Ask Slashdot: Female Engineers, Could You Please Share Your Thoughts On the Google Memo
Reader joshtops writes: The widely circulated memo written by software engineer James Damore has become the talking point across companies in Silicon Valley, and elsewhere. In an interesting take, The Economist on Tuesday argued with the scientific or otherwise assumptions made by Damore. I was wondering what female engineers -- or females in other STEM beats -- think of the memo.
They do it by the book.
Maybe you should post the question to a website with fewer trolls. I suggest 4chan.
Female engineers, could you please revisit this topic on Slashdot, yet again, to generate a big spike in ad traffic? In a week, we'll ask male engineers to say what they thought about what the female engineers thought. Because this definitely hasn't been discussed yet, and female engineers certainly wouldn't have participated earlier, not until they were asked to.
Really?
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
Many of the more reasonable criticisms of the memo say that it wasn't written well enough; it could've been more considerate, it should have used better language, or better presentation. In this particular link, Scott Alexander is used as an example of better writing, and he certainly is one of the best and most persuasive modern writers I've found. However, I can not imagine ever matching his talent and output, even if I practiced for years to try and catch up.
I do not think that anyone's ability to write should disbar them from discussion. We can not expect perfection from others. Instead we should try to understand them as human beings, and interpret them with generosity and kindness. Also benis.
It seems there are no female engineers on here...
What's the % of female users on Slashdot, seriously?
Dear female engineers,
Do you prefer affirmative action or getting the job on your own merits? In other words, do you prefer equal outcomes, or equal opportunity?
Bonus points if you comment after reading the memo in its entirety!
Two things I don't want to read on Slashdot this week: Nazis and the Google Memo. I just might take my affiliate links and go home.
Women should be seen, not heard.
https://medium.com/the-mission/im-an-ex-google-woman-tech-leader-and-i-m-sick-of-our-approach-to-diversity-17008c5fe999
Here's the Google diversity training Damore seems to have been reacting to.
"Google's Bias Busting @ Work | Facilitator Guide"
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1yNBCAro6b-S1KifD6PnZWrlyBZ_kEFGWPtUkIpvFljk/edit
I read this article (see bottom of thread), felt like screaming and then felt compelled to write about my experiences and thoughts on the matter. ****I am a women in Information Technology and I have been doing this since 1995. Actually, even before that time since I worked at a computer camp at age 17 teaching BASIC computer language. ****Before there was oodles of money in IT, I rarely experienced prejudice and sexism in my job. I loved what I did and all of the guys in my field were very nice and helpful. They were collaborative and fun to be around. I never felt out of place and I did what anyone else was doing without anyone blinking an eye. When the dollar signs started to increase a lot of men must have thought "Well, I could like Tech if there's money in it." and started studying CS in school. Later, they would emerge into the dotcom time where money was flowing like honey. The boys club moved into my world and it has never been the same. **** I've been marginalized, badgered, stalked, ostracized, been the center of vicious gossip, denied work expenditures, had someone digging into my childhood and family and had IT peers hack into my home PC turn it on and listening to private conversations. Sadly, the list goes on and that last item is more common than you would believe. Note that that kind of voyeuristic behavior would have had someone in jail before the 90s. (Just creepy if you ask me.) But, the good guys are still there and they are somewhat left behind as well. They quietly watch the bullies from the Lord of the Flies and go about their business. ****This hierarchy that these guys have created is brutal. They are each testing boundaries trying to find out where they fit in and the weakest and most insecure pick on women. They pick on women because first and foremost, it bonds them with other men. Secondly, they do it because they can't hack being at the bottom of the pecking order and a woman is a nice target. Woman will often say nothing in a blind attempt to keep the peace. And if they do say something, they become a bitch. Which of course fits in with the first item mentioned, it bonds them with other men. ****So, what does this have to do with Information Technology? NOTHING! Yeah, that's right. Nothing! So, all of your money, all of your private information, all IoT (Internet of Things), all of your Security is exposed to this lot of people! Hence why this guy was fired. Google is smart enough to realize that they hold information about ALL of us. Male, female, straight, gay, black, white, Asian, Hispanic, transgenders etc. And guess what, we all want a say in who has our information and how it is used. We all want them to show empathy with our personal information and lives. And if Google, Facebook and IBM etc. are experimenting with AI, most of us would want them to build a system with agents that are compassionate. How will that happen if all of it is run by men who live like we are all on an island like the Lord of the Flies? So, I beg everyone to think about these ideas. We cannot afford this kind of behavior at the height of an epoch of science and discovery that has the tell tale signs of a change that will effect all of human existence as we know it. As for James Damore and his so called manifesto, his call for the elimination of empathy in IT is so short sighted that I can barely believe it. How can someone with such intelligence be so blind to how dangerous that would be. Hey wait, I answered my own question. He's on the island of The Lord of the Flies, that's how. He's not thinking properly. http://www.businessinsider.com...â¦
This topic comes up with my wife fairly often; even more often since we had two daughters. She is a business / data analysis at a smallish multinational manufacturing company, and while it upsets me when I see this behavior directed at my female software engineer counterparts it is even worse when you hear first hand accounts from someone you care about deeply. From being treated like a secretary to having her comments dismissed, it is all behavior any reasonably educated male should notice even without having it pointed out by female coworkers.
It is often hard to give advice to my wife because I simply don't have to deal with the same obstacles. She cannot really complain about misogynistic behavior without being branded a trouble maker, and she has to walk a very fine line between being assertive or just a bitch.
A quote from Bob Thaves about Ginger Rogers sums up the plight of women in the workforce in general, and women in STEM field especially. "Sure [Fred Astaire] was great, but don't forget Ginger Rogers did everything he did backwards and in high heels."
-- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
To even ask the question to females only acknowledges that men and women are in fact different, with different views driven by biology. Well done Slashdot.
https://www.vox.com/the-big-idea/2017/8/11/16130452/google-memo-women-tech-biology-sexism
https://www.vox.com/first-person/2017/8/10/16119334/female-coders-tech-students-respond-sexist-google-memo
http://fortune.com/2017/08/09/google-diversity-memo-wojcicki/
...
I am never anything but appalled by the majority of comments on Slashdot any time a topic related to females comes up, so I cannot imagine why any woman would respond to this. I know that I wouldn't want my daughter to ever have to interact with the kind of ignorant male jackasses who seem to constitute the majority of posters on Slashdot.
most of us would want them to build a system with agents that are compassionate. How will that happen if all of it is run by men who live like we are all on an island like the Lord of the Flies?
Which seems like a stronger generalizing statement than anything I saw in the kids manifesto.
I read the memo and found it well written and I think it pointed out how the SWJ and left leaning bias at Google isn't good for anyone including the class of people that the wrong headed policies seek to help. Google is clearly all about respecting everyone's opinion so long as they are the "correct" ones.
On this pig-board? Doubt it...
Y'all ran them off a long time ago. Nice work.
The question presumes, women have some sort of unique insight/opinion — simply due to their sex. People have lost their jobs for such ideas.
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
Google it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dek5HtNdIHY
"females" sounds like you are performing some kind of scientific experiment
female is used to refer to the sex of a species which is capable of producing offspring
woman refers to an adult human female
the more you know
There has been tons of opinions asserting that the brains of females and males are not different in any respect and that there is no reason a female can't be a brilliant scientist or engineer.
There has been tons of opinions asserting that the brains of females and males are different, which is the reason a person can feel as if they are a female trapped in a male body, or visa versa.
Seems to me that one argument obliterates the other, one way or another.
My oh my. What's a SJW to think?
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
Long story short: nerds are cool, jocks are jerks?
#DeleteFacebook
the whole point was there aren't that many women to speak up.
Frank W. Miller
But please read the full memo with links before settling on an opinion. I was listening to NPR just two days ago and they resorted to straw man arguments and condemnation without being truthful about what it's contents were. Also keep in mind it was written as an internal reply in response to a specific request by google for controversial thoughts on improving workplace diversity practices.
I am sorry to hear of your experiences.
As a cis white male in his 30s teaching CS at a university, would you have an opinion of what I can do to help the situation?
Do you believe that your inability to organize your writings into paragraphs may have adversely affected your employment prospects?
It seems that we used to have SJW articles a few times a week on Slashdot. Lately, its been several SJW articles each day. Please, give AmiMoJo some time to rest...
Time for you to be the bitches you've always wanted to be, I mean are, after that old man Trump used you all, well, like bitches. SJW on one end of the spectrum and alt-right on the other. Butch chick on one end of the scale and twinky fag on the other.
alternative-right and shane_optima know butt hurt like it's been going on for decades yet it's only a year, so step in and answer for females because I can see big Don in the other room, oh and it looks like he is rolling on a sandpaper condom especially for you and it looks like it's going to be a loooong time before you're going to be able to sit a a computer, comfortably, long enough for you to type something. Big Don wants to use you again.
Yes, it's a troll but, you have to admit, it's fucking funny because of the irony.
The fact that your article only got 3 on Slashdot says it all.
There are women here at Slashdot who work in technical roles within a variety of industries, and we're tired of all of this bullshit.
When we go to work, we don't want to be subjected to these kinds of arguments.
We're there to work, to make money, and to go home. That's all there is to it.
We don't want to waste our days arguing about genitalia, sexual preference, racism, and transgenderism.
Yes, there are some unproductive people in major corporations and the media who wish to push their left-leaning political agendas on the public at large.
But we want no part of it.
And you know what? It's no different here at Slashdot.
We come here to learn about new technologies, about new scientific and mathematical discoveries, and to discuss computing.
We don't want to waste our days arguing about genitalia, sexual preference, racism, and transgenderism.
We just want this bullshit to end.
We want those on the political left to stop trying to divide society into small groups based on arbitrary traits.
Or at the very least, we want everybody else to ignore the divisions that the political left are trying to create.
We need to work together, regardless of what our genders are, or what our sexual preferences are, or what color our skins are.
We need to stop letting the political left divide us.
We just want to do our jobs, live our lives, and not be subjected to all of this bullshit from the political left, whether it's at work or whether it's at Slashdot.
