KEY POINTS
  • A group of current and former Google employees claims that researcher Timnit Gebru did not resign, despite what Google AI chief Jeff Dean is saying.
  • Gebru claims she was abruptly fired last week after a dispute over a research paper she'd co-authored.
  • The group, Google Walkout for Real Change, particularly criticized Dean's contention that research papers take two weeks to approve, noting that papers are frequently approved in a shorter period of time.
Google senior fellow Jeff Dean speaks at a 2017 event in China.

A group of current and former Google employees who started a petition supporting departed researcher Timnit Gebru disputed an executive's account of her departure in a blog post Monday.

In a post titled "Setting the Record Straight," Gebru's colleagues and petitioners said she did not resign, and claimed inconsistencies in Google AI chief Jeff Dean's statements, including his contention that Google's process for approving research papers requires two weeks. In fact, they said, papers are often approved much more quickly than that and Gebru's paper had been approved through "standard processes" known as PubApprove.

"This is a standard which was applied unevenly and discriminatorily," said the group, Google Walkout for Real Change.