Three Women Suing Microsoft for Bias Want To Add 8,630 Peers (bloomberg.com) 246
A reader shares a report: A lawsuit accusing Microsoft of discriminating against women in technical and engineering roles is poised to grow a lot bigger if it wins class-action status. With the technology sector awash in challenges to white male dominance, the three women spearheading the case against Microsoft told a Seattle federal judge they want to represent about 8,630 peers who have worked for the company since 2012. The women said their expert consultants have determined that discrimination at the Redmond, Washington-based company cost female employees more than 500 promotions and $100 million to $238 million in pay, according to Oct. 27 court filings. They also accused the software maker of maintaining "an abusive, toxic 'boy's club' atmosphere, where women are ignored, abused, or degraded." Microsoft said it strongly disagrees with the allegations, saying the filings "mischaracterize data and other information."
I didn't know Harvey Weinstein. . . (Score:2)
. . . .was working for Microsoft. . . .(rimshot)
well... (Score:2)
As a male who worked at a sausage party fortune 3 company in their "cyber defence" dept with only white males; tbh i see what they are saying. Multiple times I thought "are they really doing this? Yes they are". Racist jokes are the "black friend", making "curry" jokes around Indians, talking about which chick in xyz dept to "bang" or "her hair is JBF".... Needless to say I left that company. If a woman did bring a class action on the co I'd definitely be on their side....
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my female cow orker.
WHAT!
That's SEXIST!
You sexist pig! How dare you!
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statistics be racist, they be rapping ebreybody round here.
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This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:5, Insightful)
They will distort reality to entitle themselves to whatever the fuck they want, paint you misogynist, and then sue you in a case with worldwide visibility.
If you had never hired them in the first place, then you wouldn't owe them anything and you wouldn't have to deal with this shit.
Seriously... you want to be treated like an equal? Take your lumps like the rest of us and stop making a big fucking stink out of the fact that you are a woman.
Re: This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:3, Insightful)
Your comment is asinine. I'm sure there are women who use their gender as an excuse to get ahead while not working hard. However, it is completely unreasonable to use that as grounds to jot hire any women. We shouldn't be so politically correct as to label opinions we don't like as misogynistic or racist, because it's counterproductive in addressing the issues at hand. Your comment, however, truly is misogynistic because it applies the stereotype to all women.
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Re:This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:4, Interesting)
On the other hand, men I've worked with seem convinced that they should get paid far more for doing minimal work of questionable quality. When they aren't promoted for this work they cause a big stink, complaining about how they are not treated like they deserve.
The women I've worked with are usually quietly competent. For the most part they weren't brilliant but they weren't idiots either. If I want to point out the biggest idiots around my workplace it is usually a man.
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So what you're really saying is that all boils down to "sales" and the men are better at "sales". It really has squat to do with "gender discrimination". This isn't the fault of the company or the industry. It's a lingering effect of social indoctrination that "vile geeks" have absolutely no control over.
We continue to raise girls as victims and then are shocked when they become one.
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Which is often saying something in an engineering company when the majority of workers are slightly to heavily introverted. I HATE negotiating in yearly reviews but after my pay kept getting crappier I started pushing hard for a bigger raise every time, with some results.
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So what you're really saying is that all boils down to "sales" and the men are better at "sales". It really has squat to do with "gender discrimination". This isn't the fault of the company or the industry.
Not exactly. While the industry insists on using "sales" (or metrics, for that matter) as a proxy for aptitude or merit, the industry is at least partly to blame.
Re:This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've worked with some quiet, competent women and some loudmouthed, entitled, idiotic women. But I've also worked with some quiet, competent men and some loudmouthed, entitled, idiotic men.
I really don't think it's aligned to gender.
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No, development companies and IT support companies.
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Never said they were brilliant, just quietly competent in appearance with the men ranging both above and below. Of course I could be assuming the competence due to the quiet but where I work, the most vocal idiots are the men. Fortunately I can count that number on one hand in recent memory and the vastly larger number of men where I work means there are almost less women I can count as having actually worked with than the total number of blatantly incompetent people in my company. Maybe I'm too tolerant
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I have seen hit or miss on what Slashdot thinks of any demographic group.
Slashdot's consensus opinion these days, like the wider political environment, is bimodal.
The realisation that Slashdot reflects the wider political environment is pretty good evidence that Slashdotters are no more intelligent, rational, or objective than anyone else.
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This is incorrect--men do not create a big stink over the scenario you present. when was the last time you saw a highly visible lawsuit where a man demands money from his employer for doing "minimal work of questionable quality?"