You can't be a very good engineer if you don't know how to use newline characters or post an URL.
It's the new perpetual frontpage story!
Saying women are subhuman and shouldn't be allowed to have jobs is objectionable to any thinking person. Too bad too many Republicans support this piece of garbage. Google needs to press charges against him for this hate crime.
I sent my wife, who is an engineer (AND is a female, FYI), a link to this post to make a comment. Here's what she texted back: "They're still going on about this on that crap /.? I don't have time to comment hun!"
Yes, we're happily married. :)
I would complete with: "...and jocks on IT are extra jerks because they want big bucks by playing the nerd. Not even nerd status is safe anymore when you want a man that treats women with the respect they deserve".
But I would still not generalize it. There ARE disgusting, deuchebaggy nerds and always have been. That's the problem with sitgmas and stereotypes - they're flawed by definition. Christinagirl1 shows a nice view over time of her overview on tech, but you still can't extrapolate universally. Every situation should be analyzed ad-hoc
If Google wasn't such a disgusting CONservative company, they wouldn't have let this guy leave their property. They would have held him for the police to beat and arrest rather than letting him flee.
Now this Republican is spewing lies all over the TV and his movement of hate is gaining momentum.
Now this Republican is spewing lies all over the TV and his movement of hate is gaining momentum.
Just look at what his kind did in Charlottesville. One of their kind lost their temper after freedom fighters for higher taxes beat his new car then he drove into a crowd. It's sad how the media blames the freedom fighters. If this Googler hasn't inspired people with his hate, that probably wouldn't have happened. This Google clown is responsible and needs to be put in prison and silenced just like the rest of his Republican kind.
You can't even write an internet post that's formatted in a legible way, and we're supposed to believe you're a skilled IT engineer? Could you not even press the preview button to make sure it was at least readable? This is a poor indication of the quality of your work and your level of attention to detail.
When you have no skills and do sloppy work, just play the victim card, eh
Republicans won't be happy until all women are chained in basements. That's how their kind be.
Note this is a biased sample*. They are the 6 current or former engineers that I associate with, they are very confident and assertive. They all agreed with Demore. They have experienced minimal sexism from other engineers. 3 of them don't mind working as the only woman at a location. They all thought women on average had different job preferences than man. They also thought job security was more important to women than men and that if they were not so good at what they did and guarenteed to always have jobs they might not have been in their current careers.
*Sample - 5 CS and 1 mechanical engineer. 1 is now in finance and 2 are software managers.
I'm lost on what you are saying here, I read the memo and it did not call for elimination of empathy, just reduction of emphasis. Certainly I disagree with some of what he said, but he made a lot of arguments for changing positions to eliminate some of the rat race aspects of leadership and tech roles to encourage women and keep them in the positions longer. He seemed like an anti-post modern sjw progressive, not like a far right winger. Could you be more specific on what in the memo begs that level of fury, given that he appears to be calling for the opposite of what you claim he is, from my reading of it.
people who identify with the female gender? Failing to specify is a form of discrimination and I feel this creates a hostile environment.
A women in IT - can't figure out how
To format paragraphs.
This has been going on through both dem and rep administrations.
Well, they ALL want to come here, trust me. Through a system of evil and well-thought out artificial barriers Slashdot has managed to keep them at bay by blocking all female engineers with user imperceptible OSI layer micro-blockers.
I'm guessing you didn't actually read the memo. You're part of the problem.
No. It's because it's almost unreadable. Formatting matters. A large block of text is just skipped by most people, no matter what the content is.
It's presented in the best way to make people ignore it. Don't be surprised when they do.
What is is about nerd culture that has problems with the word "women."
Loads of women engineers have posted extensive responses elsewhere. Why troll for more?
This is a week old account which has only posted on topics about the Google memo. Most of the posts appear to be badly copy/pasted.
I tried to read it but it's an impenetrable wall of text.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Google won't press charges because they hate women. No woman has ever ran that company. Men hold an iron-fisted control of it and push their hatred of women down the chain there. Just look at how many women were too terrified to go to work there after Google's hate was exposed.
Modern formatting was bleeding edge stuff about 1300 years ago. Get with the times. :p
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
I started to read that post from The Economist until I got to this section:
Have you ever noticed how no one takes sentences that start “I’m not a racist, but” at face value? Here’s why, in the words of Jon Snow in “Game of Thrones” (season 7, episode 1). When Sansa Stark tells him: “They respect you, they really do, but,” Snow laughs and comes back with: “What did father used to say? Everything before the word ‘but’ is horseshit.”
Seriously....they argued with the science, but quoted Game of Thrones.
If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
Police don't beat white males
I am sorry to hear of your experiences.
As a cis white male in his 30s teaching CS at a university, would you have an opinion of what I can do to help the situation?
Stop teaching CS.
Seriously. The smartest, most motivated and competent engineers I have ever worked with (both male and female) got there because they *wanted* to learn, so they taught themselves. They didn't go to college to learn a trade--they learned from an early age how to teach themselves anything related to technology. A life-long engineer friend of mine skipped college, and has worked in a wide variety of companies--from industrial to technical to government stuff he can't discuss--as an engineer and earns around $150k/year because he's awesome at what he does. I also work as an engineer earning about $120k/year and have done everything from internet providers, mom-and-pop IT shops, managed service provider, software development, and other technical fields. It's not about passing a college test that shows you have memorized all the switches to the 'dir' command (yeah--I failed that test when I wrote in the margin that you can simply pass '/?' rather than memorize a bunch of stuff you'll rarely ever need).
At the bottom of the gizmodo article, an advertorial was squashed in titles "hands on with the vibrator that wants to be the smartest sex toy in the world"
Gizmodo must have used tensorflow to analyze the Google diversity VPs response to find a relevant ad. Optimized for conversions.
Men and women tend to be different.
Deal with it.
This is simple unprofessional behavior, unacceptable, period.
If these children cannot act like adults they should be fired.
1. And yet in all that time working with computers you still haven't figured out how to Preview and add line breaks??
2. Your link is broken -- it should be: james-damore-diversity-manifesto-science-logical-fallacy-2017-8
* http://www.businessinsider.com...
3. James has a Ph.D. in Biology. What are your degrees?
4. Four scientists agree with James' analysis.
http://quillette.com/2017/08/0...
5. You are the one not thinking properly -- your logic is broken. **THINK** about what is _actually_ being said. I'm going to quote the last part from the link above because you _completely_ missed the paradox.
Considering how forceful and near-universal condemnation from women and women's groups in and out of tech has been to the memo, it is extremely difficult to believe that this Ask Slashdot was submitted in good faith. Particularly in light of the extreme ease of finding high-profile responses. Here is a (small) sample from a simple google search:
https://www.vox.com/the-big-id...
https://www.vox.com/first-pers...
http://fortune.com/2017/08/09/...
http://www.businessinsider.com...
https://patch.com/california/m...
If you really are that out of the loop, that should inform you pretty well. If you're begging the question, then the quantity of vile reactions in these comments have likely confirmed that it was worth it. I hope it is the former.
I don't need to read hate to know hate.
I get what your saying cloud.pt, I try not to do that but it can be difficult. I do know some misogynists that are nerds too. Overall, the field has changed a lot. I think the whole world has changed in what is being found as acceptable behavior in regards to privacy and just plain manners. I think what really rings true in my head is that these companies are inadvertently paying people to harass one another. And this memo was a way of doing that, though he tried to disguise his point with points from studies to validate himself. Google might want to reconsider trying to get everyone to think of their campus as home, because it appears that people have gotten a little too comfortable and have forgotten that it is actually a publicly traded company.
All I can say, is have them all read threads like these on Slashdot! Get them prepared and teach them to stand up for themselves.
When less than 50% of the responses to this question are female, we should investigate what slashdot can do to make the site more balanced, with an equal number of male and female users.
Because obviously any disparity is due to the inherent sexism of slashdot.
Maybe refuse to add male accounts until we have an equal number of females?
bad ass. so the fact that the boys and girls both live in poverty by default, helped create the good old boys network of women and coworker harassers to get ahead. all those acts you describe them doing would be an effort to steal jobs and get ahead at all costs. competition and capitalism. it sounds like men are generally doofuses but it's probably the fault of capitalism making them that way (our world from moment we are born promotes the behavior).
https://www.trumpsweapon.com/
This didn't happen under Obama. This is Trump's fault.
Stop referring to yourself as "cis"? It just creates more pointless divisions.
Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
But, the good guys are still there and they are somewhat left behind as well. They quietly watch the bullies from the Lord of the Flies and go about their business.
I have seen this happen and as a man it can be hard to speak up. You get accused of political correctness, and excluded from anything remotely fun because you are labelled a killjoy. Sometimes it goes the other way, the guy being a dick ends up ostracised, it really depends on the workplace.
Hence why this guy was fired.
I think it was more to do with his unwarranted conclusions. He has been debunked by the authors of the very papers he was citing in the memo.
"Women as a group score higher on neuroticism in Schmittâ(TM)s meta-analysis, sure, but he doesnâ(TM)t buy that you can predict the population-level effects of that difference. "It is unclear to me that this sex difference would play a role in success within the Google workplace (in particular, not being able to handle stresses of leadership in the workplace. Thatâ(TM)s a huge stretch to me)," writes Schmitt. So, yes, thatâ(TM)s the researcher Damore cites disagreeing with Damore."
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
The guy who was fired from Google is a liberal, and the Alt left is just as bad as the Alt right.
Both sides are to blame, shame on you for thinking your "progressive" racism, sexism, and prejudice was any better than the old version.
My parents taught me two wrongs don't make a right, but then again they took the trouble to raise me, and not letting the TV do it for them.
I am not a female engineer, but I work in a scientific field (biomedical research) that is at gender parity. Medicine is at gender parity. Chemistry is at gender parity. Women are even well represented in the computational subdivisions of these fields. These are not the "soft" sciences they might have been 20 years ago; this is quantitative, computationally intensive research. I know women who can put together an fMRI from scratch and write the algorithms for novel data analysis. There is no question that women can and do excel in technical and scientific fields. The only question is why the CS and IT, particularly the Silicon Valley start up culture, actively drive women away.
