Sexism in Silicon Valley
Silicon Valley and the wider tech
industry have a problem with women. At least, that is what you might
conclude after a week that has seen a leading tech investor resign after
admitting his involvement in sexual harassment.
On the Tech Tent
podcast this week, we talk to two women who have been on the receiving
end of that kind of behaviour and ask why the culture of Silicon Valley
appears to be stuck in the last century. We also discuss a week that has seen the demise of the internal combustion engine come closer - as Volvo announced that all its cars will soon include an electric motor - and we meet the woman who has a powerful role in regulating Facebook and other tech giants in Europe.
Tech's Problem With Women
You might think that California was among the most liberal, even politically correct, places on Earth. But tell that to women in the technology industry. We knew how few women there were at senior levels in tech companies - and the situation is even worse at the venture capital firms that fund them. Now we are finding out just why they may find it difficult to thrive.This week has seen the latest in a series of scandals that have underlined something deeply wrong with the culture of Silicon Valley. Dave McClure, the co-founder of 500 Startups, an important and powerful figure in the funding of small tech firms, resigned after accusations that he had sexually harassed a female entrepreneur.
Then another woman came forward with similar allegations. Malaysian tech entrepreneur Cheryl Yeoh posted an account on her website of a brainstorming evening with Mr McClure and a group of other people in her apartment, which ended with him proposing that they should sleep together and pushing her against a wall to demand a kiss.
On our programme, Ms Yeoh gives her first interview about her story, telling Zoe Kleinman she did not confront Mr McClure after the incident, afraid of what it might mean for her business and the deal she was trying to strike with him.
"If I had told him how angry I was at the time, he might have pulled the deal off."
We've contacted Mr McClure about the allegations but have not heard back from him so far.
We also talk to one of the most prominent women in Silicon Valley, Danae Ringelmann, co-founder of the crowdfunding site Indiegogo. She tells us of her own experience of sexual harassment, when a drunken entrepreneur groped her at a post-conference party.
She says there was not the same power imbalance as in Ms Yeoh's case - she wasn't seeking funding from the entrepreneur - but she still thought long and hard about reporting the incident. "I've had the same type of concerns as other women - do I say something and risk hurting my company or do I shut up?"
In recent weeks, more women have felt emboldened to tell their stories about sexual harassment and other forms of discrimination. Silicon Valley's cool liberal image is under threat - and the pressure is growing to do something about it.
The Electric Future
Will we look back one day and say this was the week when the electric car's time finally arrived?At a press conference in Sweden's capital Stockholm this week, Volvo Cars announced that from 2019 all its new models will be fully or partly electric-powered.
On Friday, the first Tesla Model 3 - the electric car-maker's first mass-market model - rolls off the production line.
And France has announced that by 2040, cars that use petrol or diesel will be banned from its roads.
But reaching a time when the internal combustion engine can take its place in a museum rather than on the road may still prove a long and complex journey.
Silicon Valley and the wider tech
industry have a problem with women. At least, that is what you might
conclude after a week that has seen a leading tech investor resign after
admitting his involvement in sexual harassment.
On the Tech Tent
podcast this week, we talk to two women who have been on the receiving
end of that kind of behaviour and ask why the culture of Silicon Valley
appears to be stuck in the last century. We also discuss a week that has seen the demise of the internal combustion engine come closer - as Volvo announced that all its cars will soon include an electric motor - and we meet the woman who has a powerful role in regulating Facebook and other tech giants in Europe.
Tech's Problem With Women
You might think that California was among the most liberal, even politically correct, places on Earth. But tell that to women in the technology industry. We knew how few women there were at senior levels in tech companies - and the situation is even worse at the venture capital firms that fund them. Now we are finding out just why they may find it difficult to thrive.This week has seen the latest in a series of scandals that have underlined something deeply wrong with the culture of Silicon Valley. Dave McClure, the co-founder of 500 Startups, an important and powerful figure in the funding of small tech firms, resigned after accusations that he had sexually harassed a female entrepreneur.
Then another woman came forward with similar allegations. Malaysian tech entrepreneur Cheryl Yeoh posted an account on her website of a brainstorming evening with Mr McClure and a group of other people in her apartment, which ended with him proposing that they should sleep together and pushing her against a wall to demand a kiss.
On our programme, Ms Yeoh gives her first interview about her story, telling Zoe Kleinman she did not confront Mr McClure after the incident, afraid of what it might mean for her business and the deal she was trying to strike with him.
"If I had told him how angry I was at the time, he might have pulled the deal off."
We've contacted Mr McClure about the allegations but have not heard back from him so far.
We also talk to one of the most prominent women in Silicon Valley, Danae Ringelmann, co-founder of the crowdfunding site Indiegogo. She tells us of her own experience of sexual harassment, when a drunken entrepreneur groped her at a post-conference party.
She says there was not the same power imbalance as in Ms Yeoh's case - she wasn't seeking funding from the entrepreneur - but she still thought long and hard about reporting the incident. "I've had the same type of concerns as other women - do I say something and risk hurting my company or do I shut up?"
In recent weeks, more women have felt emboldened to tell their stories about sexual harassment and other forms of discrimination. Silicon Valley's cool liberal image is under threat - and the pressure is growing to do something about it.
The Electric Future
Will we look back one day and say this was the week when the electric car's time finally arrived?At a press conference in Sweden's capital Stockholm this week, Volvo Cars announced that from 2019 all its new models will be fully or partly electric-powered.
On Friday, the first Tesla Model 3 - the electric car-maker's first mass-market model - rolls off the production line.
And France has announced that by 2040, cars that use petrol or diesel will be banned from its roads.
But reaching a time when the internal combustion engine can take its place in a museum rather than on the road may still prove a long and complex journey.
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