No, in this scenario the man either works harder, finds a new job, or sucks it up and accepts his position*.
* or goes on an office-wide shooting spree. YMMV
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Not talking as large a stink as a lawsuit, don't know anyone in the companies that I work at that went that far. But I know a very specific male engineer who got hired into our company. The first thing he started doing is asking about other people's job titles. When he found out that there were job titles above his, he pushed for a promotion to the highest job title, the first week after he started. Most of the rest of the time he spent doing little work and continuing to push for promotion, up until ma
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A lawsuit over systemic gender discrimination is hardly the same thing as kicking up a fuss when you feel you are simply not paid enough. One is a legal right based on practices within the organization, the other is your estimation of your market worth.
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On the one hand, it is possible that women are being victimized by an unfair bias.
On the other hand, it is possible that women are seeking special treatment and using bogus claims of bias to get it.
In my experience, both are probably true. Most people are shitty people, so most employers will act on unfair biases and most employees will demand unreasonable special treatment...both will point at the other's bullshit in order to justify their own.
Re:This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:5, Funny)
They will distort reality to entitle themselves to whatever the fuck they want
And we let them. What; never been in a relationship?!
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Get off your fucking high horse. I'm a female coder and have bee
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Take all of the gender out of what you just said and you very closely approximate where most guys are coming from: We are treated like equals because we demand it. I don't have to put up with your shit, I'm a professional and competent at what I do. That is it.
Some women don't want to be called a "bitch" so they don't demand equal treatment. They doormat themselves. Then, after not standing up for themselves for years they assert it is everyone else's fault they don't have the promotion they never told
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Do you call men bitches or something equivalent if they demand equal treatment? If a woman is being self-effacing because she doesn't want to be called a bitch, there's probably reasons for that. She's not being treated equally when she deman
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I don't call anyone a bitch, except for my wife, and then only when she has done something surprising, exceedingly pleasant, and beautiful for me, unbidden, without expectation of recompense, and straight from her vastly perceptive heart to mine. Hearing her laugh is, to me, the most beautiful sound in the world. Under the the previously described circumstances if I call her a "vicious irrational bitch" in the right tone of voice I am rewarded with rare peals of her laughter and we share a moment of unpar
Re: This is exactly why you don't hire women... (Score:2)
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Well, isn't this just some textbook sexism.
Basically you're saying all women are guilty because of the actions of a few and therefore because that woman over there did something you should't hire that other woman because she's guilty by association.
paint you misogynist,
You are: you appear to think all women are bad.
PS, I think you forgot to post AC.
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So you wouldn't mind if a female boss kept passing you over, constantly making jokes about how much of a sissy you are?
Can't say; I've only had female bosses who touched me every time they spoke to me, or openly stared at my crotch... but call me a sissy? No.. nor do I know how I would handle that; it sounds so... degrading (/sarc).
How do you prove this? (Score:2)
I don't like discrimination but also don't like people who play victim
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Among other things you can dig through reviews and salary data. If there is a consistent trend of females in the same job title and years of experience with equivalent review scores getting lower salaries/raises and fewer promotions you have about as clear cut evidence of discrimination as you are going to get.
Sure there are "ambulance chaser" type lawyers out there, but I don't know what so many people jump to concluding these sorts of suits are all frivolous.
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What's the actual proof standard, though?
Microsoft is a huge company in a rapidly evolving sector. I'd worry you'd never be able to demonstrate any kind of substantive "equality" in jobs based on title alone -- there'd always be exceptions trotted out for this or that, greatly minimizing if not nullifying the ability to just run the numbers.
"Her performance was great, except that Office always peaks 6 months after the revision is bumped, so it was a judgement call as to whether her performance really impro
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You're talking about individual cases. There will be all sorts of individual cases. However, if men have a clear advantage in raises and promotions, given their data (and large companies will keep data and have lots of comparable cases), it's reasonable to conclude that the environment is sexist.
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Indeed. And the beauty of it is that none of the accusations even have to be true for this to work...
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Well, hopefully the SJWs will turn on themselves full blast soon. Humanity will be better off without them.
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How about trying to get a raise by asking potential new customers out for coffee?
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Do you think they want /. posters to be talking to their customers?
Wait before making a conclusion (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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So you are saying they should just include their 175k some peers in the lawsuit?
https://www.seattletimes.com/b... [seattletimes.com]
Proper response. (Score:3)
"an abusive, toxic 'boy's club' atmosphere, where women are ignored, abused, or degraded." Microsoft said it strongly disagrees with the allegations, saying "we ignore, abuse and degrade underlings regardless of gender."