Thanks for sharing this. Suddenly everything that I've experienced makes sense.
Respect is earned first, and plenty of toxic women ruin work place environments too, but they get a pass because yay feminism!
I'm male and work at one of the giant software companies. I don't know what it's like on other teams, i've been on the same team my whole career, but i can say that at least on MY team, i haven't seen nor heard of any woman being treated as anything other than just how awesome she is. We have female engineers, female QE, female managers (who USED to be engineers or QE), and, IMHO, they are awesome at what they do. A best of the best white box QE lead is a woman, and she kicks everyone's ass, we're all like "i can't figure out how to repro this bug, we should give it to !". All the men just love and utterly respect all the women, and vice versa. Maybe i'm in some insulated fantasy bubble, but nobody on MY team acts like the neanderthals we're referring to in this post, and i wouldn't have it any other way.
UnknownSoldier, proper noun, - a slashdotter who finds it necessary to have a directory of names to call people at the foot of his post. The irony of one of them complaining about Ad Hominem labels is apparently lost on him.
>Which seems like a stronger generalizing statement than anything I saw in the kids manifesto.
Ooooh... sick burn!!
How about some reason or logic instead? "I know you are but what am I" is pretty weak. My point? That generalisation rings pretty damn true in my experience of the modern work environment.
The hypothesis Damore argued against is that all gender-differences in workplace representation are due to discrimination. You only need a single counter-example to disprove this hypothesis, and Damore provided several. The Economist article doesn't even try to tackle these (in fact it seems to avoid acknowledging them except implicitly).
Instead, the Economist brings up counter-points to Damore's memo. e.g. That there are statistical differences between men and women which favor women, to counter his point that there are statistical differences which favor men. In other words, it is written as if the hypothesis in dispute was "there is no gender-based discrimination." Which AFAIK nobody is arguing except those using it as a straw man to try to justify draconian anti-discrimination measures.
Basically, the SJW crowd argued "all wood floats." Damore pointed out "hey these types of wood sink." And the Economist in response argues "well these types of wood float." Well that's nice, but it doesn't really support the original argument nor counter Damore's point.
This whole debate boils down to using gender ratio in the workplace as a measure of discrimination. All Damore is arguing is that there are other reasons than discrimination which cuase the ratio not to be 50/50. The SJW crowd doesn't want to give up this disproven hypothesis because it makes it easy to justify their anti-discrimination measures. Anyone who's published any real paper using statistics knows it's never this easy - that is why statisticians have jobs. There are always caveats and other factors you have to try your best to control for.
Just because a woman is a woman, it doesn't mean she has any background in gender studies or any special understanding of gender issues.
It's just her opinion and experiences.
my CS classes in high school and university between 1990 and 1997 were easily 95% men. In later years, maybe 90% men, so my experiences of a pre dot-com utopia for equality in tech is the opposite of hers.
But then you saw the same in metalshop, welding, electronics, carpentry and other technical fields. Her insulting stance that the bias is a money issue is just sexism.
I found the entire document objectionable.
One of the big problems with discussing this manifesto is that most men have been focusing in on the fact that he cited studies and he used a lot of language that could be reasonably interpreted as "positive." He also claims to be for diversity as long as it is still "fair."
Here is my problem: the entire manifesto is predicated on the assumption that Google's diversity efforts are discriminatory towards white men and are actively harming the company. Neither of those two assumptions is backed up with any evidence. On the other hand, there is abundant evidence across all sectors that simply changing the name on a resume to a female sounding name or to a black sounding name reduces the number of callbacks you receive on that resume. There is also abundant evidence that the software industry has enormous bias against people who are not white men, and it goes far beyond just hiring practices. Women and people of color are less likely to be promoted, to earn similar pay, to have their startups funded, to receive recognition for their work, etc.
There is a trend happening right now where white men feel like their personal challenges are being marginalized. The reaction are things like this memo, or the white lives matter group, or the men's rights associations, or the group of men trying to form a class action lawsuit about the handling of rape investigations on college campuses, or ... the list goes on. For possibly the first time in history, it is possible that a white man MIGHT be discriminated against and suddenly discrimination is the MOST URGENT ISSUE. Forget black people being shot by police, forget the massive pay and gender gaps in the workplace, forget every real challenge facing the world because Google's anti-discrimination policies might, possibly, maybe, cause a white man to miss an opportunity.
The entire manifesto comes across as tone deaf and is essentially one guy screaming "BUT WHAT ABOUT MEEEEE?" Ten years from now or ten years ago we would probably be having a different conversation but context matters.
First off ...Anonymous Coward, this is a thread and not a creative writing class! If you cannot understand that...you are the one with the issue and should get off the internet. Secondly, if you had seen what I created the comment in, you would understand. And lastly, I have written a book and I am published. Have you?
I'll add one more thing. You don't scare me! If you think you can bully me with your comment you've got another thing coming. So for all of you reading this...it's this kind of little jerk that's the problem. Are you trying to invalidate someone else so you feel better? Take my advise, it never works. Why? Because you still will get up in the morning and look in the mirror and fall short. So why don't you fix it and get a constructive HOBBY.
Marie Curie is one of my science heroes, and I posted some of her quotes the other night after at the Heterodox Academy discussion of this. I thought I'd repost them here as a bit of a break from the rest of the arguments over the memo. Also, if you want a great descriptions of why Marie Curie is so cool, look here:
http://www.badassoftheweek.com...
Anyway, Enjoy!
âoeBe less curious about people and more curious about ideas.â
âoeIn science, we must be interested in things, not in persons.â
âoeLife is not easy for any of us. But what of that? We must have perseverance and above all confidence in ourselves. We must believe that we are gifted for something, and that this thing, at whatever cost, must be attained.â
âoeYou cannot hope to build a better world without improving the individuals. To that end each of us must work for his own improvement, and at the same time share a general responsibility for all humanity, our particular duty being to aid those to whom we think we can be most useful.â
âoeNothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood.â
âoeI am one of those who think like Nobel, that humanity will draw more good than evil from new discoveries.â
If you were a guy writing your wall-of-text diatribe, this would be the point where women would tell you to Man The Fuck Up and stop being such a crybaby.
Ya know what, I was not thinking of that when I wrote it. Was kind of being creative and spontaneous in an informal setting. But, I suppose I should have written it in a way an imbecile could read it.
When was that? IT has always been well paid (if you're any good at it, helpdesk not so much), if you had actually been there...
That's a tell, someone is repeating mythology. 'Lord of the Flies' in the office? I'm sure it happens, but I'm also sure those places implode shortly after. It's hardly common.
C- try harder.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Where's the paragraphs?
Your entire argument hinges on money being the contributing factor for your mistreatment. The boom is long gone and nobody goes into IT to get rich these days. You also fail to realize gender and melanin quotas weren't a thing in the 90's. I'd like to go back to this period too. I'd even suffer the name calling by **** women because I wasn't interested in sports. Hell the guys were probably happy to have a female to talk to.
godrik, you may want to look at the comments further down the thread. It's a wonderful example of bullying behavior. I am going to try to only answer the positive comments now. I'm getting drawn into the negativity. Not good.
Listen to me because I have a clitoris! I grew up playing with Barbies and painting my nails! I wear pink every day and studied computer science because my boyfriend told me it would be a good idea.
First off, one thing I have seen over the decades is that women, in general, are better at multitasking than men. Likewise, men , in general, maintain a stronger focus. As such, men tend to do better at coding than women. By the same token, women are better at management, going from low all the way up to VPs, since they will handle a number of different task at the same time ( ceo typically have to focus on a single issue and solve it).
Secondly, there are 2 issues with my first point. Many women/men break these molds . Plenty of women that can focus, and men that multitask. In addition, we do NOT know the reason for this. Is it genetics or training. It really could be either way.
third, the diversity issue has nothing to do with being conservative or not. Diversity programs are simply a program to capture top ppl that traditionally would not jump into that position. If they put quotas on it, then you have an issue. But just having a diversity programs by itself is NOT an issue, and esp not a political issue.
fire suit on.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
No self-respecting female is gonna poke this hornets nest with a hundred foot pole.
How about stop trying to be a white knight saving innocent women who can't look out for themselves. You're just helping them stay victims and continuing the story that women are weak and must be protected by males. When you're bullied you need to stand up for yourself. Far too many women don't do that because they don't want to upset the social order. Too afraid of words to risk gaining respect so instead they choose to accept harassment and bullying. Speaking out for someone else just makes them look weaker and they'll be bullied more then you're not around to protect them.
You wanted equality? Now you've got it. With that comes taking care of yourself instead of having men rush to protect you. Those good guys? Why should they stick their necks out for you when you won't do the same for yourself?
People hacking into your home computer to spy on you? Provide some proof on that one, how about the arrest record (you did press charges against the criminal correct? Who doesn't press charges when someone breaks into their home?) ISP routers have firewalls, computers have firewalls, home computers aren't on 24x7, ISPs don't give home users static IPs, PCs don't have built-in mics and cameras, etc... A lot would have to go right for someone to hack into a specific person's home video equipment.
Here's a long interview with an actual female engineer at Google. Some of the best quotes:
During an internal discussion about the memo, "One of the women put her hand up and said, 'Look, I’m a conservative. I completely disagree with everything he said, but I’m still a conservative. And I don’t feel like I can’t voice that opinion here'... Google really does have an open culture of debate, I think."
"It’s hard because I think he couches so much of his document as if it’s fact, when it’s actually not. There’s so little evidence in there. And it’s all really opinion. And the whole argument is couched as, 'Well this is fact.'"
"there were parts of my Google existence internally that I was like I’m going to have to delete this for the fear that someone is going to take this and post publicly and screw me for speaking out against this."
"I just really want us to think about why we’re not asking the women at Google how they feel about it because that to me is the root of misogyny right there. We’re not even asking them to participate in the debate about an issue that directly affects them."
I start scrolling, and all I see are the usual suspects.
Guys, a) shut up, or b) you prove the point of shutting down women.
Oh, and one of my daughters is a better programmer than you.
