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Lawmakers urge Google to fix abortion searches suggesting ‘fake clinics’

U.S. lawmakers are questioning Google over how the company's search engine shows users in certain states inaccurate results about abortion services.

Matt Rourke / AP

U.S. lawmakers are questioning Google over how the company’s search engine shows users in certain states inaccurate results about abortion services by diverting them to “fake clinics” that don’t provide the procedure and dissuade people from ending a pregnancy.

In a letter sent Friday to Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Google's parent company, Alphabet, 20 Democratic members of Congress and Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, Vt., urged the company to quickly rectify the search accuracy issue, noting it comes as a U.S. Supreme Court decision due later this month could overturn the right to an abortion established in Roe v. Wade.

» READ MORE: U.S. abortions rise: 1 in 5 pregnancies terminated in 2020

Lawmakers cited a recent report that found in states with abortion "trigger laws," 11 percent of Google search results for abortion services led users to nonmedical facilities that don't provide abortion; the result was 37 percent for Google Maps queries. The report by the U.S.-based nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate also found that almost 28 percent of Google ads that appear at the top of related search-result pages were for antiabortion clinics.

"Directing women toward fake clinics that traffic in misinformation and don't provide comprehensive health services is dangerous to women's health and undermines the integrity of Google's search results," Democratic lawmakers wrote in the letter that was spearheaded by Sen. Mark Warner, Va., and Rep. Elissa Slotkin, Mich.

The lawmakers note their request comes after Google pledged in 2014 to remove ads for some "crisis pregnancy centers" that violated the company's policy against deceptive advertising.

A Google spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment Saturday.

The landscape for reproductive rights in the United States is expected to shift dramatically in response to the Supreme Court decision, which may come as early as Monday. In addition to the 13 states that have already enacted "trigger laws" that effectively ban abortion the moment Roe is overturned, at least five others are expected to follow suit.

Sixteen states and the District of Columbia have laws explicitly protecting abortion rights at the state level, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit research center based in New York and Washington that supports abortion rights. Remaining states either have no specific law or unenforced bans on the books.

Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, told The Washington Post that the draft Supreme Court opinion that leaked in May has stimulated "massive" growth globally in fundraising activity and creativity among groups that seek to undermine fundamental reproductive rights. Similar themes around reproductive rights and abortion misinformation are emerging in Kenya, Latin America and the United Kingdom, he said.

Fighting misinformation through accurate search results is especially critical for Google given its global reach, Ahmed said. Google is far and away the most popular search engine, with more than 90 percent of the global market share, according to the German consumer data analysis company, Statista.

"When Google screws up, it can have an enormous impact on the whole word," Ahmed said.

How Google's search algorithm works is a tightly-guarded trade secret, but the company says in a public-facing guide on its search engine that Google looks for webpages deemed relevant to a user's search query and then returns results it believes "are the highest quality and most relevant to the user." Google said it uses "hundreds of factors" including user location and language to determine "relevancy"

But Ahmed said the search algorithm can be easily gamed as it tries to determine which webpages are relevant, including by groups that create networks of pages that interlink to each other.

Fake abortion clinics, which often self-style as "crisis pregnancy centers" or "pregnancy resource centers" do not provide abortions, though critics say they try to create a veneer of medical facility by offering pregnancy tests, ultrasounds or testing for sexually-transmitted infections. The American Medical Association's Journal of Ethics has argued that while "crisis pregnancy centers" are legal, they are unethical "by providing misleading information and causing delays and inequities in access to abortion."

Instead, the sites for the "crisis pregnancy centers" actively dissuade patients from choosing abortion, often through misinformation. Among the false claims made by fake clinics cited in the CCDH report are that abortions will make a pregnant person infertile or that suicidal impulses are "common" after an abortion.

Ahmed stressed the relevant criticism of fake abortion clinics is not their ideology, but the deceptive tactics they use to induce people to behave in a way they want.

"People have a right to hold an opinion on abortion," he said. "But it's [their] use of deception that makes it so malignant."

With disinformation and misinformation having direct repercussions on people's personal health, Ahmed said it's crucial for major technology platforms to act responsibly -- and for policymakers to hold them to account.

“This is just another example of how hate and disinformation actors can weaponize digital platforms to cause real-world harm to people,” he said.