FTFY. ;)
Deeper pockets .... (Score:2)
... would be hard to find.
Cases first then class actions (Score:2)
This is the way it should happen... you have six different cases involving a dozen women or less with very specific evidence and testimony. You win all those cases and establish a pattern. Then you file for class action.
White Male Dominance? Microsoft? LOL. (Score:5, Interesting)
Really, who comes up with this drivel?
Has anyone noticed that the CEO is not a white male? How about the top HR person? Most of management? Microsoft is FAR from being a place where white male dominance is a thing. In fact, on the team I was on for several years, it was commonly observed that the best way to not get a promotion was to be white. It didn't really matter if you were a white male or white female, you were probably getting a mediocre to poor review no matter what you had done, so that someone the same race as the director could get the promotion. If you were a female from the same part of the world and were sufficiently subservient, you might also get a promotion, but us uppity white folk were last in line (in addition to being last to leave the building every night).
There are a lot of problems with the culture of Microsoft, and racism *is* one of them, but it's certainly not white-dominant racism. The biggest difference is, as a white male, I don't have a voice if I try to claim discrimination. My recourse is pretty much limited to either "shut up and deal with it" or "find a better company to work for." So, after years of the first option, I finally took the second option. That's white male privilege at work right there... "you're a white male, so you have the privilege to shut up and take it or get the hell out."
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The reality is 10% of jobs (using your numbers) are completely unavailable to white males. Those, by definition, go to unqualified non white males.
By definition they go to people who are not white males; nothing about the definition suggests unqualified. You have made the assumption that nobody qualified gets hired. Also, in the next sentence, you changed qualified to competent. Those words are related but not synonyms.
Then you comically miss the point here:
once you get a non white non American into a management role that entire part of the company soon turns into a mirror image of that manager's racial background
So...you acknowledge that people hire and retain matching their racial background over the competence pool of the society around them? That's *exactly* the point you were fighting against in th
Surprising math (Score:4, Insightful)
$238 million for 8630 employees over 5 years comes out to about $5,500/year/employee.
That's a lot less than I would have expected for an upper limit at this early of a stage in the proceedings, when numbers are typically very optimistic in order to leave headroom for surprises as the case evolves.
I'd imagine that means their reasonable expectation of what they'll be able to show is quite a bit less than that, and maybe quite a bit less than even the $100 million (about $2,300/year/employee).
"White Male Dominance" (Score:2)
Well, perhaps more than white males should take IT courses. Women, by far and large, would rather work in other STEM fields over tech. Throwing in this not so subtle jab just detracts from everything else. It's incredibly racist and sexist.
Mind-readers (Score:2)
Interest and power structures (Score:2)
If you talk about this you are either sexist or virtue signaling, there is very little room for being a geek or nerd in this conversation without being called one of these two things in a polarizing debate, everyone seems to be trying to win instead of settle.
Ok, that said, I want to point out something that seems obvious to me. Much of this conversation revolves around competence instead of interest in the field. Second thing I notice is women have different power structures to men and this is something
Re: here we go again (Score:2)
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If those women are disadvantaging her son, you know what she will say, the fucking bitches need a good cunt punt. Mothers favour their own children over all other children including the female children of other fucking women. Of course you'd expect the typical mother to be more polite but basically the gist of it will be the same. Most clambering all over feminism nowadays don't do it for other women, they just do it for themselves and the other women they suck in or men, are just useful idiots to be used a
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There is a stigma in the tech sectors, Men do coding and Women do data entry. Women who are in coding, usually need to double down on their attitude, to show that they are one of the guys. This is unfair, and often has the women, either not being proactive enough, or being too much of a bully to get the promotion. A lot of the these problems isn't overt sexism, but a combination of many subtle differences that really add up.
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Re:here we go again (Score:5, Informative)
Incorrect. I know quite a few women coders. I even know a few really excellent coders who are female. They are not common, but any really excellent coder isn't common either..
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Honest question: I'm really curious of your opinion here: do they act and behave more "manly" than other women? by that I mean: less emotional, more no-nonsense, colder mind, focused on the task at hand, less inclined to multitask.
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"manly" ? No. Socially inept, yes, but most of the really good coders I know are. (And yes, there are exceptions to that as well. But even amongst really good coders, there are the occasional, for lack of a better term, 'superheroes'. I only WISH I was that good. . . )
As one of those wierd hybrid geek/managers, I get called in to . . ."translate" on occasion. The pure management MBA types often can't deal with them well.
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Sure there are.