No, the other AC was making a joke. All you had to do was say you posted from a tiny mobile device. People understand that. Don't turn things into personal insults. No one stands up for other people when it seems like they might get flamed from the person for doing it.
It sure grabbed your attention, didn't it? And that, was my goal. So, while you may not care for my style, at least I 'manned up" uh, woman'd up and used my name. How about you? Oh wait, that is your name. Anonymous Coward! Pleased to make your acquaintance. Oh, one more thing. Despite your perspective, I don't have to be perfect for the likes of someone like you.
First of all, stop identifying as a "cis". It's a ridiculous label created by leftist to further divide us. You're either a male or female.
Nice miss of the point.
Even Southpark knows they are smart.
I'm a little confused as to how you could have a diversity effort to include employees from groups other than white and asian males without excluding whites or asian males. You have a finite number of employee spots available... how effective would such an effort be if it didn't weigh individuals from the minority groups you are targeting more heavily than whites or asians?
I'm not even saying I object to the effort but to argue that providing a handicap number to minority groups you want in the company doesn't somehow result in candidates less qualified by the objective measurements you use to evaluate candidates.. that doesn't seem logically consistent to me. -Unless you're simply saying that in the rare cases more than one individual is equally tied and qualified you want to pick that from the group who's numbers you are trying to grow.
It follows then that other than the rare case of a tie above, you have the objectively less qualified candidate.
Great question! Why not consult what the dozens of women who have written and talked about this publicly have already said, instead of trying to wring answers out of slashdot?
https://www.vox.com/the-big-idea/2017/8/11/16130452/google-memo-women-tech-biology-sexism
http://fortune.com/2017/08/09/google-diversity-memo-wojcicki/
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/08/11/female-google-engineer-on-viral-memo-i-was-painfully-unsurprised.html
https://www.wired.com/story/the-pernicious-science-of-james-damores-google-memo/
https://www.vox.com/first-person/2017/8/10/16119334/female-coders-tech-students-respond-sexist-google-memo
Great Post!
And if you change the word "Men" to "Extroverts" and "Women" to "Introverts", then my story is the same as yours!
Sincerely,
Introverted Male
If I were a woman, and having seen what I have seen surrounding "Gamer Gate" and other gender issues in tech, I wouldn't comment. To do so would be opening themselves up to a potential world of hurt, and I don't blame any woman who makes the rightful decision to keep shtum. Let's work on making a safe environment for people to comment regardless of gender/ethnicity/demographic and prove that people with opposing views aren't going to be bullied out of the ring.
Especially a fellow Nazi.
Your link is not written by the authors of the paper he cited but by two staff writers at wired. I skimmed it and saw no references to the papers authors.. which if you have seen, and I know you have, there is another article floating around where the actual authors responded and agreed with his position.
Claiming the papers disprove his theory is NOT backed up in the actual article you posted, that article trys to poke holes more in his sources then in the memo itself. Which makes it unsubstantiated. If the authors of the paper actually disagree with the memos author please provide sources of that. No one here wants more laymen(or lay womens) positions of ruminations on this. Stick to the science please and not the feelings.
Im much more interested in the point of view of women that are NOT in the field. Those that are egineers already are interested in the field. I want the opinion of women not in the field. Have they ever considered it, if yes why did they reject it...
Is this how the alphabet kingdom crumbles? Mass exodus underway!
The only hierarchy that should existing in technical jobs should be merit based, ignoring management. The main issue isn't men forming some bully hierarchy, it's management hiring incompetent engineers that form these hierarchies. Good engineers are rare and a good engineer knows how to spot another good engineer and will consider them someone worthy of their time. The way they act gives away how astonishingly incompetent they actually are.
In general, these toxic people must be pruned, but even more so for the fragile tech culture that requires a meritocracy to function correctly.
"Your quest for equality diminishes my privilege," or (more plainly) "Your success diminishes me," says a guy in one of the highest paid demographics in the company besides management. That he took so long to say it and tried to couch it in logical arguments (fallacies, really) was the really annoying part. He is, at the very least, sexist. He is also most likely racist. And I hate employees that have no skin in the game, no risk associated with their reward, that then go on to complain about their employer. He had lots of opportunities elsewhere if he didn't like it there. That decision has now been made for him. And other employers are going to wonder if he's worth the trouble.
....can we please be sure we're actually talking about what he wrote, and not what "everyone says he wrote"?
It seems there's a pretty sizable difference.
Gizmodo stripped all links, charts, footnotes, and data from the document before tearing it apart. Other sources (including the Economist & the BBC) blithely go with the 'he stated women aren't capable of doing the work' which is complete bullshit.
-Styopa
My understanding of the money issue is that the money attracted non-techies, namely old-rich frat boys who brought that culture with them. And of course, they are the ones who got power within these organizations and that culture trickled down.
The "who live like we are all on an island like the Lord of the Flies" is the operative part. If it said "How will that happen if all of it i run by men?" the message would be a generalization. There are men with compassion and consideration for user privacy - at least I'd like to think I'm not alone in that.
They do, media and the left don't give a shit
Because hate is all you know?
Current psychology research shows time and time again that people cannot teach abstract reasoning, it can only be self learned. This could be a symptom of our limited understand of how people learn, but no one has cracked this problem in half a century of trying. Meta-cognition and abstract reasoning seem to be nearly perfectly correlated, but no one can tell if it's a chicken or the egg that came first. All they know is above a certain level of combined meta-cognition and abstract reasoning, one's ability to grow both skills skyrockets. Below this inflection point, it stays relatively flat and drops off over time.
Several papers have attributed these mental skills to the colloquial usage of the word "personality". There is nothing that stops any normally functional person from becoming great that these skills, it's just that only certain "personalities" ever do. They think it's less of something you learn from memorizing and more of something you learn from "caring". Obsessive personalities that care about these issues naturally do well and everyone else is horrible.
According to some feminists, give up you job, house, money, and possibly your life.
what about the tps reports
Any woman who admits that Damore's argument about seeking "diversity" is at least rational risks doxxing and slut-shaming, not to mention ostracism and job loss. Disclaimer: ianaw.
I like it, it just need more paragraphs.
Her contention wasn't that there was a 50:50 ratio of men to women before the dotcom boom occurred. Her contention the "boys club" showed up around then, with all of it's bullshit behavior.
hairstyles for men in 2018 2019, men hairstyles in 2018. hairstyles for men in 2018
Is it worth an aggregate extra to the corporation's salaries of $1.5 million per year? Is it worth sacrificing (literally) your first born?
There are a huge range of potential costs and people who refuse to permit discussion of how much current cost is worth paying for the future benefits are giving true bigots an opening to take the stage,
You're either a black-and-white thinker, or you're not. There's no in between.
As some have pointed out, if Google rejects the notion that there are any biological/psychological/sociological factors as to why there are fewer women in their STEM workforce, then they must acknowledge that the only reason left is that management and HR at Google are deliberately discriminating against women when hiring STEM workers.
I suggest that every woman who works for/has worked for/applied to work for Google join in a gigantic class action sex discrimination lawsuit against Google since their upper management people clearly admit to discriminating against women in their response to the memo.
To paraphrase Sherlock Holmes: When you eliminate all the non-discriminatory explanations for fewer women at Google, whatever is left (discriminatory explanations) must be true.
I didn't find the memo sexist at all, but then again, maybe I'm not reading the correct version; people keep saying that he wrote that women are less well-suited for software engineering and I can't seem to find that section. Did Gizmodo edit that part out along with all the links?
Touche. Well played.
And if they somehow hacked into her PC, she's got a serious problem as an IT professional. It's possible, though unlikely, they hacked into her computer externally by acquiring her IP address (perhaps when she accessed a company server). But she may have ran an executable delivered over email, which would be a fairly dumb thing to do (I suppose the company might send around executable code for testing, but it seems like sending the source code would be better for auditing and such).
I'm an artist, and I object to the omission of Art as one of the listed disciplines. The new, better acronym for these inter-related fields is STEAM - Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Mathematics.
</troll> See, I know how to use "&xxx;"-style html codes, so I should be included.
He works for cisco systems
Should creimer take his bal^H^H^Haffiliate links and go home?
Yes?
No?
WWCD? (What Would CowboyNeal Do)
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I was mentioning this to the wife recently, "Before there was oodles of money in IT."
Prior to the tech-explosion, there were geeks that were into computers, and anywhere's from 25% to %50 of the computer-related courses were populated with women, depending on the course in question -- math, logic and statistic courses tended to be more diverse than the purely programming side of things.
Yet now, IT can be one of the best paying jobs available, and our fields have been invaded by the commons and alphas.
That's pretty easy and well-tested elsewhere. You simply guarantee to at least bring to interview stage anyone who is from a protected group (however you want to define that) and who qualifies for the position (by whatever criteria you've set). You ensure that your HR department remove anything that might prejudice anyone in the selection criteria so that short-listers cannot shortlist on the bases of any criteria that would exclude members of a protected group. You have your HR department review tests and stock interview questions to ensure that they are not exclusionary and you make sure that any off-the-cuff questions are recorded.
When it comes to selecting a candidate you make sure that any decisions made are fully reasoned and that the reasoning is express in terms of matching the candidates to the job and person specification which you have already drafted with the help of someone (probably from HR) able to assist in ensuring that they fairly treat candidates and consider their ability in context of any social pressures that being a member of a protected group might have.
It's hardly rocket science. It's well-tested, produces results and is a very long way from the quota-filling exercise that the right-wing would like to characterize it as.
OK - I'm posting this anonymously and the reasoning is simple. I have an account and it has enough respect tied up with it (insomuch as any does here) that I'd like to keep it that way and it sure as hell won't remain that way if admit to the sin of being female.
Now - being female the in tech industry. I can throw dozens of anecdotes around from my 20+ years of experience working for companies ranging from 7 to 10,000+ employees. Some of them were pretty OK and the one I'm at now is great. The places that are good to female employees are in the minority, though and I have no reason to suspect that it's any different for other groups that are considered to be industry-minorities.
