Merrill's hacking roots go back to Arkansas, where he disabled an online bulletin board used by white supremacists. "One of the things I found that really interested me is it turns out that it's not actually all that hard to crash those bulletin boards and make them unavailable," he says.
An interest in how technology works and how people use it followed. Merrill's premise: There are no lasting technical solutions to social problems, and most interesting problems are social problems. "The particular tools and systems we give [people] yield certain kinds of problems," he says. Merrill sees it as his job to help solve them.
Merrill, 36, graduated from the University of Tulsa, majoring in social and political organization, then earned a master's and a doctorate from Princeton in psychology. He worked for the Rand Corp. as an information scientist; taught information security in Southeast Asia; joined Price Waterhouse, where he became leader of the West Coast security practice; then moved to Charles Schwab as senior VP of information security. In 2003, he was hired by Google.

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Douglas Merrill, VP of engineering, Google![]()
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