This is pretty much what I think, knowing no more than what anyone here knows. It's reasonable to argue that NSA-issued request are wrong, period, but that's different from saying that Google is actively assisting them in a para-legal process...not only out of Constitutional concerns, but because building such a backdoor necessarily creates security risks to users, NSA targets or not.
In my layman's opinion, building such a backdoor in an infrastructure as complicated as Google's would require a team as well as an oversight group...someone has to write tests for that "feature" and someone else has to make sure those tests aren't seen by those who don't need to know (I.e. the rest of Google's sizable test department)...this kind if arrangement would seemingly have to be known by someone on the executive team.
In my layman's opinion, building such a backdoor in an infrastructure as complicated as Google's would require a team as well as an oversight group...someone has to write tests for that "feature" and someone else has to make sure those tests aren't seen by those who don't need to know (I.e. the rest of Google's sizable test department)...this kind if arrangement would seemingly have to be known by someone on the executive team.