Why do companies struggle to get somewhere close to a representative selection of employees? Is it because women, people of color and other groups don't want those jobs? Yes - almost certainly. That's missing the point, though. Is it because they are biologically predisposed to dislike those working in tech? No.
The reason I took a break from the tech industry for a few years was simple. The environment is, in my experience, a predominantly toxic one. You can only put up with harassment, discrimination and belittlement for so long before it wares you down, no matter how determined you are to overcome it. It's all very well to sit in a position of white male privilege and (badly) write an essay that cherry-picks it's sources to support a conclusion that's straight out of 1950s science. When you do that, you don't have to live the reality of what it is like to put up with the sort of workplace environment that is the reality for women in the tech industry.
Companies like Google are at least trying to grapple with issues of equality and diversity. Are they a paradise workplace for women and other industry-minority groups? I doubt it very much. But at least they are trying and some idiot with an axe to grind about his white male privilege being eroded is not helpful to anyone. It's good to see Google drop him and I very much hope he doesn't get picked up by anyone else in the industry. One less lizard in the swamp.
If men and women are equal, what makes a woman's point of view more salient than that of a man?
Or are they not?
Let’s assume for the sake of argument that men and women do have different interests that may account for gender disparity in tech. (Even if you only look at research cited by Damore, plenty of research has shown that more fundamental gender differences can only account for PART of the disparity, but let’s put that aside for a moment.)
Question 1: Let’s say that, all OTHER things being equal, we’d still have fewer women in tech jobs. This would just be a statistical bias. What women are interested in, on average, is not really relevant to the individual women who decide to go into tech, despite perhaps a majority of other women not wanting to do the same. *How could this have any impact on recruiting women into tech?* What could possibly be wrong with encouraging women to get into these professions (even aggressively)? I’m not talking about biased hiring or career advancement, just going out there and making it not difficult for women who ARE interested in tech to apply for those jobs and demonstrate their competence.
Question 2: Based on Damore’s memo and things he cites, I infer that workspaces have evolved to suit the needs of MEN. (And based on some other recent discussions about ageism at Google, they have evolved to better accommodate YOUNG men.) *But what could possibly be wrong with giving employees the ability to adapt their work environments to better match the needs of WOMEN?* Ideas in the memo touch on things like making the environment more social, and pairing people up to do coding together instead of always giving people isolated cubes or offices. Not only might this benefit women, but I know plenty of very social men (such as myself) who might enjoy doing pair-coding and other kinds of more cooperative approaches to engineering. Ultimately, it may be best to approach workspaces in a way that facilitates *anyone* adapting the space to their needs, and the fact that current work environments are statistically less suited to women is only a vehicle to highlight a more general problem with cookie-cutter workspaces. (At the same time, we should not try to generalize women out of the discussion. Men have dominated for a very very very long time. It’s about time women got the chance to make some demands and mold things to their tastes.)
Question 3: Finally let’s put gender bias back into the discussion. We’re not denying it exists. It’s just that people like Damore are tired of feeling accused of having unconscious biases and being made to feel bad about them. But what Damore’s memo does is cast doubt upon the extent to which bias is a factor in disparity relative to other factors. Ok, so there are lots of factors besides bias. *Nevertheless bias exists, so what could possibly be wrong with working to eliminate the bias?* Even if it were only 25% of the problem, it still sucks!
First time I heard someone say "cis," I heard it as "sis," the female equivalent of "bro." No foolin'.
Sorry. I'm too busy engineering stuff.
How the hell did this unreadable wall of text get modded "Insightful"?
Please read the actual memo before commenting on it. The media have persistently lied about what the memo says.
This is a week old account which has only posted on topics about the Google memo. Most of the posts appear to be badly copy/pasted.
I tried to read it but it's an impenetrable wall of text.
There you go, with your male lack of empathy! You are going to bring on the Terminators!
but to argue that providing a handicap number to minority groups you want in the company doesn't somehow result in candidates less qualified by the objective measurements you use to evaluate candidates [...] it follows then that other than the rare case of a tie above, you have the objectively less qualified candidate.
You're making the false assumption that looking for more diverse candidates inherently means lowering the talent pool and giving a handicap. However, based on the many engineering interviews I've conducted, the non white male candidates do just as well at the same rate; I just happen to see way more white males come through the door.
I see two main reasons for this non-diverse pool:
1. In pure numbers, most current employees are white males, most candidates are referred by current employees, most people will try to refer their friends, and most people are friends with people of the same race and gender. This compounds pretty quickly to create a candidate pool that's largely white male, and recruiters have to work harder to find somebody who's not.
2. Based on discussions and public statements from my female and minority friends, I know with certainty that, as a direct result of callous culture, lack of fair career advancement opportunity, and especially threats to personal safety (yes, seriously), staggering numbers of women and minorities choose to leave certain positions, tech as a whole, or even the entire job market, because that is objectively a better choice for them and their families.
Part of diversity hiring is convincing qualified people that it's safe for them to exist.
If you listen to people who have been working for several decades, you will regularly hear that it used to be better, until suddenly it wasn't.
my CS classes in high school and university between 1990 and 1997 were easily 95% men. In later years, maybe 90% men, so my experiences of a pre dot-com utopia for equality in tech is the opposite of hers.
She did not say that there were more women in IT then than there are now (although I understand most statistics to confirm this). She said that the field had less male assholes in it. And from my temporally limited experience since the late 90ies I would tentatively agree. How is your perception? How were those 5 to 10% of women in your classes treated by the male participants?
The money argument is something that I cannot confirm but also would not dismiss entirely. IT has indeed changed significantly – from a purely academic field to an exotic adventure park for nerds and misfits to a serious multi-billion dollar cut-throat industry with enough economic leverage to blow most nation states out of the water. And its culture has changed with it.
Rudolf Hess edited Mein Kampf. He was the very first grammar nazi.
In my class at university there were three females amongst 500 males and one of the three eventually finished - the same 66% drop out rate held for the males too. So only about 6% of engineers are female.
3. James has a Ph.D. in Biology. What are your degrees?
Argumentum ad authoritum aside, Damore lied about his Ph.D.
I really hate for coding to get politicized... It is pretty easy for the cream to rise to the top in our industry as long as politics do *not* intrude. I don't want any special favors because I'm a woman. I don't need them. I leave a lot of other programmers in the dust in my area of expertise.
I've had nothing but good experiences as a female programmer, and it doesn't bother me that most of my coworkers are male. We cooperate and treat each other with respect. I get the impression that my company is special, though. We have interview tests specifically designed to weed out narcissists and other malefactors. This has led to a very internally motivated and cooperative team. We're small enough that everyone has valuable individual skills that set them apart.
I read Damore's essay, and I think he made some valid points, the most important of which was that we should all treat each other like individuals.
"Women as a group score higher on neuroticism in Schmittâ(TM)s meta-analysis, sure, but he doesnâ(TM)t buy that you can predict the population-level effects of that difference. "It is unclear to me that this sex difference would play a role in success within the Google workplace (in particular, not being able to handle stresses of leadership in the workplace. Thatâ(TM)s a huge stretch to me)," writes Schmitt. So, yes, thatâ(TM)s the researcher Damore cites disagreeing with Damore."
That's absolute gibberish. Statistically significant differences won't manifest in large workforces?
Unless you believe either that 1. neuroticism has no negative effect in the workplace, or 2. that Google is far better at selecting less neurotic women from the general population than at selecting less neurotic men from the general population.
I thought that was an interesting perspective. It was hard for me to read without paragraph breaks, so I added them in below. (This is a cut-and-paste of the above comment, but with paragraph breaks....
______________________________________________________________
I read this article (see bottom of thread), felt like screaming and then felt compelled to write about my experiences and thoughts on the matter.
I am a women in Information Technology and I have been doing this since 1995. Actually, even before that time since I worked at a computer camp at age 17 teaching BASIC computer language.
Before there was oodles of money in IT, I rarely experienced prejudice and sexism in my job. I loved what I did and all of the guys in my field were very nice and helpful. They were collaborative and fun to be around. I never felt out of place and I did what anyone else was doing without anyone blinking an eye. When the dollar signs started to increase a lot of men must have thought "Well, I could like Tech if there's money in it." and started studying CS in school. Later, they would emerge into the dotcom time where money was flowing like honey. The boys club moved into my world and it has never been the same.
I've been marginalized, badgered, stalked, ostracized, been the center of vicious gossip, denied work expenditures, had someone digging into my childhood and family and had IT peers hack into my home PC turn it on and listening to private conversations. Sadly, the list goes on and that last item is more common than you would believe. Note that that kind of voyeuristic behavior would have had someone in jail before the 90s. (Just creepy if you ask me.) But, the good guys are still there and they are somewhat left behind as well. They quietly watch the bullies from the Lord of the Flies and go about their business.
This hierarchy that these guys have created is brutal. They are each testing boundaries trying to find out where they fit in and the weakest and most insecure pick on women. They pick on women because first and foremost, it bonds them with other men. Secondly, they do it because they can't hack being at the bottom of the pecking order and a woman is a nice target. Woman will often say nothing in a blind attempt to keep the peace. And if they do say something, they become a bitch. Which of course fits in with the first item mentioned, it bonds them with other men.
So, what does this have to do with Information Technology? NOTHING! Yeah, that's right. Nothing! So, all of your money, all of your private information, all IoT (Internet of Things), all of your Security is exposed to this lot of people! Hence why this guy was fired. Google is smart enough to realize that they hold information about ALL of us. Male, female, straight, gay, black, white, Asian, Hispanic, transgenders etc. And guess what, we all want a say in who has our information and how it is used. We all want them to show empathy with our personal information and lives. And if Google, Facebook and IBM etc. are experimenting with AI, most of us would want them to build a system with agents that are compassionate. How will that happen if all of it is run by men who live like we are all on an island like the Lord of the Flies? So, I beg everyone to think about these ideas. We cannot afford this kind of behavior at the height of an epoch of science and discovery that has the tell tale signs of a change that will effect all of human existence as we know it. As for James Damore and his so called manifesto, his call for the elimination of empathy in IT is so short sighted that I can barely believe it. How can someone with such intelligence be so blind to how dangerous that would be. Hey wait, I answered my own question. He's on the island of The Lord of the Flies, that's how. He's not thinking properly.
