The hidden ties between Google and Amazon’s Project Nimbus and Israel’s military
On April 16, police entered Google offices in New York and California to detain several employees protesting a $1.2 billion cloud contract with Israel’s government called Project Nimbus. The deal, shared with Amazon, has met pushback from some employees at both companies since 2021, but the protests have grown louder since Israel’s renewed conflict with Hamas after the attacks of October 7, 2023.
Current and former Google and Amazon workers protesting Project Nimbus say it makes the companies complicit in Israel’s armed conflicts and its government’s illegal and inhumane treatment of civilian Palestinians. Google has insisted that it is not aimed at military work and is not “relevant to weapons or intelligence services,” while Amazon, seemingly, has not publicly discussed the scope of the contract.
But a WIRED review of public documents and statements by Israeli officials and Google and Amazon employees shows that the Israel Defense Forces have been central to Project Nimbus since its inception, shaping the project’s design and serving as some of its most important users. Top Israeli officials appear to think the Google and Amazon contract provides important infrastructure for the country’s military.
In February, at a conference dedicated to Project Nimbus, the head of Israel’s National Cyber Directorate, Gaby Portnoy, was quoted by Israeli media as crediting the contract with helping the country’s military retaliation against Hamas.
“Phenomenal things are happening in battle because of the Nimbus public cloud, things that are impactful for victory,” Portnoy said, according to an article published in People & Computers, which coorganized the conference. [Continue reading…]
STATEMENT from Google workers with the No Tech for Apartheid campaign on Google's announcement of massive $23B investment in Israeli tech startup as Wired investigation confirms Project Nimbus' active role in the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza pic.twitter.com/r3j9XE1sNC
— No Tech For Apartheid (@NoTechApartheid) July 17, 2024
An elite Israeli military intelligence unit may once again be about to prove its value to the nation’s tech economy as Google’s parent eyes cybertech company Wiz for an eyewatering $23 billion.
Alphabet Inc, a person familiar has said, is in advanced talks to buy Wiz from founder Assaf Rappaport, a former officer from the famed 8200 military unit, which has built a track record in turning out tech entrepreneurs.
As the war in Gaza squeezes Israel’s economy, the deal underscores the resilience of the tech industry, which accounts for some 20% of the country’s output and around 15% of jobs. It also highlights the military’s role in developing one of Israel’s most successful sectors.
Along with universities, Israel’s military intelligence and technology units, such as 8200, have provided the leaders for hundreds of tech start ups, helping to turn Israel into what is widely considered the No. 2 tech centre globally after Silicon Valley.
Check Point Software Technologies, Nice, Palo Alto Networks, CyberArk, Wix and Waze – bought by Google for $1 billion – are a handful of companies whose founders have military roots.
Rappaport credits the Israeli military for his success, once calling the 8200 unit “the best school of entrepreneurship.” [Continue reading…]