Facebook is furry sex videosfacing backlash over possible gender bias within its engineering team, according to a report from the Wall Street Journalon Tuesday.
Data collected by an engineer in 2016 suggests that code submitted by women at the company was rejected more frequently than men, according to the Journal. Specifically, that female engineers' code is rejected 35 percent more often than men's. The engineer no longer works for the company.
SEE ALSO: Donald Trump tweeted about International Women's Day and everyone's making the same jokeIn response to the allegations, senior officials at Facebook conducted their own internal review. However, they found that the rejection rates could be attributed to a Facebook engineer's rank and not their gender, according to the Journal. The company also said that its analysis was based on more complete data that the engineer didn't have access to.
However, it's possible that both interpretations could be true, and the problem is more nuanced. Some employees, again per the WSJ, argued that the company's conclusions instead reflected the fact that female engineers don't get promoted at the same rates as their male counterparts.
Women hold only 17 percent of technical roles at Facebook, according to the company's recent diversity numbers.
Essentially, employees posited a snarling feedback loop: Women engineers get more pushback on their code, slowing their rise through the ranks and then contributing to the perception that their expertise is less than that of their male counterparts, whose paths to promotion are greased with positive bias. The Journalwas not able to independently verify these claims.
In a statement, Facebook said that "the discrepancy simply reaffirms a challenge we have previously highlighted – the current representation of senior female engineers both at Facebook and across the industry is nowhere near where it needs to be," but argued that the conclusions drawn by the former employee are based on "incomplete data" and are invalid.
Facebook reiterated in an emailed statement to Mashable that the data is incomplete:
As we have explained, the Wall Street Journal is relying on analysis that is incomplete and inaccurate – performed by a former Facebook engineer with an incomplete data set. Any meaningful discrepancy based on the complete data is clearly attributable not to gender but to seniority of the employee. In fact, the discrepancy simply reaffirms a challenge we have previously highlighted – the current representation of senior female engineers both at Facebook and across the industry is nowhere near where it needs to be.
Google's issue is over pay. Facebook's issue is over code and promotions. But the two issues are often tied together
Data suggesting gender bias has been vehemently contested in Silicon Valley, a place where such bias is largely accepted as common knowledge. Facebook's argument that the engineer's problematic data is incomplete and their exonerating data tells the whole true story is a justification that has been used before.
In 2015, Erica Baker, an engineer at Google at the time, put together a spreadsheet of Google employees' salaries. The data she collected showed pay inequities between male and female employees.
Google denied such a discrepancy, and Baker no longer works at the company. Sure, Baker's data may not have been complete -- just like the engineer at Facebook's -- but years later, the U.S. Labor Department accused Google of fostering an "extreme" gender pay gap. Google continued to deny that's the case, again using the defense of an incomplete dataset.
Google's issue is over pay. Facebook's issue is over code and promotions. But the two issues are often tied together and can dog employees for years as they change jobs. New York City recently passed a law forbidding companies to ask job applicants about salary history specifically so women and minorities, who are often underpaid, won't be at further disadvantage.
Do these companies have blind spots? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was asked about the internal review during a weekly town hall meeting and responded that gender bias is "an issue," according to theJournal.
Jay Parikh, Facebook’s head of infrastructure and the person responsible for the company's analysis, did not completely deny the discrepancy, and in his response to employees suggested that employees take Facebook's voluntary training course on biases.
"Consider the ways you could be a bias interrupter in your daily life," Parikh wrote, according to the Journal.
NYT's The Mini crossword answers for January 19'The Zone of Interest' review: A chilling portrait of complicity#nyc #adayinmylife by Taylore ScarabelliHow to watch 'The Office' Superfan episodes: streaming deals, release dates, and moreOur Staff’s Favorite Books of 2021 by The Paris ReviewHow to Choose Your Perfume: A Conversation with Sianne Ngai and Anna Kornbluh by Jude StewartGet up to 23% off Logitech PC products at AmazonBest iPad deal: Save on models from the classic iPad to the iPad Air238 Announcement by Emily StokesRedux: Couples at Work by The Paris ReviewWordle today: The answer and hints for January 21Objective Correlatives by Stephen ShoreGet up to 23% off Logitech PC products at AmazonRedux: Furry Faces by The Paris ReviewHow to Choose Your Perfume: A Conversation with Sianne Ngai and Anna Kornbluh by Jude StewartChetna Maroo Wins This Year’s Plimpton Prize by The Paris ReviewTikTok, tweens, and Sephora: Everything you need to know, according to the tweens themselvesChetna Maroo Wins This Year’s Plimpton Prize by The Paris ReviewTikTok, tweens, and Sephora: Everything you need to know, according to the tweens themselvesChetna Maroo Wins This Year’s Plimpton Prize by The Paris Review Don't worry, Drake. We came up with some ideas for your next tattoo. 'Town Hall' is here, but don't expect to start DMing with Trump Chrissy Teigen politely lets Fox News know that she 'detests' them Insatiable 'Overwatch' players are speedrunning the hero menu, of all things Tesla rival continues to be a bad Tesla rival Night Shift is now available on your Mac so you can finally get some damn sleep Amazon's Kindle is currently a bargain for Prime members Surprise! Katie Cassidy's coming back to 'Arrow' as a series regular in Season 6 The internet is very confused by this shirt at the Trump Tower gift shop The new head of the White House Office of American Innovation has never tweeted Reddit user created a mind Snake on a plane hitches a ride to New Zealand, which has no snakes It's time to let a robot invasion stop the Lionfish explosion Paper artist transforms historical landmarks into silly scenes North Carolina's bathroom bill will cost the state $3.7 billion The secret weapon that will make your next computer super fast Drake's 'More Life' playlist destroys Spotify records—including some of his own TFW your shadow looks exactly like Rihanna Airbnb brings Trips to Australia for a bigger slice of the tourism pie 'Stranger Things' star Millie Bobby Brown is taking a much
1.7818s , 8614.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【furry sex videos】,Pursuit Information Network