You don't scare me! If you think you can bully me with your comment you've got another thing coming. So for all of you reading this...it's this kind of little jerk that's the problem. Are you trying to invalidate someone else so you feel better?
That escalated quickly.
If they look and behave like this, they can run me down anytime.
Please mod up if you have points.
Truly amazing, isn't it?
My first IT job paid me 26K per year in mid 90's. Plus bonus. I then moved on to make 38K. Then 42K. Left for the Valley and jumped to 97K plus bonus to 120k during dotcom time. Big jump. Happily. As for the rest, I've seen a lot of it and so have many of my peers and friends. If you have not, consider yourself fortunate.
This whole debate is silly and pointless. Just let us do our work, and let those who do well succeed and those who do poorly fail. Arguing about 'not enough' or 'too much' or 'the wrong kind' of 'diversity' is a waste of my time as a designer and I wish everyone else would stop trying to shove their opinion, regardless of what it is, down my throat. Regarding the memo specifically. I don't agree with it, but what actually disgusts me about this whole situation isn't the memo but all these people foaming at the mouth to demonize one side or the other. The memo itself was the opinion of one man.. what has followed has been gross and inappropriate.
I think Schmitt was misunderstanding Damore's memo also. The memo wasn't claiming that women's characteristics made them less able to perform in such jobs, but that those characteristics made those jobs less attractive.
It's not that women can't handle the stress, it's that fewer women enjoy the stress. It's not that women don't like the video games, gym, and unlimited energy drinks that Google uses as perks to attract programmers, but maybe they'd prefer a library, yoga studio, and tea instead.
dom
On the other hand, there is abundant evidence across all sectors that simply changing the name on a resume to a female sounding name or to a black sounding name reduces the number of callbacks you receive on that resume.
Most of this is anecdotal evidence, or fake resumes "to test bias", not real resumes and real people.
Here are some real life results.
The issue with female engineers in any field is pretty much a "chicken and egg" problem..... Both sides can be argued (with varying degrees of eloquence and effectiveness) but the point remains that the egg simply wont hatch if it's not incubated!!! This is the entire point of making the workplace environment more acceptable to womens needs!!!
Hear, hear butchersong. I've been badgered for so long that sometimes I can be a little harsh myself. I need to think on this further and then I will answer your questions in more detail.
That contrary to its propaganda, Google does NOT like diversity of opinion.
Running with Linux for over 20 years!
Female dev here, the memo did not sit well with me. I can't authoritatively disprove or prove the things it said about inherent biological differences between the sexes, I can however say that from my own experience the social issues that female devs face are so real, tangible and solvable that quibbling over minor differences in aptitude which we can't say for certain are social or biological is missing the point entirely.
It was poorly thought out, and the crux of what he was getting at, attacking affirmative action doesn't really make sense in the current market. If you can't get a job it's almost certainly because you're not very good, not that someone less able has "stolen" it from you by quota. I'm not quite sure how I feel about affirmative action, but attacking it the way he did, for the quoted reasons does not sit well with me.
Yep.
Yes, that is my observation.
I've consulted into many businesses. Many more than you can possibly have worked for. 'Lord of the Flies' is very very uncommon. Sure indication that the boss is a psycho and the business is doomed. I love to find them when publicly traded, but still more uncommon than dysfunctional small businesses.
First jobs pay for shit. In the 90s, 26K implies working in east bumfuck with a very low cost of living. I made 100k+ in the mid 90s. I know I couldn't have hired anyone competent for that price at that time. I made 50K inside my first year, in the mid/late 80s. But I had to admin Netmare and code Dataflex (spit), so they were getting their monies worth.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
How do we know people posting are female engineers?
Oh wait, we don't.
Let the trolling begin.
The last year I was in grad school, the Computer Science department was having a crisis. There were no female grad school applicants, none. Contrast this with around 40 males (of which Asian and middle eastern nationalities were over represented). The solution is not to force people into equal outcomes based on local populations because it's simple, if you want to do equal outcomes at least have a pool that reflects actual interests.
The real solution is to fix the problem before it becomes one, during youth. Many of the issues around diversity revolves around opportunity. Give scholarships, and perhaps a stipend if they support thier family, to promising youths of low income in disadvantaged areas. No need to discriminate on race or sex either as the people who fit this will be stastically far more likely to be the ones affirmative action or women's programs are intended to help. Further more can be done to nurture and cultivate interest through role models, providing opportunity will make these efforts more effective as they will be within reach. The money spent will fix so many auxiliary problems with society that it is insane not to spend it this way.
Equal outcome before opportunities is like trying to cure STD years after the fact instead of providing free vaccines, education and condoms. It also serves to unite and inflame bigots like the alt right and undermines and cheapens those who really did earn thier positions on merit.
As a graduate student / teaching assistant in the late 1970s, it seemed like a third of the computer science students were female - and I noticed, having come from an engineering school with an 11:1 ratio. CS was useful in all sciences, and education, and business - not a purely tech subject. It was also new and open to all comers, seen as moving away from the engineering side (though again my own background was from that engineering side, and I've worked in embedded systems rather than business applications). This was still the days of Users' Groups yet before the anonymity of BBSs, and it seemed like the heyday of cooperation. I concur that things have gone downhill personality-wise as it became bigger business, and the Open Source "community" has as much show-off competition as useful cooperative product. (Even allowing for some favorite utilities existing because someone said "I can do that better", and did, the fact that those were allowed do wither and die because there's no glory in keeping things running is an ongoing problem.)
If you haven't experienced assholes at work, you've been lucky. If you haven't experienced M&A disasters, and companies folding under you, ditto.
"Equality or diversity. You can't have both."
i have often pondered logic like this...
equally asking,
"Pro Choice and Pro Life" -- can you have both at the same time? I believe so.
i was told by colleagues not to ask questions about social issues because it is so divisive -- i replied, really? then what are we doing with our vote any how?
i still keep the faith.. that all of us are just 1's and 0's and some gray matter in between.
The hysteria surrounding this is deafening... It still seems that obsessed as the West is with individualism, very few are able to comprehend that the author of the memo was making arguments based on sampling from large populations. There are no doubts that men and women are very different, quite how that makes a man a greater or lesser engineer is up for debate but the fact that women don't find tech education or careers as alluring send pretty nailed on. Just look at the numbers at universities for men and women.
Either way, the author of the memo, seemingly, is not just a sexist and is rational. It's difficult not to agree that much of this is simply ideological intolerance...
1. This is an informal thread. For someone who's supposed to be so intelligent, you might have noticed that fact.
2. Thanks for noticing the issue with the link.
3. I don't have a Masters degree from Harvard, does that make me a pissant? No it does not. I have friends that do have a PhD's from Harvard, and well, they think I have some intelligence, so I guess that validates me a little. You know, coming from a State U and all.
4. I'm glad that 4 scientists agree with Demore. There are nearly 6 million scientists and engineers in the US alone. I would say globally, several million. Let's take the US number. So, your 4 scientists work out to ...OMG, its infinitesimal. Hmmm, infinitesimal is a great word, its like " You know, I've always liked that word... 'gargantuan'... so rarely have an opportunity to use it in a sentence. " -Elle Driver
I'm guessing you are not a mathematician, because you would not be so impressed with that number if you were. Get back to me when you've interviewed at least 10%.
Though there were some points that appeared to be injecting some form of nicety to dull the huge slap in the face, it did not work. The undercurrent and spirit of the memo was noticed. I guess we women are not that ignorant after all.
First of all, stop identifying as a "cis". It's a ridiculous label created by leftist to further divide us. You're either a male or female.
Why don't you just go all the way and get rid of all labels and simply say you are a person (until we get AI, we are all people right ;^)
Female engineers' opinions are like any layperson's: anecdotal at best.
It's all about money man. When money talk...
1. This is an informal thread. For someone who's supposed to be so intelligent, you might have noticed that. 2. Thanks for noticing the issue with the link. 3. I don't have a Masters degree from Harvard, does that make me a pissant? No it does not. I have friends that do have a PhD's from Harvard, and well, they think I have some intelligence, so I guess that validates me a little. You know, coming from a State U and all. 4. I'm glad that 4 scientists agree with Demore. There are nearly 6 million scientists and engineers in the US alone. I would say globally, several million. Let's take the US number. So, your 4 scientists work out to ...OMG, its infinitesimal. Hmmm, infinitesimal is a great word, its like " You know, I've always liked that word... 'gargantuan'... so rarely have an opportunity to use it in a sentence. " -Elle Driver
I'm guessing you are not a mathematician, because you would not be so impressed with that number if you were. Get back to me when you've interviewed at least 10%.
Though there were some points that appeared to be injecting some form of nicety to dull the huge slap in the face, it did not work. The undercurrent and spirit of the memo was noticed. I guess we are not that ignorant after all.
Oh, and by the way, he does not have a PhD from Harvard. But, I still think his points should he noted.
That's not The Glamazon Way!
(For those not in the know, Oglaf is written and drawn by a female human.)
> "Pro Choice and Pro Life" -- can you have both at the same time? I believe so.
Are you really that fucking stupid???
How do you "half-murder" a baby???
Murder is a pretty binary operation. To kill or not to kill. There is no imaginary third choice.
Not because I wasn't good at it, consistently wrote more code and closed more issues than the guys. I got sick of being treated like an idiot, having the guys mandolin stuff to me, and getting hit on even tho it was public knowledge I was gay.
Work in family medicine now. It's much better.
Well, you might have asked where I was living! And...I was paid 30K less than my peers with more experience. That being said, why do you find it necessary to put me down? Couldn't you say you're sorry that I felt that way and that I must have been a junior at the time. Which I was. No, you had to infer that I must have been bad at my job to be making so little. "I know I couldn't have hired anyone competent for that price at that time". Really? In THIS post, that is asking for women to relay their experiences, you felt it necessary to do that? Wow. Here is the DOL figures for 2016. 21 years later than the dates I was referring to. Scroll on down. I'm sure a lot of people around the country that would stumble upon your comment are going to look at you as pretty entitled. And well, I'll refrain from saying what I really think for now. https://www.bls.gov/oes/curren...
