Google whistleblower reveals tech giant DOES blacklist right-wing news sites and says the company called police when he leaked the evidence, leaving him ‘fearing for his life’

  • Engineer Zachary Vorhies released hundreds of documents to Project Veritas
  • He says he added a ‘dead man’s switch’ to the files in case he was ‘assassinated’ 
  • One of the files leaked by Vorhies is a ‘news black list site for Google Now’
  • He claims it is a list of the web pages Google restricts including conservative leaning websites such as The National Enquirer, Media Matters and Infowars
  • Another file appears to show a ranking classifier to ‘define channel quality’ 
  • Images show Vorhies walking towards officers after ‘Google called the police’
  • ‘Google is not who they say they are’, he warns in a chat with Project Veritas
  • CEO Sundar Pichai’s told congress that Google is not biased in December 2018

A Google engineer has spoken on the record to say the web giant does blacklist certain news sites and has an ‘editorial agenda’. 

Whistleblower Zachary Vorhies spoke to Project Veritas after claiming the company called police in San Francisco to perform a ‘wellness check’ on him when he originally leaked files on their activity. 

Senior software engineer Vorhies, who worked for the company for eight years, says he added a ‘dead man’s switch’ which would activate the files in case he was ‘killed or assassinated’.  

Among the hundreds of documents leaked by Vorhies to Project Veritas is a document called ‘news black list site for Google Now’ which he claims shows a list of the web pages Google restricts. 

It includes a number of conservative leaning websites such as The National Enquirer, Media Matters and Infowars. 

Vorhies says the company’s actions are ‘hypocritical at the least and it’s perjury at the worst’ after CEO Sundar Pichai testified to Congress to say they do not promote left-leaning, Democratic news over that of more Conservative outlets or merely outlets it does not rate.

The insider said he spoke out amid fears the ‘entire election system was going to be compromised forever by this company that told the American public that it was not going to do any evil’.