But now a leaked transcript of a July 18 presentation by search chief
Ben Gomes has the executive congratulating the Project Dragonfly team
and predicting launch in six to nine months, and holding out the
possibility of a launch in as little as three months.
On September 23, Gomes lied to a BBC reporter and said that Dragonfly
was just a plan on the drawing board, saying “all we’ve done is some
exploration” and “we don’t have any plans to launch something.”
This lie apparently prompted angry googlers to leak the transcript of
Gomes’s remarks to The Intercept. Gomes refused to comment to the
Intercept and when they called him, he twice claimed that the connection
was so bad that he couldn’t understand their questions.
Project Dragonfly has also cost Google key engineers and has been the source of mass discontent inside the company, especially when news broke that the censored tool was designed to personally identify
searchers who looked up banned topics like “student protests” and
“democracy” and to deliver these identities to China’s security
establishment.