The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Google exec denounces employee’s views on female workers

- By Barbara Ortutay

Silicon Valley’s efforts to promote workforce diversity haven’t yielded many results — unless you count a backlash at Google, where a male engineer blamed biological difference­s for the paucity of female programmer­s.

His widely shared memo, titled “Google’s Ideologica­l Echo Chamber,” also criticizes Google for pushing mentoring and diversity programs and for “alienating conservati­ves.”

Google’s just-hired head of diversity, Danielle Brown, responded with her own memo, saying that Google is “unequivoca­l in our belief that diversity and inclusion are critical to our success.” She said change is hard and “often uncomforta­ble.”

The dueling memos come as Silicon Valley grapples with accusation­s of sexism and discrimina­tion. Google is also in the midst of a Department of Labor investigat­ion into whether it pays women less than men, while Uber’s CEO recently lost his job amid accusation­s of widespread sexual harassment and discrimina­tion.

Leading tech companies, including Google, Facebook and Uber, have said they are trying to improve hiring and working conditions for women. But diversity numbers are barely changing .

The Google employee memo, which gained attention online over the weekend, begins by saying that only honest discussion will address a lack of equity. But it also asserts that women “prefer jobs in social and artistic areas” while more men “may like coding because it requires systemizin­g.”

The memo, which was shared on the tech blog Gizmodo, attributes biological difference­s between men and women to the reason why “we don’t have 50% representa­tion of women in tech and leadership.”

The employee, whose identity hasn’t been released, was described in news reports as a software engineer.

While his views were broadly and publicly criticized online, they echo the 2005 statements by thenHarvar­d President Lawrence Summers, who said the reason there are fewer female scientists at top universiti­es is in part due to “innate” gender difference­s.

Brande Stellings, senior vice president of advisory services for Catalyst, a nonprofit advocacy group for women in the workplace, said the engineer’s viewpoints show “how ingrained, entrenched and harmful gender-based stereotype­s truly are.”

“It’s much easier for some to point to ‘innate biological difference­s’ than to confront the unconsciou­s biases and obstacles that get in the way of a level playing field,” Stellings wrote in an email.

Google, like other tech companies, has far fewer women than men in technology and leadership positions. Fifty-six percent of its workers are white and 35 percent are Asian, while Hispanic and Black employees make up 4 percent and 2 percent of its workforce, respective­ly, according to the company’s latest diversity report .

Tech companies say they are trying, by reaching out to and interviewi­ng a broader range of job candidates, by offering coding classes, internship­s and mentorship programs and by holding mandatory “unconsciou­s bias” training sessions for existing employees.

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