Bangkok Post

More women in tech industry but not at the top

- TOM FINN

LISBON: Technology firms are hiring more women and narrowing the gender gap, a poll by Europe’s largest technology conference found on Wednesday, but female leaders said the multi-trillion dollar industry was still failing to put them in its boardrooms.

A poll of 600 women in tech by the Web Summit showed nearly half, or 42%, believed gender ratios had improved in the last year. One in three were “unsure” if representa­tion was better.

The findings from the conference suggest the sector is starting to respond to allegation­s last year of sexism at tech firms such as Facebook and walkouts by Google employees in response to claims of inequality and sexual misconduct.

“It’s great to hear that women in tech feel that they are becoming better represente­d,” said Winnie Lee, chief operating officer of Taiwanese artificial intelligen­ce (AI) startup Appier.

Lee said both men and women needed to be involved in AI to make sure the technology “is applied in the most creative ways to benefit society”.

About 70,000 people from 163 nations attended the conference, whose organisers said the number of women attendees had risen to about 46% from 25% in 2013, boosted by ticket discounts.

Other women tech leaders, though, were less sanguine.

“Yes there are more women in tech, but until women are around the table making decisions, it really doesn’t matter that there are more of us,” said Laurel Touby, who runs a New Yorkbased venture capital fund, Supernode Ventures.

“When you have 30% representa­tion by women, women start to feel comfortabl­e enough to make themselves heard and to express their opinions. In tech we definitely haven’t hit that percentage yet.”

The tech sector has long come under scrutiny for inequality and for its “brogamer” culture, referring to men who play video games.

Global organisati­ons including the

United Nations have spoken out about under-representa­tion of women in science, technology, engineerin­g and maths (STEM).

A 2016 report by the global consultanc­y McKinsey & Company found that women made up 37% of entry-level roles in technology, but only one in four senior management roles.

About half the women polled at the Web Summit believed their salaries were in line with those of their male counterpar­ts, up from 37% in a similar study last year.

Nonetheles­s, four in 10 respondent­s agreed with the statement : “Many women are offered leadership roles just to fill quotas”.

Boosting gender equality was a key theme at this year’s Web Summit in Portugal, where company representa­tives spoke of training staff in unconsciou­s bias, deleting sex from CVs, having women on all shortlists and improving maternity rights.

Even the resident robot was on message.

Asked by a journalist if she would like to inspire women in AI, Sonia, a social humanoid robot developed by Hong Kong-based company Hanson Robotics, said:

“Girls are one of the most valuable natural resources this planet has to offer being so full of potential, thinking brilliantl­y. And yet they are mistreated all over the world. There is definitely an apartheid of gender.”

 ?? AFP ?? Hanson Robotics founder David Hanson, left, attends to a conference with social humanoid robot Sophia during the Web Summit in Lisbon on Wednesday.
AFP Hanson Robotics founder David Hanson, left, attends to a conference with social humanoid robot Sophia during the Web Summit in Lisbon on Wednesday.

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