Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The fact that those respondents are behavioral scientists is irrelevant to their short responses which are primarily based on their opinions or are assertions without backup.
...
Get rid of gender bias in work, and I'll talk about inherent differences in ability. Until then, this is all exactly what it seems to be. Whiny victimization by people who feel threatened at losing their entitled status.
I'm not an expert, but the Quillette did include links to what seem like respected academic journals at the bottom of the article. Are those studies not accurate?
As for gender bias, I agree. Does Google have an effort underway to ensure there are sufficient men in positions like marketing, PR, and HR? In most companies I worked in, these departments were dominated by women, and I saw no effort to promote diversity.
My point is not about the science (which as a physicist I am only partially able to critique). My point is that the science is irrelevant...because none of the science can address whether those biological differences have anything to do with how well someone will perform as a Google engineer. It might have been missed, but a former Googler addressed this point quite well, explaining that many of the things the manifesto writer claimed were weakening Google in the name of diversity were actually strengths in how they did their work and developed engineers into the management tracks:
https://medium.com/@yonatanzunger/so-about-this-googlers-manifesto-1e3773ed1788
I don't work at Google, so I can't speak to their diversity hiring efforts in HR. It seems to me that there could be advantages to promoting more diversity in those divisions, but I have no idea. What I do know is that company's like Google don't do things out of kindness or a sense of what's right. Everything they do is toward increasing their bottom line, and if they can earn some nice PR in the meantime that's just a bonus. There are very good reasons to think that having a product development and engineering that reflects the people buying or using your products will result in products that your buyers and users prefer. That alone is a reason to have a few more than 20% of your engineers be women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if a Google employee would get fired if it was known that he/she supported a traditional or biblical view of marriage?
Hopefully. No one needs that kind of crazy in the workplace.
So no Christians or Muslims, then? Simply for believing in traditional marriage, and not actively discriminating? You're quite the bigot.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if a Google employee would get fired if it was known that he/she supported a traditional or biblical view of marriage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if a Google employee would get fired if it was known that he/she supported a traditional or biblical view of marriage?
Hopefully. No one needs that kind of crazy in the workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The fact that those respondents are behavioral scientists is irrelevant to their short responses which are primarily based on their opinions or are assertions without backup.
...
Get rid of gender bias in work, and I'll talk about inherent differences in ability. Until then, this is all exactly what it seems to be. Whiny victimization by people who feel threatened at losing their entitled status.
I'm not an expert, but the Quillette did include links to what seem like respected academic journals at the bottom of the article. Are those studies not accurate?
As for gender bias, I agree. Does Google have an effort underway to ensure there are sufficient men in positions like marketing, PR, and HR? In most companies I worked in, these departments were dominated by women, and I saw no effort to promote diversity.
Anonymous wrote:
The fact that those respondents are behavioral scientists is irrelevant to their short responses which are primarily based on their opinions or are assertions without backup.
...
Get rid of gender bias in work, and I'll talk about inherent differences in ability. Until then, this is all exactly what it seems to be. Whiny victimization by people who feel threatened at losing their entitled status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the link to the full article where behavioral scientists respond to the memo:
http://quillette.com/2017/08/07/google-memo-four-scientists-respond/
I think a lot of people won't like that response because it doesn't comply with their own biases. Most people aren't rational thinkers, but instead emotional thinkers.
Anonymous wrote:Here's the link to the full article where behavioral scientists respond to the memo:
http://quillette.com/2017/08/07/google-memo-four-scientists-respond/
Anonymous wrote:The problem with Google, and the problem with other modern software houses, is that they have decided to put their laser-like attention on things other than quality of product. They focus on diversity, social good, various arcane theories of user-interface design, and other things that have nothing to do with writing effective code. Unsurprisingly, they aren’t very good at doing any of those new tasks — and because they’ve abandoned the things that they used to do well, the foundations are slipping out from underneath them.
Today’s Google home page is a slow-loading mess compared to what it used to be, loaded with buggy features and featuring plenty of bugs. Browser-dependent, hugely bloated, more like the old Excite! homepage than anything a Google user would have enjoyed a decade ago. It’s simply not very good anymore. That should worry the people at Google. Fixing that should be a priority above “social good” or “diverse teams”. They should hire the smartest people and have them write the best code. Period. That’s what Google is supposed to do. Whenever Google does that, it succeeds. Whenever they try to change the world, it’s a ridiculous failure.
Anonymous wrote:Here's the link to the full article where behavioral scientists respond to the memo:
http://quillette.com/2017/08/07/google-memo-four-scientists-respond/
Anonymous wrote:So if there are no gender differences, that means transsexuals don't really need to exist right? If males and females are the same in how they think, they no one is born with the wrong body, since both men and women think alike right?
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if a Google employee would get fired if it was known that he/she supported a traditional or biblical view of marriage?