POPULARITY
Join us for a best of episode where Chris catches up with Emmy Award-winning journalist, author of "Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley", and anchor at Bloomberg TV, Emily Chang.As executive producer and host of daily show Bloomberg Technology and the interview series Studio 1.0, Chang speaks to top tech executives, investors, and entrepreneurs, including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and CEO Sheryl Sandberg.Chris learns what Emily has discovered about the staggering gender inequality in the tech industry, and to understand more about how we got here and how we can foster real change.
To ona pomogła z dość mizoginicznego serwisu do oceny studentek zrobić globalny fenomen biznesowo-technologiczny, dziś znany jako Meta. Jako jedna z najbardziej wpływowych menadżerek świata stała się znana także z tego, że głośno zwracała uwagę na rolę kobiet w miejscu pracy, ich prawo do robienia kariery, ale też że publicznie mówiła o prawie do przeżywania żałoby. Równocześnie jednak stała się symbolem stawiania biznesu nad dobro społeczne, gdy okazało się, że Facebook wiedział o tym, że Rosja wykorzystuje jego mechanizmy do wpływania na wybory w Stanach Zjednoczonych w 2016 roku. Jest więc architektką w zasadzie całego obowiązującego obecnie ładu internetowego, rewolucji, która porwała każdego z nas i sprawiła, że Sheryl Sandberg zyskała piękny przydomek “tyfusowej Mary”. W tym odcinku: Koniec epoki 00:00 Orędowniczka praw kobiet 03:20 Królowa Facebooka i tyfusowa Mary 12:42 Sandberg vs. Zuckerberg 16:44 Królowa biznesu 22:35 Imperium eksploduje 26:07 Zmowa reklamowa 35:05 Dziedzictwo Sandberg 43:45 Źródła: "Włącz się do gry. Kobiety, praca i chęć przywództwa", Sheryl Sandberg "Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley", Emily Chang "Brzydka prawda. Kulisy walki Facebooka o dominację", Sheera Frenkel, Cecilia Kang "Wiek kapitalizmu inwigilacji", Shoshana Zuboff O tym, jak Sandberg nie przetrwała Trumpa: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/08/business/mark-zuckerberg-sheryl-sandberg-facebook.html O kapitalizmie nadzoru: https://wyborcza.biz/biznes/7,177150,24596970,kto-upoluje-lowce-pokemonow-czyli-jak-dziala-inwigilacja-i.html O rosnącej roli Nicka Clegga, prezesa Facebooka ds. globalnych https://spidersweb.pl/plus/2022/05/nick-clegg-meta-facebook-lobbing Partnerem podcastu jest The:Protocol.
This week, Chris catches up with Emmy Award-winning journalist, author of "Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley", and anchor at Bloomberg TV, Emily Chang.As executive producer and host of daily show Bloomberg Technology and the interview series Studio 1.0, Chang speaks to top tech executives, investors, and entrepreneurs, including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and CEO Sheryl Sandberg.Chris learns what Emily has discovered about the staggering gender inequality in the tech industry, and to understand more about how we got here and how we can foster real change.
