Google Guy Comes Home To Find Fliers Labeling Him A 'Parasite' Plastered Everywhere

Google Guy Comes Home To Find Fliers Labeling Him A 'Parasite' Plastered Everywhere
Kevin Rose, chief executive officer and founder of Milk Inc., speaks during a Bloomberg via Getty Images West television interview in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Rose, founder of Digg Inc., discussed Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc., Google Inc.'s Google+, and his role at Milk. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Kevin Rose, chief executive officer and founder of Milk Inc., speaks during a Bloomberg via Getty Images West television interview in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Rose, founder of Digg Inc., discussed Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc., Google Inc.'s Google+, and his role at Milk. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

San Francisco is no stranger to raucous anti-tech demonstrations, but a protest outside of Google Ventures partner Kevin Rose’s home yesterday took a turn for the personal.

Protesters held up banners and dispersed fliers outside Rose’s San Francisco home reading “KEVIN ROSE: PARASITE,” and blaming the Google Ventures partner and Digg founder for having a hand in San Francisco’s escalating affordability crisis.

Rose posted a photo of the flier to Instagram (reader warning: vulgar language.)

The protest appears to have been staged by a group called The Counterforce, which took credit for the protest on the activist website IndyBay and on the blog kevinroseisaterribleperson.wordpress.com, where they requested Google pay a ransom for its effect on the city’s soaring rents.

“We demand that Google give three billion dollars to an anarchist organization of our choosing. This money will then be used to create autonomous, anti-capitalist, and anti-racist communities throughout the Bay Area and Northern California. In these communities, whether in San Francisco or in the woods, no one will ever have to pay rent and housing will be free.”

A Google spokesperson told The Huffington Post that neither Rose nor the company would be releasing an official statement but shared some of the company’s efforts to give back to the San Francisco community, including $6.8 million pledged to fund free city bus passes for low-income youth and the the Bay Area Impact Challenge to kickstart nonprofits.

The city’s affordability crisis is apparently not lost on Rose, who tweeted out his frustrations and sympathies following the protest.

This is not the first time The Counterforce has staged a protest aimed at an individual Google employee. In January, the group used similar tactics at the Berkeley home of Google X developer Anthony Levandowski of the company’s self-driving car project.

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