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Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

Uber Manager Told Female Engineer That 'Sexism is Systemic in Tech' (theguardian.com) 272

Sam Levin, writing for The Guardian: Uber is facing yet another discrimination scandal after a manager who was recruiting a female engineer defended the company by saying "sexism is systemic in tech." On 14 March, an engineering manager at Uber tried to recruit Kamilah Taylor, a senior software engineer at another Silicon Valley company, for a developer position at the San Francisco ride-hailing startup, which is struggling to recover from a major sexual harassment controversy. Taylor, who provided copies of her LinkedIn messages with the Guardian, responded by saying: "In light of Uber's questionable business practices and sexism, I have no interest in joining." Taylor was stunned by the reply she received from Uber. The manager, who is a woman, wrote: "I understand your concern. I just want to say that sexism is systemic in tech and other industries. I've met some of the most inspiring people here."
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Uber Manager Told Female Engineer That 'Sexism is Systemic in Tech'

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  • Hmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24, 2017 @03:47PM (#54105067)

    That sounds like the recruiter is agreeing/commiserating with her. Nothing to see here?

    • Re:Hmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gfxguy ( 98788 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @03:55PM (#54105153)
      Agreed.... did not sound like she was justifying it, just making a (sadly) honest statement. What she was saying was that there are good people at Uber, which I'm sure is also true. It's a big company, there will be #@holes and there will be good people.
      • Re:Hmmm... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @04:43PM (#54105449)

        did not sound like she was justifying it, just making a (sadly) honest statement.

        True. But the problem is that she didn't rebuke what's happened; she just said "Deal with it."

    • Re:Hmmm... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by pipingguy ( 566974 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @04:15PM (#54105259)
      Yes, this story is odd... almost if the "scandal" is ginned-up so as to generate Yet Another Story Of Workplace Sexism And Why Something MUST BE DONE NOW (And BTW, Trump Grabs Pussies).

      It's just one more "Raising Awareness Moment" rammed into the eyeballs of the reader. Or a attempt to threaten a lawsuit and then settle.
      • Yes, this story is odd... almost if the "scandal" is ginned-up so as to generate Yet Another Story Of Workplace Sexism And Why Something MUST BE DONE NOW (And BTW, Trump Grabs Pussies). It's just one more "Raising Awareness Moment" rammed into the eyeballs of the reader. Or a attempt to threaten a lawsuit and then settle.

        There hasn't been a Friday night fight for a while - it looks like it's back.
        There used to be an article every week to inspire angry virgins to go around screaming SJW!!!!

    • The issue is location Sexism in tech is far prevalent in the West then in the East. The problem is all the big name tech companies are based in the West, while the normal established boring tech companies are in the East. However working tech in the east you see a higher percentage of female working tech. In my departments the ratio is 50/50 male to female (granted it is higher than normal), and the higher level positions in my department are male. In the East coast there is sexism in tech, but it isn't

      • by TWX ( 665546 )

        I think it may be due to most of the tech jobs centered around long time established companies with older employees, who are married and have children, and are less invested in looking at the opposite sex as something relieve their primal instincts.

        This does not agree with what I've seen. I've been to training classes and to conferences in addition to my own workplace, and the vast majority of men in tech are married, and they act like thirteen year old boys fictionally bragging about fictional exploits and talking about various women and what they would like to do to or with them in their own fantasy worlds. They do not generally do this in front of women, but they do it plenty when women aren't around, and it's much worse in the conference setting

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's notable because people on Slashdot keep saying that there is me sexism in tech and that complaints about Uber might be fake.

      Sadly this is the stage of the debate we are at.

    • As a broad description, the manager is probably right, but not every tech-oriented company mistreats women. Sexism need not, and should not, be endemic in the high tech industry or any high tech company.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24, 2017 @03:48PM (#54105073)

    The HR Manager, who like 76% of HRMs in the US is female, said "sexism is systemic".

    You got that right.

  • Please stop (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @03:48PM (#54105077)
    Please stop putting a "sexism in tech" story on the front page. three times a week. Please! I know you get more clicks and ad views but I beg you not to descend to that level. It's all been said. Every possible part of this debate has been had. Dozens of times. Enough is enough. Gut check: Are you ready to become a Gawker in your quest for shareholder value? I love Slashdot and I don't want to see it go down that road. Down the path to posting more inflammatory posts for clicks or worse, to push a narrative. Don't do this to me. Don't do this to yourself. You're better than this.
    • Why? (Score:4, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24, 2017 @03:49PM (#54105091)

      Please stop putting a "sexism in tech" story on the front page. three times a week.

      Why? Are you a snowflake? Were you triggered? Do you need a safe space where you don't have to see any articles that are offensive to you?

    • I'm fine with Slashdot reporting on sexism if there is actually some news there. New studies, new ideas on its causes/effects, hell, even a big lawsuit may be notable. But this article is nothing. The woman said "sexism is systemic in tech". Seriously, who doesn't know that? She wasn't even defending the sexism, merely making the observation that it exists.
    • I'm really enjoying watching Uber's culture getting its well-earned raking. That alone is worth every article.

