The government of New Zealand “admonished” search giant Google for publicizing the name of a man charged in the killing of backpacker Grace Millane in Auckland, with justice minister Andrew Little demanding that the company change its algorithms to prevent it from happening again in the future, the New York Times reported on Friday. According to the Times, at issue are laws designed to ensure a fair trial by allowing a criminal defendant to request their identity be withheld from publication. That’s the case with the defendant in the Millane trial, whose name broke in the British media before it made its way into an automatically generated Google newsletter on trending topics sent to people in New Zealand. Google told the Times that it did not receive a suppression order, but would have complied by geoblocking the name’s visibility in-country if it had: But several British media outlets published it, and on Thursday Google included the man’s name in the subject line of an email sent to people in New Zealand who subscribe to a service that highlights local topics that are trending online. Google said in a statement to New Zealand news outlets that it “didn’t receive an order to…