fear by bkr1_2k (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @03:50PM
  • Why shouldn't the NDA do something for me? by pwizard2 (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @05:05PM
  • I had to sign one (like most people) by RobinH (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @06:14PM
  • People are reading this wrong ... by wilder_jw (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @06:36PM
  • My Interview at Google by lynx_user_abroad (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @08:37PM
  • It's all about terms by enronman (Score:1) Thursday May 03 2007, @09:52PM
  • Just decline stuff like this by Askmum (Score:1) Friday May 04 2007, @01:42AM
  • They forgot to make me sign the NDA by Lemmingue (Score:2) Friday May 04 2007, @08:17AM
  • You don't have to fricking sign the NDA. by Dan Berlin (Score:2) Friday May 11 2007, @09:56AM
  • Re:Oh noes. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 03 2007, @09:48AM (#18972529)
    Eh, I work for a rather large mobile phone company, and my contract with them isn't even half as stupid, and still manages to protect against industrial espionage. I'm even allowed to mention that the company is called Ericsson.
    [ Parent ]
    • Re:Oh noes. (Score:4, Funny)

      by Elvis Parsley (939954) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:43AM (#18973501)
      All well and good, but clearly the terms of your contract prevent you from disclosing your name.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Oh noes. by 19thNervousBreakdown (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @01:03PM
    • Re:Oh noes. by devilspgd (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @03:47PM
  • Re:Stupid and unenforceable by Billosaur (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:01AM
  • Re:This just in (Score:5, Interesting)

    by arivanov (12034) on Thursday May 03 2007, @10:08AM (#18972883)
    (http://www.sigsegv.cx/)

    No. While it does some cutting edge work, it is not anything particularly new as far as working methods are concerned:

    • Google has strict separation between network, servers and development. You are not allowed to straddle fences. In fact this is something you are asked during the interview process long before any NDAs. So if you have a skillset which spans multiple disciplines you are of no interest to them. Based on prolonged and utterly disfunctional dialogue with their recruiters, they want "industry standard" people. Outstanding - maybe, but "industry standard" none the less, which fit exactly the industry standard niches
    • Google deploys industry standard working methods - current and past:
      • Own project time, mandatory skills improvement, etc - ATT, Xerox, etc had that 30 years before them. Granted they abandoned it when descending into the outsourcing sweatshop frenzy, but there is nothing new in this. This was the industry standard for a long time until some penny pinching idiots decided to "rationalize" it. Same for many of the other famous gimmicks.
      • Google operates a more or less strictly on-site shop. So telecommuting, no teleworking, etc. Once again, nothing new, nothing revolutionary, firmly stuck in the past. Half of the Valley (and outside it) is way ahead of it on this one.

    Google has some of the attributes which the industry used to have before penny-pinching cretins tried to "rationalize" it. As a result it achieves roughly what the industry used to achieve in those days. In fact less. Just look at the level of innovation coming out of ATT, IBM, Xerox and early Valley companies 30+ years ago per hour human time invested. In everything besides these "blast from the past" attritbutes it is an utterly bog standard corporation. And the primary aim of the NDA is to hide this, not to hide its supersecret achievements.

    And now follows news at 11.

    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Oh noes. by Applekid (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:35AM
    • Re:Oh noes. by devilspgd (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @03:36PM
  • Re:Oh noes. by Digital Vomit (Score:2) Thursday May 03 2007, @10:43AM
  • 14 replies beneath your current threshold.