Ricardo Wong, Isabel Sesma, Miguel Alejandro, Adrian Murra y Fernando Veloz platican sobre La Cibercultura en la cultura popular.Hablaremos de:Robocop, Pokemon, Detective Pikachu, Inteligencia Artificial, Tiempos Modernos, Buffy La Cazavampiros, The Net, Escritor Fantasma, Dilemma - Kelly Rowland, NieR:Automata, Beastie Boys - Intergalactic, Weird Science, Ready Player One, Furbys, Xiaomi, Clueless, Wall-E, Mark Zuckerberg, Ex-Machina, Yo Robot, Matrix, Sapiens: De animales a dioses, 21 lecciones del siglo 21, Yuval Noah Harari, James Bond, Iron Man, Resident Evil, Los Alguiens - El Internet, Eight Grade, CatfishRecomendaciones de la Semana:Ricardo Wong: The Imitation GameIsabel Sesma: The Great Hack, Grace Hopper: Queen of Computer Code de Laurie Wallmark, Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon ValleyBook de Emily Chang.Adrian Murra: Girls5EvaMiguel Alejandro: NieR:AutomataFernando Veloz: Saga Millenium
We get REAL, real fast during this SMOKING conversation, friends. Once upon a time, Mountain View Police Chief Chris Hsiung was a buyer of mine. And then some. We talk about what it means to serve with compassion and humility. We talk how critical it is to leave the ego/machismo at the door. We talk the current state of police and community relations. And how the media and entertainment industry influences each and every one of us. We talk recruitment and team design and psychological safety. We talk culture and maintaining said culture. We talk conflict resolution, bridging divides, and creating spaces where humans can listen AND be heard.We talk facilitating those hard conversations. We talk lived v. learned experiences. We talk community building, on the strategy and tactical level. We talk about technology's role in our current state, and what tech can do about it. Really though, we just talk human. For more on using stories to drive human connection across divides, check it out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RQ-pHmNDuU (here).For more on Chief Chris Hsiung, check him out on https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrishsiung/ (LinkedIn) and https://twitter.com/Chief_Hsiung (Twitter)https://www.amazon.com/Brotopia-Breaking-Boys-Silicon-Valley/dp/0735213534 (Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys Club of Silicon Valley) by Emily ChangInterested in weighing in on the conversation? Voicemail is open, friends. #JudgmentFreeZone: 646-470-0248!
Emily Chang is the San Francisco-based anchor and executive producer of “Bloomberg Technology,” Bloomberg Television’s weekday technology program. She is the author of ""Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley,” which was published by Portfolio Books in February 2018. Arlan Hamilton built a venture capital fund from the ground up, while homeless. She is the Founder and Managing Partner of Backstage Capital, a fund that is dedicated to minimizing funding disparities in tech by investing in high-potential founders who are of color, women, and/or LGBT. GLOBAL CONFERENCE: https://www.startupgrind.com/conference/ READ THE BLOG: https://medium.com/startup-grind TWITTER: https://twitter.com/StartupGrind FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/StartupGrind/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/startup/
1. Her definition of a sponsor. 3. Advice on how to identify your own sponsor. Additional Leadership Resources The Sponsor Effect: How to Be a Better Leader by Investing in Others Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley by Emily Chang Learn more about Sylvia Related Episodes The Connectors Advantage with Michelle Tillis Ledermen Managing Talent Risk with Steve Trautman
In 2018, Emily Chang's Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley made national headlines, further opening up the conversation around discrimination, sexual harassment and toxic work environments taking place across industries and in Silicon Valley. One year later, join Chang and moderator Aileen Lee, partner at Cowboy VC and founder of All Raise, the new nonprofit dedicated to strategically engaging more women and minorities in the founding and funding of technology-driven companies. In this powerful expose, Chang reveals how Silicon Valley got so sexist despite its utopian ideals. Drawing on her deep network of tech insiders, Chang sheds light on how hard it is for women to crack the Silicon ceiling and offers insight on what companies and employees need to do to bring down the “brotopia” culture once and for all. This program was generously supported by Ernst & Young. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
SPEAKERS Emily Chang Anchor and Executive Producer, Bloomberg Technology; Author, Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley Aileen Lee Partner, Cowboy VC; Founder, All Raise—Moderator This program was recorded in front of a live audience at The Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on March 14th, 2019.
