Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
International

James Damore, The Google Employee Fired For His Anti-Diversity Manifesto By CEO Sundar Pichai

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Aug, 2017 12:42 PM
    A memo written by a male engineer at Google about gender differences sparked a quick rebuttal from Google after it circulated widely online.
     
    Google CEO Sundar Pichai denounced the memo in an email on Monday for "advancing harmful gender stereotypes" and said he was cutting short a vacation to hold a town hall with staff on Thursday.
     
    The engineer, James Damore, was fired, according to Bloomberg, which cited an email from him. An email sent to an address believed to be used by Damore was not immediately returned; Google declined to comment.
     
    The engineer's widely shared memo, titled "Google's Ideological Echo Chamber," criticised Google for pushing mentoring and diversity programmes and for "alienating conservatives."
     
    Google's just-hired head of diversity, Danielle Brown, responded earlier 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 battling messages 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 systemising."                
     
    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 per cent representation of women in tech and leadership."
     
    While the engineer's views were broadly and publicly criticised online, they echo the 2005 statements by then- Harvard 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 per cent of its workers are white and 35 per cent are Asian, while Hispanic and Black employees make up 4 per cent and 2 per cent 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 programmes and by holding mandatory "unconscious bias" training sessions for existing employees.
     
    But, as the employee memo shows, not everyone at Google is happy with this. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Woman Meera Dalal In UK Allegedly Kills Self Over Abuse By Boyfriend

    Indian-Origin Woman Meera Dalal In UK Allegedly Kills Self Over Abuse By Boyfriend
    Meera Dalal's family and friends are now running a campaign to raise awareness and funds for a UK charity which supports victims of domestic violence.

    Indian-Origin Woman Meera Dalal In UK Allegedly Kills Self Over Abuse By Boyfriend

    Indian Woman Says Was Forced To Marry Pakistani Man On Gunpoint

    Indian Woman Says Was Forced To Marry Pakistani Man On Gunpoint
    Uzma filed a plea with an Islamabad court against her husband Tahir Ali alleging that she was being harassed and intimidated by him. She also recorded her statement before a magistrate.

    Indian Woman Says Was Forced To Marry Pakistani Man On Gunpoint

    Indian-American Woman Outraged At Possible Lenient Sentence Against 'Abusive' Husband

    Indian-American Woman Outraged At Possible Lenient Sentence Against 'Abusive' Husband
    Neha Rastogi, a former Apple engineer, had told Sunnyvale police in July that her husband Abhishek Gattani, co-founder of customer analytics startup Cuberon and a native of India had beaten her.

    Indian-American Woman Outraged At Possible Lenient Sentence Against 'Abusive' Husband

    American Sikhs Support Trump's Religious Freedom Order

    American Sikhs Support Trump's Religious Freedom Order
      Founder of 'Sikh Americans for Trump', Jasdip Singh alleged that for political reasons "certain vested sections" of the society and community members are blaming the President for the rise in hate crimes in the US.

    American Sikhs Support Trump's Religious Freedom Order

    Hinduja Brothers Top UK Annual Rich List

    The Hinduja brothers have topped the 2017 list of the richest people in the UK with a wealth of 16.2 billion pounds, a massive 3.2 billion pound hike in their fortunes over the previous year.

    Hinduja Brothers Top UK Annual Rich List

    Bomb Blast Outside Girls' School Injures 4 Persons In Pakistan

    Bomb Blast Outside Girls' School Injures 4 Persons In Pakistan
    A roadside blast outside a girls’ school in northwestern Pakistan’s restive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Monday injured four persons, including three counter terrorism officials.

    Bomb Blast Outside Girls' School Injures 4 Persons In Pakistan