Just ask any MBA in HR or poster on ziprecruiter and they will tell you a coder with 5 years of rust experience who also has 3 to 5 years of project management experience is only between 45,000 to 57,000 a year.
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bullshit
women dont want to code when they realize how much work it is
I am a man and I code and I don't want to code because I realize how much work it is to not just code something but to constantly recode something to match some ill-defined and ever-changing business process. It's a Sisyphean task.
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Funny how at my tech company females outperform all the males in.... vacation days taken per year.
I'd be interested to know if the males in your "tech company" are less likely to have families or hobbies or other reasons to be somewhere other than work. Or if they make their female partners do all the child- or home-related work.
I'd also be interested to know precisely what you mean by "vacation day". Do you, for example, live in some kind of backwards jurisdiction where you don't automatically get N days of paid leave per year which you must use, otherwise you are considered not to be taking workplace
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No, but the company can get in trouble.
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Oh sorry. Responded to wrong post.
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The whole "Women are being discriminated against in tech" schtick mostly stems the effects of gender differences like this. It's not just one thing, there's loads of other factors like how men (on average) put in more hours, take
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Interestingly, putting in extra hours won't normally make you much more productive. Not taking sick days when you're sick is likely a negative for the company. Negotiation skills are not particularly relevant to technical skill.
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Culture. I've been at places where it was unofficially frowned on if you took "excess time off". Defined as your annual two week's leave in more than 2 or 3-day packets.
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I think this is gonna have unintended backlash consequences for women in the job force across ALL industries.
Re: here we go again (Score:5, Insightful)
At this point....would YOU hire a woman for most any job, knowing they are likely to be looking for any good reason to sue you and your company?
If there really was a good reason for an employee or ex-employee to sue me and my company, I'd be far more worried about that possibility.
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Blame the person I responded to.
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I wish I had mod points so I could +1 funny this.
But just in case you were serious: The main effects of fetishising measurement (be it Agile-as-it-has-become, or whatever) are to give the illusion of objectivity and to establish a system which can be gamed.
See also: Pretty much any Adam Curtis documentary. The Trap is probably the most directly relevant. [wikipedia.org]
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You know, your company might be better off adopting Agile methodologies rather than what you're doing.
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Furthermore, men need jobs more than women do because if a man doesn't have a job, people look down on him. If a woman doesn't have a job and her husband works, nobody looks down on her. It is time we stop denying qualified man who need work jobs so that less qualified females can get them.
The obvious response, then, is to change the social conventions that require a man be the primary breadwinner for a family. There are a number of quality-of-life improvements you could make for men once that was done away with.
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> Or maybe you need to think about how widespread and pervasive the problem actually is...no, wait, no,
Except that can cut both ways. It can cut against your pre-set agenda too. You are only out to try and prove yourself right. You have no real interest in the truth.
You are unwilling to consider that you're wrong.
Re:here we go again (Score:5, Interesting)
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Sexism is rampant in every field. 50% of all women have been assaulted and 1/3 raped according to statistics
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is there a firm out there trying to ride the Social justice wave to the bank? I dont know. but it is a valid question to ask.
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LOL. If you're a law firm, and you want to "ride a wave" to the bank, you don't do it through "social justice" cases. You do it by sucking up to big firms and getting that sweet monthly payout. Y'all nerds really need to learn how other industries work.
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You laugh, but there are quite a few law firms out there that are in the business of suing business that are out of technical compliance (real or imagined) with social justice regulations. And by "out of technical compliance", I mean such things as restroom mirrors mounted 1/8" too high per Americans With Disabilities Act rules. See, for example, this [adaabuse.com].
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is there a firm out there trying to ride the Social justice wave to the bank? I dont know. but it is a valid question to ask.
Obviously, they all are. Some might be more successful than others.
Re:here we go again (Score:4, Insightful)
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The problem is that it's easy to rush to judgment
That's half the story - the other part of the problem is that it's dangerous not to. You sure as hell don't want to be seen as the one who was supporting their behavior by not condemning them as strongly as the other guy.
Re: here we go again (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't ever be the first to stop applauding! [mannerofspeaking.org] I mean, booing!
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I singled out one sentence of yours that seems to let such behavior off the hook.
In other words, you took one sentence out of context. In the sentence you fixated upon, he wasn't talking about Weinstein or Spacey. Go back and read it again.
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like souls, lawyers don't have genders.
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Indeed. Lawyers reproduce by fission, like all other germs and fungi. . .
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But they have no souls, right?
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Well then you can opt out. Or not join the class. Nobody can make you become a part of the group.
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Thank you for that excellent example of /. misogyny.