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte CacheFly Panel Divya Sasidharan Erik Hanchett Charles Max Wood Joined by special guest: Natalia Tepluhina Episode Summary In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists talk to Natalia Tepluhina, Senior Frontend Developer at GitLab, about the importance of good documentation and the value of its contribution to open source in comparison to that of actual code. Natalia talks about the projects she has written documentation for, and they discuss the challenges in producing good docs. She explains three rules in making documentation comprehensive and the process involved in its creation. They then go into specifics about Vue documentation and discuss plugins, differences between cookbooks and guides, ways for developers to contribute to the projects, resources that they can use to learn stuff effectively and Vue Vixens curriculum vs official Vue documentation. Natalia gives an overview of Vue Vixens’ workshops (catered exclusively to women in software development) and mentions some locations around the world where they are held. She gives details about them including reasons why they choose to build mobile apps, their content and curriculum, and technical level of attendees. She also encourages women listeners to join their Slack channel (given in the links section) for more information about Vue Vixens. The panelists finally discuss representation of various groups in software development in general and the benefits of attending such workshops. Links Vue.js Vue cookbook Awesome Vue Twitter poll on Documentation vs Code contribution Vue Vixens Vue Vixens Slack channel Workshop at VueConf US Building a Desktop App with Vue Natalia’s Twitter Natalia’s GitHub https://www.facebook.com/ViewsonVue/ https://twitter.com/viewsonvue Picks Erik Hanchett: Brotopia:Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley Divya Sasidharan: How to build a Vue CLI plugin by Natalia Tepluhina Natalia Tepluhina: Vue 2.6 Charles Max Wood: Regularly spend time with just your significant other Honey - Chrome Plugin Withings weighing scale
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for $100 credit Triplebyte CacheFly Panel Divya Sasidharan Erik Hanchett Charles Max Wood Joined by special guest: Natalia Tepluhina Episode Summary In this episode of Views on Vue, the panelists talk to Natalia Tepluhina, Senior Frontend Developer at GitLab, about the importance of good documentation and the value of its contribution to open source in comparison to that of actual code. Natalia talks about the projects she has written documentation for, and they discuss the challenges in producing good docs. She explains three rules in making documentation comprehensive and the process involved in its creation. They then go into specifics about Vue documentation and discuss plugins, differences between cookbooks and guides, ways for developers to contribute to the projects, resources that they can use to learn stuff effectively and Vue Vixens curriculum vs official Vue documentation. Natalia gives an overview of Vue Vixens’ workshops (catered exclusively to women in software development) and mentions some locations around the world where they are held. She gives details about them including reasons why they choose to build mobile apps, their content and curriculum, and technical level of attendees. She also encourages women listeners to join their Slack channel (given in the links section) for more information about Vue Vixens. The panelists finally discuss representation of various groups in software development in general and the benefits of attending such workshops. Links Vue.js Vue cookbook Awesome Vue Twitter poll on Documentation vs Code contribution Vue Vixens Vue Vixens Slack channel Workshop at VueConf US Building a Desktop App with Vue Natalia’s Twitter Natalia’s GitHub https://www.facebook.com/ViewsonVue/ https://twitter.com/viewsonvue Picks Erik Hanchett: Brotopia:Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley Divya Sasidharan: How to build a Vue CLI plugin by Natalia Tepluhina Natalia Tepluhina: Vue 2.6 Charles Max Wood: Regularly spend time with just your significant other Honey - Chrome Plugin Withings weighing scale
Emily Chang, a Harvard University graduate and five time regional Emmy award winning journalist currently working as Bloomberg Technology's anchor and executive producer, joins IVY to discuss her new book Brotopia. An exposé into how Silicon Valley's sexist, aggressive, and misogynistic culture creates an environment where women are subject to toxic workplaces and sexual harassment despite the utopian ideals and moral high ground that the Valley claims to hold. In her book, she continues to discuss how to fix this culture: bring down the Brotopia.
In this second installment of our special MAYtriarchy series, we explore mothering change in the tech world with Bloomberg Technology anchor, Emily Chang, in conversation with her own mother, Sandy. In her recent book, "Brotopia," Emily sheds light on the treatment of female technology professionals. We discuss Emily’s campaign for workplace equality, how Sandy combats her daughter’s book trolls, and the best advice Emily ever got from Sheryl Sandberg. Emily Chang is the anchor and executive producer of Bloomberg Technology, a daily TV show focused on global technology and Bloomberg Studio 1.0, where she regularly speaks to top executives, investors, and entrepreneurs. She was previously a CNN correspondent based in Beijing and London, and has won five regional Emmy awards for her reporting. Her work has also appeared in Vanity Fair and Bloomberg Businessweek. Emily is a graduate of Harvard University and lives in San Francisco with her husband and three children. Sandy Chang is a proud mom, grandmother, and writing teacher. She was born in Philadelphia, the middle child in a family of seven. She worked on Capitol Hill as a legislative writer while earning her Master's Degree at Georgetown University. That's where she met her late husband, a law student from Hawaii. They moved back to his hometown where they raised two daughters. Sandy has taught for three decades first at Punahou School in Honolulu and now at a private school in The Bay Area where she enjoys being closer to her children and grandchildren. .·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·. MOMMA B’S GOODIE BAG OF HELPFUL LINKS Check out Emily’s book: “Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley” http://www.brotopiabook.com A great article by Emily: “Women Once Ruled the Computer World. When Did Silicon Valley Become Brotopia?” https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-02-01/women-once-ruled-computers-when-did-the-valley-become-brotopia Send us your feedback and win a box of Advice from Mom sneeze-solvers (many tiny packets of tissues): www.advicefrom.mom/feedback .·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·..·:*'`*:·.·:*'`*:·. Support Advice from Mom and the art of jingle-making by supporting our sponsor: Care/of: For 25% off your first month of personalized care/of vitamins, visit www.takecareof.com and enter “pickleball”. Advice from Mom is a production of Wise Ones Advice Services. It was produced by Juliet Hinely & Rebecca Garza-Bortman. Editing by Juliet Hinely and Samantha Land. Mixed and mastered by Jake Young. Publicity by Anna Beyder. This interview was recorded at KQED in San Francisco. Audio assistance by Bryan Garza. Our theme music is by my band, Love Jerks. This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended to offer diagnosis or treatment of any medical or psychological condition. All treatment decisions should be made in partnership with your health professional.
