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Google is battling main points with AI search and now loses a veteran
Google’s chief privateness officer, Keith Enright, will go away the corporate this fall, after 13 years on the tech big, a spokesperson for the Alphabet-owned firm mentioned on Tuesday.
(Reuters) – Google’s chief privateness officer, Keith Enright, will go away the corporate this fall, after 13 years on the tech big, a spokesperson for the Alphabet-owned firm mentioned on Tuesday.
“We regularly evolve our legal, regulatory and compliance efforts to meet new obligations and expectations. Our latest changes will increase the number of people working on regulatory compliance across the company,” the spokesperson mentioned.
Enright was named Google’s privateness chief in September 2018, at a time when the corporate confronted heavy authorities scrutiny over privateness points.
Enright’s departure is a part of a broader reorganization inside the privateness groups, with the corporate trying to shift privateness coverage to numerous particular person product administration groups, in line with the corporate.
“After over 13 years at Google, I’m ready for a change, and will be moving on this fall, taking all that I’ve learned and trying something new,” Enright wrote in a put up on LinkedIn.