Agreed.
Ha ha. Yeah, I feel like it was the a different life. I remember my SLIP connection in college. The UMN Gopher and Mosaic was all anyone was talking about for searching. I got "Internet in a Box" which was really over the top to me. I felt as if it would be so cool to have an item to click on and receive information about it. The other biggie was the databases of gifs in Sweden at the U of Upsala I think it was. Either way, we had lots of pride in keeping things up and going and loved to share information. Alas, things do change.
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6300803703108575233
You started the discussion, claiming IT was recently a low paid, 'lord of the flies' environment...I don't buy it, then or now. Called (shenanigans/pushing a narrative), I stand by it, I was there at the time. It's always been well paid. The first computer 'gold rush' was in the early to mid 80s. It wasn't all that different from now.
Does 'lord of the flies' simply mean you didn't get enough 'validation'? Am I being mean to you? Toughen up. Hint: The non-apology: 'I'm sorry you feel that way' is itself a veiled insult. From a male perspective, that's not a phrase you'd use on someone you have any respect for. It's formulaic trope to calm hysterical women.
That nobody competent would work IT in any major city for 26k in about 95 is just history. It's a nice training wage, but if you knew what you were doing, you didn't know how to negotiate salary.
I _am_ entitled to every penny I can squeeze out of the bastards. Let me quess...'lord or the flies'? I hope you never have to work outside IT, you'll be shocked.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
It's not binary at all. There are varying degrees of murder, plus manslaughter as well.
Ok, what the fuck is a cis?
I read this article (see bottom of thread), felt like screaming
Also on one of the news channels, after mentioning the article, one of the female newscasters was "I'm speechless, I'm trying not to hyperventilate right now"
Although, just give it time. I would not be surprised if the authors themselves will feel pressured to come out against it or their own writings even. This is not the time for reasonable discussion. The mob gets what the mob wants.
You call it a "joke", and doubtless from your (male?) perspective it was, but it was also a snide put-down intended (at least in part) to de-legitimise her comment - exactly the sort of thing that women in IT experience far too often, so small surprise she's sensitive to it here as well. It's that whole "lack of empathy" thing again.
You're taking that one phrase out of context. Read the article; there are many other factors involved, including social influence and individual preferences, where biological differences turn out to be a very minor influence in the mix.
"And from my temporally limited experience since the late 90ies I would tentatively agree. How is your perception? How were those 5 to 10% of women in your classes treated by the male participants?"
Normally they were treated like everyone else. Sometimes there was a geek who fawned over them, other times there were guys lining up to "help" her. Women varied in how they responded. I made a point to treat her just like anyone else. Some of these women became my friends, some of these women I never talked to. Just like any other student.
But the worst was when she was singled out in the class and asked a question like: "as a female in technology, can you share your thoughts?"
This reinforced that her that her presence was unusual, that opinion on gender issues was special, that she should be able to come up with a reason as to why she shouldn't be there, and that she should list these to her peers.
It put her in an extremely awkward position that told the rest of the class that she spoke for her gender, that her successes and failures were indicative of "women in technology", that her presence was, intentionally or not, political.
But despite most teachers being clueful about this, and despite 100% supervision during classes, and despite it being the early 90s, there was rarely a girl who enrolled in a highschool course in CS. I don't know why.
Boys clubs? I never actually saw one. I've only read about them in magazines. It seems to be the new thing people are talking about since a certain douchebag CEO made the news a few times in Silicon Valley.
Seriously, asking the question, is the very base for all of this.
People need to stop looking at gender, skin color, geographical location, marital status, financial status, employment status, etc.
Stop it. You're the idiot.
Your entire class may enjoy this very inspiring speech from Admiral McRaven.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Pretty much every time he wrote "I'm not X but ..."
>Most of this is anecdotal evidence, or fake resumes "to test bias", not real resumes and real people.
>Here are some real life results. [abc.net.au]
No numbers in your 'study', not even percentages, and it's maybe 250 words. And yet scored 3. Your article is a textbook example of garbage "journalism" and apologism.
Thanks, Slashdot.
>Could you provide some examples of what he wrote that you found objectionable for discussion?
She doesn't need to. It's an opinion from a side that your people don't like to hear.
> It seems likely you're objecting to him characterizing women as being slightly inclined to more interpersonal roles and empathy but then in your post you say that:
>most of us would want them to build a system with agents that are compassionate. How will that happen if all of it is run by men who live like we are all on an island like the Lord of the Flies?
The two are not mutually exclusive. People are allowed to generalize, because enforcement would be a shitshow, and generalizations allow people to make decisions quickly.
>Which seems like a stronger generalizing statement than anything I saw in the kids manifesto.
Of course you'd say that. Provide some examples for your claim.
Also, he's a kid? What the fuck? The man was at least 22 - he had a fucking job at Google.
What's next, calling the female parent poster a 'girl'?
No numbers in your 'study', not even percentages
That you're too blind to read is not my fault.
Quoting the linked page:
"The trial found assigning a male name to a candidate made them 3.2 per cent less likely to get a job interview.
Adding a woman's name to a CV made the candidate 2.9 per cent more likely to get a foot in the door. "
and it's maybe 250 words.
Your ability to estimate is terrible too. Removing the colophon, all headers, key points and captions, the text is 469 words.
And if that's not enough for you, that you're too lazy to follow a link is not my fault either.
It links to the study as the only text link, so it should not have been hard to find.
Your article is a textbook example of garbage "journalism" and apologism.
Any data disagreeing with your cemented views is garbage and any publishing of it apologism?
She copied and pasted it from elsewhere. It's just a formatting issue due to the different sites.
Like, fuck, do you seriously not immediately get that?
You're kidding right?
In the 1990's all of the males in a CS class would have been geeks. If there were girls in the class they would have been too socially inept to have even talked to them. The women would have been effectively ignored as far as interaction was concerned. There was likely a bit of creepy staring from afar, maybe.
I come from the school that gender does matter and that we all have different perspectives and ideas to contribute and that women compliment men to come up with the best ideas. That is truth. Many haven't figured this out and try to diminish matter. Hey, did you ever hear about the tribe of ancient America where the women went out and hunted, made war with their neighbors, and kept their men safe while they the men washed the clothes, made the food and tended the garden and kept the tepee. No, I didn't think so.
This is a week old account which has only posted on topics about the Google memo.
Is there a problem with that? A possible simple explanation would be that the memo - and all the offensive reactions to it on /. - spurred her into creating an account. And newbies don't get a karma boost, so if it made it all the way up to 5, I guess it deserved it. More than some other score:5 posts, to be sure.
Most of the posts appear to be badly copy/pasted.
I grant you copy/pasted - she said so herself - but the "poorly" could just be a display of unfamiliarity with slashdot's HTML-ish formatting, consistent with the account being new. That and not using the preview function. Shame on her and also on all slahdotters that regularly don't preview their posts. Oops, that seems to include me. Look, a squirrel! *sneaks away*
I tried to read it but it's an impenetrable wall of text.
Maybe try harder - while not everyone will agree with all her points, it's an interesting read nonetheless.
Also, I'm sorry to say so, but this statement is an invitation for the trolls that seem to have been following you around lately and like to poke (puerile) fun at your "reading skills". Then again, maybe you don't/shouldn't care.
On the other hand, there is abundant evidence across all sectors that simply changing the name on a resume to a female sounding name or to a black sounding name reduces the number of callbacks you receive on that resume
This isn't "all sectors" though, this is the IT industry. In this industry, the evidence suggests recruitment outcomes are better for women. e.g.
http://blog.interviewing.io/we...
Not just the IT industry either:
https://pmc.gov.au/sites/defau...
. Women and people of color are less likely to be promoted, to earn similar pay
You have evidence for this? I have evidence that suggests otherwise:
http://media.dice.com/report/m...
Forget black people being shot by police, forget the massive pay and gender gaps in the workplace, forget every real challenge facing the world
Oh no! A population group is demanding the very fucking same equality that everybody else is demanding and suddenly it's wrong?
By the way, there are no massive fucking pay gaps in the workplace and I really can't be arsed providing links to the 78 studies that demonstrate this so you'll just have to take my word on it - or try actually showing some fucking evidence of your own instead of a hate filled sexist racist rant.
No wonder you found the entire document objectionable, it challenged your bigotry.
It never stops amazing me how some people have nothing better to do than spinning the most far-fetched fantasies about people they come across online.
Oh wait... AC on /. Never mind, carry on.
If only the link he shared had included somewhere within those 250 words a hyperlink to the department that did the study, taking the competent reader to a page that doesn't just give you direct access to the full writeup, but also summarises it and offers you downloads in multiple document formats.
If only.
( https://pmc.gov.au/resource-ce... if you were too lazy to check)
Straight answer: "cisgendered," meaning you identify as the gender you were born with and are not transgender.
The only people who use this word are those who spend a lot of time thinking about gender issues.
Comical. You post an impenetrable blob of text, someone posts a joke and you response with
you are the one with the issue and should get off the internet
The only thing that could be more comical would be if your book was on self awareness.
If you think you can bully me with your comment you've got another thing coming. So for all of you reading this...it's this kind of little jerk that's the problem.
Wait, who is the bully here?
That's absolute gibberish.
Yes, scientists are notorious for assuming knowledge from their audience that may not be present. Here are a couple of hints for you: what do we know about correlation and causation? What might that imply in terms of transferring an observed correlation from the whole population to a non-randomly selected subpopulation?(*)
(*) In case this is gibberish to you to, tough luck, I don't feel like explaining. That, and you might want to consider taking your talking points to the Yahoo News or YouTube comment sections.
Ad authoritum is a bullshit cop-out.
You don't ask a Prof. of Basketweaving about Computer Science problems.
The point is he _STILL_ knows more then armchair critics such as the OP.
I've seen those joke responses to many men too. Are you suggesting that women lack a sense of humour, or that treating them the same as men is a bad thing?
it was also a snide put-down intended (at least in part) to de-legitimise her comment
No. It wasn't. What sort of fucking paranoia are you living under that you could remotely think that to be the case?