This episode kicks off our book club discussion of Brotopia, which reveals that sex parties are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to gender discrimination in Silicon Valley. Hosts Phil Libin, Jessica Collier, and Blaise Zerega share their strong reactions to the reporting, history, and advocacy contained in Emily Chang's book. Along the way, they delight in the ways AI improves reading the New York Times, our grammar, and keeping track of one's schedule. Responding to listener questions, your hosts lay bets on a timeline for human birth in space, and how to maintain privacy in an age of Alexa. Show notes Everyday encounters with artificial intelligence New York Times (2:35) 100 Notable Books of 2017 (NYT) Like Grammarly but it shouts at you (5:18) Grammarly (company web site) Auto-suggested events in calendars (8:20) How to create calendar events from emails (LifeWire) Book club discussion: Brotopia by Emily Chang (13:11) Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley (GoodReads) In ‘Brotopia,' Silicon Valley Disrupts Everything but the Boys' Club (NYT Book Review) “Oh my God, this is so f--ed up”: Inside Silicon Valley's Secretive, Orgiastic Dark Side (Vanity Fair) Apple's “1984” television commercial (YouTube) Listener Questions When do you think someone will be born in space? (31:07) What percentage of the population is concerned with their privacy in a time of Alexa devices, Nest cameras, and the like? (33:19) We want to hear from you Please send us your comments, suggested topics, and questions for future episodes: Email: hello@all-turtles.com Twitter: @allturtlesco with hashtag #askAT For more from All Turtles, follow us on Twitter, and subscribe to our newsletter on our website.
The tech companies in Silicon Valley have changed the world in the past few decades, but one thing that new technology hasn’t solved is sexism. Author and Bloomberg Technology host Emily Chang discovered while writing her book “Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley” that the gender gap is even worse than she had believed. In this ScribdChat episode, Chang breaks down the numbers and experiences of women in tech with TaskRabbit founder Leah Busque. Together, they talk through the “pipeline problem” and reassert their belief that if Silicon Valley companies can solve many of the world’s problems, it can definitely tackle sexism.
Emily Chang began writing her book "Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys' Club of Silicon Valley" 2 years ago when a top venture capitalist told her that in order to hire more women at the firm, they would need to lower their standards.
"My book is about the experience of women in Silicon Valley. It is called BROTOPIA: Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley. It is my first book. And I wrote it because while Silicon Valley is an incredible place that's created incredible things, there is one glaring flaw and that is that women have largely been excluded from the greatest wealth creation in the history of the world. There are very few women building and working at these companies."
Bloomberg Technology executive producer Emily Chang talks with Recode’s Kara Swisher about her new book, “Brotopia: Breaking Up the Boys’ Club of Silicon Valley.” Chang says the idea for the book originated when venture capitalist Michael Moritz suggested that bringing more women to Sequoia Capital might mean “lowering our standards.” However, in between then and now, Donald Trump was elected president and the #MeToo movement arose, which “changed dramatically” how many women would speak on the record. Plus: Chang discusses the impact of Ellen Pao and Susan Fowler, and her much-discussed Vanity Fair story about sex parties and “cuddle puddles” in Silicon Valley. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices