Google kicked off I/O, its annual developers' conference, on Wednesday with the traditional keynote address where the company showed off its latest products. However, the presentation was interrupted - twice - by protestors inside the hall, while a stream of activists registered their displeasure with the company's activities outside the venue, Moscone West in San Francisco.
About 45 minutes into the keynote, a woman walked up near the stage holding a banner that seemed to say, "Develop a Conscience: Stop Jack Halprin From Evicting SF Teachers." Jack Halprin is a Google lawyer who was was accused of trying to evict people under the Ellis Act in San Francisco. The woman was apparently later identified as Claudia Tirado, one of the eviction victims.
The woman was removed from the venue, and David Burke, the Google engineer on stage at the time, even managed to throw-in a joke at her expense, saying, "Battery Saver [the feature he was talking about at the time] is really great if you're about to embark on a long hike or, say, a long protest, and you want the battery to last even longer."
That wasn't all. Two hours into the keynote, another protestor, a male, walked near the stage and started shouting. "You all [Google employees] work for a totalitarian company that is building machines that will kill people," he said, in an apparent reference to Google's purchase of Boston Dynamics.
The man was also removed from the hall, but not before he asked the audience to "wake the f* up."
Even before the keynote began, activists began gathering outside, continuing their protest well into the day.
Inside Google I/O people are cheering for Google. Outside Google I/O people are cheering against Google. pic.twitter.com/eV281IgErF
-- Nick Bilton (@nickbilton) June 25, 2014Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.
Supernova’s First Moments Show Olive-Shaped Blast in Groundbreaking Observations
Intense Solar Storm With Huge CMEs Forced Astronauts to Take Shelter on the ISS
Nearby Super-Earth GJ 251 c Could Help Learn About Worlds That Once Supported Life, Astronomers Say
James Webb Telescope May Have Spotted First Generation of Stars in the Universe