The News-Times (Sunday)

Tech’s gadget show edges closer to gender equity

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The world’s largest tech conference has apparently learned a big lesson about gender equity.

CES, the huge annual consumer-electronic­s show in Las Vegas, caught major flak from activists in late 2017 when it unveiled an all-male lineup of keynote speakers for the second year in a row. Although it later added two female keynoters , the gathering’s “boys’ club” reputation remained intact. It didn’t help that one of the unsanction­ed events latching on to CES last year was a nightclub featuring female “robot strippers.”

This year, four of the nine current keynoters are

women. GenderAven­ger, the activist group that raised a ruckus last year, recently sent CES organizers a congratula­tory letter and awarded the show a “Gold Stamp of Approval” for a roster of keynote and “featured” speakers that it says is 45 percent women — 60 percent of them women of color.

It’s a significan­t change for CES, which like most tech conference­s remains disproport­ionately male, just like the industry it serves. Even absent the robot dogs, sci-fi worthy gadgets and “booth babes” CES has been known for, you could readily peg it as a technology show from the bathroom lines alone — where men shift uncomforta­bly as they wait their turn while women waltz right in.

The four-day CES show opens Tuesday, though media previews begin Sunday. Keynoters this year include IBM CEO Ginni Rometty; Lisa Su, CEO of chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices; and U.S. Transporta­tion Security Elaine Chao. The entire featured speaker list is currently half female, although the exact percentage won’t be known until after the event. “There is no question we keep trying to do better,” said Gary Shapiro, CEO of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, which organizes CES.

“Diversity is about having people who see things differentl­y — frankly, disagree with you and tell you that you are stupid,” said Tania Yuki, CEO of social media analytics company Shareablee and an attendee of CES for the past several years. The big question, she says, is whether CES has really listened to its critics.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? A model performs last January at a display for Sony cameras at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.
Associated Press file photo A model performs last January at a display for Sony cameras at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.

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