Ad authoritum is a bullshit cop-out.
You don't ask a Prof. of Basketweaving about Computer Science problems.
You were claiming his fake Ph.D was in biology, remember? We probably shouldn't ask him about Computer Science problems then either.
The point is he _STILL_ knows more then armchair critics such as the OP.
He knows more about faking things apparently.
> 1. This is an informal thread. For someone who's supposed to be so intelligent, you might have noticed that
No one loves reading a fucking Wall-of-Text. Making excuses for shitting formatting is still an excuse -- informal or formal is an orthogonal issue.
> 4. I'm glad that 4 scientists agree with Demore. There are nearly 6 million scientists and engineers in the US alone. ...OMG, its infinitesimal.
> I would say globally, several million. Let's take the US number. So, your 4 scientists work out to
Quantity != Quality.
McDonalds serves BILLIONS. That doesn't make then experts in _quality_ food -- only cheap, shit food in _quantity._
Of those ~6 million scientists how many have a degree in Biology? You don't ask a Prof of Basketweaving how do Computer Science. Why would anyone pay _any_ attention to yet-another-armchair critic instead of the experts ???
But let's keep talking about things that don't matter and ignore the issue the term "diversity" is an oxymoron and coming to conclusions that are NOT mentioned in the paper.
"You don't ask a Prof of Basketweaving how do Computer Science. Why would anyone pay _any_ attention to yet-another-armchair critic instead of the experts ???"
YOU, are a true fossil. LOL.
I'm a bit surprised everyone!
/. for a question like this I'd expect a tire fire.
Usually if I bother to look at the comments on
Other than that one "Anonymous" woman claiming to be every woman. (Be careful how you word things. I know that's maybe not what you meant, but it's what you said.)
Regardless, as many others have said, affirmative action is useful in cases where there's a systemic problem keeping certain groups out of a field. (be it women or other classifications of people)
Where a true meritocracy would see a distribution which roughly matches the population, a false meritocracy (a boy's club or clique) often over-represents one group. Here it is usually men, as they advertised the first personal computers mostly at boys when we were kids in the 70s or 80s.
Numbers of women in computing roughly matched men right up until the personal computing boom, when it became a bit of a boy's club.
If you grew up a boy, chances were that there were a nerdy group of lads at school you could talk computer stuff about. You'd challenge each other and encourage each other.
Girls didn't see the same encouragement. They were often met with scorn, or encouraged to do other things with their time. Any accomplishments they did achieve in computing were probably diminished by their peers or their parents.
Girls in computing either had to be friends with the boys, which can seem insurmountable for nerdy women who are attractive, as the boys often fail to believe you can be smart, or they had to go it alone. (Also the other nerdy girls probably don't think you want to hang out with them.)
Fast-forward to college and you're left with a lot less experience tinkering with focus, and probably big gaps in your knowledge.
Imagine you had to do 12th grade algebra having missed grade 9-11. That'd be pretty harsh, no matter how smart you are.
This is the particular problem we're trying to solve here. It's a systematic problem. Encouragement at every stage is the only answer. (By encouragement I mean removing barriers as well.)
In the work-place it can be a similar problem in that a subconscious bias encourages women less in the field. The ones who did make it through the extra hurdles to even get to the job interview aren't always weighed equally. You can see this in the difference between numbers of grads versus new workforce.
I hope this helps clear things up.
Women ARE different, but I've come to believe that the non-physical differences are caused by the cultural/psychological adaptations we've had to make because we're smaller and weaker than men. It would be nice if we didn't have to adapt any more, but I don't see that happening Real Soon Now. Still, more stuff is open to women now than when I was young, and that's a good thing. Onward and upward.
I'm ashamed that whining is apparently one of those adaptations.
The Google guy didn't say that we're unsuitable or inferior, just that we tend to have different interests etc. I don't disagree with anything he said.
Of course they're fake resumes. You aren't going to find lots of people with essentially equivalent qualifications of assorted races and sexes. With fake resumes, you can come up with a pack of resumes, and vary the names you put on them as you send them to companies.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
"Cis" doesn't create pointless divisions. The pointless division already existed, in the form of discrimination against trans people. "Cis" is just recognizing it.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
I agree with you entirely.
I also had the feeling that the authors of the article are, purposely or not, misrepresenting what Damore wrote.
He wrote in general terms on a population whereas the Wired article makes it sound like he generalizes from average aspects to the individual.
aRTee
It's about common fucking decency which you apparently lack. No one wants to read a wall of text and as a supposed author you should know that. It's just word vomit. A writer's politics, gender, ethnicity, or whatever else has no effect on it. Anyone on this site who posts diarrhea of the keyboard will get shit over it. Ask APK. The only way you'd get more shit for your post is if it were in all caps with no punctuation like someone's racist uncle would post on Facebook. OPEN YOUR EYES SHEEPLE!
Just because a woman is a woman, it doesn't mean she has any background in gender studies or any special understanding of gender issues.
It's just her opinion and experiences.
Isn't that basically what James Damore got fired for?
I haven't read every comment, but it looks like yet another rehashing of the same back and forth as in previous threads and it seems to be exclusively men sharing their thoughts. Do we not have any women on this forum? For the men participating in this, let's pipe down for a sec and hear from women, as the posting suggests.
Alexey
Of course they're fake resumes. You aren't going to find lots of people with essentially equivalent qualifications of assorted races and sexes. With fake resumes, you can come up with a pack of resumes, and vary the names you put on them as you send them to companies.
No, some studies have used real applicants and applications, but changed or blanked the names before handing them to the reviewers.
Not really. The term cis exists to pigeonhole non-trans people into tight gender roles.
It is offensive and needs to stop. If you really need to indicate that ones biological sex matches their sex, you can just say non-trans.
But most of the time there's no reason to do so and doing so Just cause trans people to be offended.
WHO | Gender and women's mental health
http://www.who.int/mental_health/prevention/genderwomen/en/
Women twice as likely to suffer depression.
Men twice as likely to be alcoholics.
What's that about no differences again?
Or, as the less sensitive of us like to say, "normal."
P.s. there is nothing insulting or offensive about being normal. It just means you fit the middle of the bell curve in some aspect. You want diversity but you can't have everyone pile up at the extremes; some of us have to fit in between.
We're testing two different things here. The apparent 'contradiction' between the results of the two testing regimes might not amount to any contradiction at all.
With fake resume studies we are isolating gender as an independent variable. With gender-blanked genuine resumes OTOH, we are perhaps testing instead which gender generally already possesses the greater portion of relevant qualifications and experience for the particular position. So while at first gloss the BETA study seems to contradict much of the fake resume work, on reflection that is not necessarily so. There may simply be (and likely is) a higher proportion of more qualified men at the relevant level which difference (modest though it appears at ca. 3%) could mask any putative gender preference.
Now there are other considerations of course, eg, in an agency culture where an equal opportunity is already well established, blanking gender relieves the anxiety of including too many of any particular gender on the interview list. Also the nature of the position needs to be considered as not all fake resume studies show a preference for men (from memory a test on child-care worker positions showed one of the most extreme gender preference response ... strongly in favour of female names). If something about a position would recommend to people's preconceptions of what fits particularly female talents, again blanking would be expected to favour men.
However, just by itself, the likely difference between in qualification/experience of one gender (esp. at more senior levels), means that the effects observed in genuine resume studies cannot be taken to contradict the effects observed in those studies where the effect of gender is isolated in purer form.
Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
I take offense to that. I have been both a jock and a nerd since I was small child, you insensitive clod!!!!
:)
Just kidding, I don't take offense so easily, and yes I was one of the biggest nerds in my school and a star football player.
While my lunch time was spent playing Magic the Gathering, my evenings were spent at football practice or lifting weights. Afterward I would play games on my computer.
Remember in Monty Python's Meaning of Life, when the new mother asks the doctor if her baby is a boy or a girl, and the doctor replies, "I think it's a bit early to start imposing roles on it, don't you?"
Back in 1983, that was considered a joke.
If this is all you've got...no wonder you lash out! The part I find really funny is that in the early 90s you could barely get a man to type something. You know, it was referred to as a woman's job! Now the misogynist IT types (not all) are all fucking experts in writing, formatting and typing. LOL. So predictable.
True! I was managing and merging systems and networks in several M &A's. Quite interesting to see the array of characters that emerge from that kind of stress and fear. The knives were out and many of the work friendships dissolved.
Right when I think it is hopeless, my faith is restored! Thanks. It's inspired me to write the blurb below. I look around me, and I see how women are treated in other parts of the world and compare it to these ramblings in this thread and it saddens me. It saddens me because I don't see that the mindset of some of these men are very different from those oppressors in the Middle East. The only difference is that we in the West have experienced the age of Enlightenment and most of us agree that all people have a right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That includes women. So while all of the haters are spewing their crap, I ask them to look eastward, maybe that is where they belong. Because the West, has other plans and it's called equality. https://www.history.com/topics...
I KNOW!!! It's as if a larva sac of them just opened and they oozed out and proliferated.
Richard Dawkins was pilloried for making basically the same point.
Did I lash out? I simply made an observation. Try to be rational even though it goes against your biology. Why don't you do like the women in tech at google who took a day off over that memo? Because reading something that goes against your dogma is just so upsetting.
To be fair, AmiMoJo generally doesn't strike me as the misogynistic type - quite the contrary. My best guess is that he (or she) really got ticked off by the lack of formatting in your message; one tends to get that sort of thing with nerds (the target audience of this site, even though it's not prominently advertised as such anymore). Since the problem persists in your more recent posts, just in case you don't know:
- Slashdot will ignore normal line breaks, but if put <br> somewhere in your text, it will act as a "soft return".
- If you start a paragraph of text with <p> and end it with </p>, you get an effect like "hard returns" between paragraphs.
- More generally, you're supposed to use an (anemic) subset of HTML for posting on slashdot. It got so anemic because it used to be a popular sport to exploit any and all HTML features to annoy others.
- Anyhow, when in doubt, you can use the "preview" function to see if your post is properly formatted.