      As to sexism, there's plenty of new things to say, but each discussion is hijacked by the same 2 or 3 arguments taking place.

      But more seriously, every social movement and major event gets its own sea of scrutiny and discussion and ties in to current events. This is tech's sexism moment, and we're in the middle of an unresolved problem. We already did mobile, iPods, Web 2.0, Microsoft vs Linux, Java

  • Working outside their area of expertise.

    Say what you like but as a manager or supervisory type, HR better be your friend, or you will be hammered in court. And fired.

    The dumb was/is strong in these Uber managers. Makes me want to buy another car just to say no to Uber.

    • Working outside their area of expertise.

      Say what you like but as a manager or supervisory type, HR better be your friend, or you will be hammered in court. And fired.

      The dumb was/is strong in these Uber managers. Makes me want to buy another car just to say no to Uber.

      HR is never your friend. Never.

      • HR's job is to protect the company from the employee. If that makes HR the friend of the employee depends somewhat on the amount of loyalty the employee has. If the employee and the employer are friends, and even teammates, then HR surely is the employees friend and teammate.

        Not that that describes most of the workplaces I've seen, but there is no law of physics preventing it.

  • by slasher999 ( 513533 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @04:00PM (#54105177)

    I've been in IT for nearly 25 years and I've always worked shoulder to shoulder with women and men alike. Uber has an HR and a culture issue. This isn't a widespread tech industry issue.

    • Your anecdote isn't data. It's nice that you've worked for progressive companies and that you yourself are good about working with women, but it's absolutely a systemic issue. Story after story after story confirms it.

      Rather, I think you and the companies you work for are outliers. Congratulations on that; I hope you keep your streak.

      • I've worked for just as many big companies as small mom and pop shops. Maybe it's just a north east / mid-atlantic thing, but this has never been an issue here. I'm sure there is anecdotal evidence to the contrary.

      • It's hardly a 'progressive' thing. Most places are small where everyone knows each other and bad interpersonal behavior of any sort is not tolerated. At least that's been my experience.
      • Your anecdote isn't data. ... it's absolutely a systemic issue. anecdote after anecdote confirms it.

    • I would have to agree, while it is not uncommon in Tech, it is on the decline and really most big firms don't have this issue anymore. Been a long time since I have seen a firm with such issues (there will always be one or two men and woman with sexist natures everywhere though). It really does sound though that Uber has serious HR and staffing issues that are endemic to the company though.
    • I've been in IT for nearly 25 years and I've always worked shoulder to shoulder with women and men alike. Uber has an HR and a culture issue. This isn't a widespread tech industry issue.

      WTF? Your anecdote if it's even true is well and truly out of the ordinary for the tech industry. You don't even need to look to the industry why, you can see why just be peeking into a university IT lecture.

      Kudos to you and your workplace for having gender equality. But that is far from the norm.

      • I've had more female bosses and supervisors than male. I've always had at least one female co-worker on my team. I think I'm up to ~20 years of IT experience now, and I started out as a contractor visiting a wide variety of sites before I started taking corporate cubical gigs.

        The problems have been with socially awkward guys, not with misogyny or institutionalized sexism. And even those problems started waning in the early 2000s as employers had more and more potential employees to choose from and could

      • Well im an electrician, ill say that atleast 99% of us are male. and we talk shit to eachother. the FEW good females that are in this career talk shit and can brush said shit talking off. the ones that dont make it. usually say sexism.

    • by dave562 ( 969951 )

      As many others have said, your experience is not the norm. I have been doing IT since 1996. I have worked with one female sysadmin and two female DBAs. Other than that, most of the women in "IT" have all been in PM and other non-technical roles.

      My current company employees ~5000 people. Our CEO and General Counsel are women, in addition to countless Managing Directors. We have equality programs up the wazoo, including for LGBT and every race except us "white" people. We are not a tech company per se,

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 24, 2017 @04:03PM (#54105195)

    I've worked in technology for a few years. When I was a floor technician assembling stuff Sexism was less pervasive since there was more gender equality.

    When I shifted to IT (network / system admin) it was 99% guys and was quite shocked how nerds could have such filthy mouths and that a lot of the guys had a bizzare nerd bravado I never experienced until entering IT.

    More women need to be in hand on tech roles and stop going into sales, client relations, office administration, etc.... When entering the tech industry.

    Until then nerd bravado Sexism will remain pervasive.

    An easy temp gap fix would be to put these guys back into the sub basement where their conversations can't be overheard anymore. :)

  • by Bodhammer ( 559311 ) on Friday March 24, 2017 @04:47PM (#54105469)
    "What's wrong with being sexy?"
    -Nigel Tufnel
  • The manager countered that they thought the industry had a problem and that the place they worked was great. Seems like a candid response that builds up their company.
  • You may as well join our company -- sure it sucks, but you're not going to get better anywhere else.

    Yeah, that's not an endorsement.

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