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terça-feira, 10 de julho de 2012

Google supports decriminalisation of gay sex, clarifies that same-sex marriage not a focus


in: http://www.fridae.asia/

The Internet was abuzz over the weekend with reports that Google has launched a worldwide push to legalise same-sex marriage but it has since clarified that it is not the case, a Google spokesperson told Fridae on Monday.



Googlers from over a dozen countries marched at the World Pride parade in London on Jul 7, 2012. 
Photo: Flickr

While Google’s Legalise Love campaign does indeed support the decriminalisation of homosexuality and elimination of homophobia worldwide, it is not a push for same-sex marriage as reported by various Internet websites.


The confusion over the focus of the campaign appears to have originated from a news story posted on gay networking site Dot429.com. It reported on Satursday: "Google is launching a new campaign called 'Legalize Love' with the intention of inspiring countries to legalize marriage for lesbian, gay, and bisexual people around the world."

It further added that the campaign officially launches in Poland and Singapore on Saturday, July 7th. CNN on Sunday reported that Legalise Love “will focus on countries such as Singapore, where certain homosexual activities are illegal, and Poland, which has no legal recognition of same-sex couples.”

When contacted by Fridae for more information, a spokesperson at Google’s Singapore’s office said the tech giant has no specific plans for Singapore or any other country, and that their campaign which involves partnering with organisations around the world has been ongoing. The California-based company has supported Singapore's Pink Dot, a public rally to support LGBTs, in 2011 and 2012; Trevor Project, an US-based organisation which provides crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBT youths as well as numerous other LGBT-related initiatives and LGBT pride events worldwide.

The campaign is in fact part of the company’s diversity programme that aims to create a work environment where employees can “bring their whole selves to work.”

Google has said in a statement posted on their site:

“Though our business and employees are located in offices around the world, our policies on non-discrimination are universal throughout Google. We are proud to be recognised as a leader in LGBT inclusion efforts, but there is still a long way to go to achieve full equality. Legalise Love is our call to decriminalise homosexuality and eliminate homophobia around the world.

“At Google, we encourage people to bring their whole selves to work. In all of our 60 offices around the world, we are committed to cultivating a work environment where Googlers can be themselves and thrive. We also want our employees to have the same inclusive experience outside of the office, as they do at work, and for LGBT communities to be safe and to be accepted wherever they are.”

Google's Mark Palmer-Edgecumbe was quoted by Dot429.com as saying: “Singapore wants to be a global financial center and world leader and we can push them on the fact that being a global center and a world leader means you have to treat all people the same, irrespective of their sexual orientation."

Same-sex sexual relations between men is illegal in Singapore although the law is generally not enforced.

Palmer-Edgecumbe was speaking at the Global LGBT Workplace Summit in London on Friday last week. As part of the World Pride celebration in London last weekend, Google held their first ever ‘Legalise Love’ Conference involving 100 representatives from LGBT advocacy groups, employee networks, and diversity organisations.

Google is known to support gay rights. In 2008, the company’s co-founder Sergey Brin announced that the company officially opposes Proposition 8, a California ballot proposition that would make same-sex marriages illegal via a post on the company’s blog. In 2010, the company began providing additional compensation to gay and lesbian employees to cover a cost that they must pay when their (same-sex) partners receive domestic partner health benefits, which heterosexual married couples do not pay.

Meanwhile at Facebook, the company showed its support for gay marriage when the company earlier this month debuted same-sex marriage status icons that best reflect a person’s relationship status. In the past a bride and groom were used for straight couples who were married while no such icon was available for gay married couples. The move was first spotted when Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes married his partner Sean Eldgridge. In February 2011, it added civil unions and domestic partnerships to relationship status options.


http://www.fridae.asia/

quarta-feira, 27 de junho de 2012

Facebook, Google, And Other Tech Companies Show Off Their Gay Pride (Pics)


in: http://techcrunch.com/2012/06/25/tech-gay-pride/



GGAD2



Pride got high tech this weekend as thousands of employees from Google, Facebook, Electronic Arts, Zynga, and more celebrated to support equal rights for everyone. Parades in San Francisco and New York saw search engine, social network, and game developer logos decked out in rainbows as engineers danced in the streets.
Here’s a look at our favorite photos of tech companies representing at Pride…
Google tells me “We support our LGBT [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender] employees in a number of ways — in taking a stand on matters of policy, putting programs in place that support Gayglers (Gay Googlers) and their families, and hosting and sponsoring events and programs around the world to continue the discussion on equality.”


Over 400 Facebook employees marched down Market Street in San Francisco for Pride yesterday. I wondered if Facebook feared any backlash from conservative countries where it’s popular but tolerance is not. Slater Tow, a member of the Gay @ Facebook employees group assured me “Facebook very much supports diversity” but that its presence at Pride is “not a company led initiative. Its 100% employee driven.”
Both companies have been showing their support online too. Last year Facebook added civil unions and domestic partnerships as relationship status options, and the company won a GLAAD award this month. And just last week, Google added a PrideEaster egg to search, displaying a rainbow banner on results when you search for Gay, Lesbian, LGBT, NYC Gay Pride, or SF Gay Pride, or Gay Pride.
So now let’s check out the awesome photos. If your tech company has pics from Pride too, post them as Imgur links in the comments and I’ll add them in.
You didn’t have to search hard to find Google at Pride. It had almost 700 marchers in New York City and over 1,000 in San Francisco
With such a huge contingent, Google figured it’d bring a bus
…and a trolley in SF
Whose to say what gender the cute little Android robots are?
Zynga shows how Words With Friends does Pride
Zynga’s dog logo gets rainbowed
All the Electronics Arts characters supporting gay rights
EA is a sports game company after all
Facebook brought a huge crew to San Francisco Pride
That looks like about 900 million, right?
Facebook decked out its team with special Pride shirts
And they weren’t shy about showing their colors
It is a social network after all, so Facebook had a DJ playing to the crowd as its trolley car drove through the parade
Because pride connects us
From atop SF’s Dolores Park, Facebook shows its support
That means equality even if you’re dressed up like Katy Perry
And even Facebook’s office got into the spirit, with its giant hack sign painted rainbow to show pride visible from space
[Thanks to Jason Agron, Chandler Abraham, and all the other photographers]






quarta-feira, 22 de junho de 2011

Google LGBT-Related Searches Are Rainbow-Colored for Pride Month

http://mashable.com/2011/06/20/google-gay/



June is LGBT Pride Month and members of those communities are organizing parades and events all over the world, showing the world they’re proud of their sexual orientation.

Like in recent years, Google is showing support for the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community by adding a rainbow next to search results for several related keywords, including “gay,” “queer” and “transsexual.”

The rainbow itself is non-clickable and the results of the searches seem to be unchanged. It’s just a small nod from Google, a company that publicly expresses support for its LGBT employees and the community as a whole.


http://mashable.com/2011/06/20/google-gay/

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