Safe to say,Watch Vagabond Online the past 24 hours have Uber a little shook up. So shook, in fact, that it's been slightly free and easy with statistics.
On Sunday, former-Uber engineer Susan J. Fowler's chilling account of workplace sexism and incompetent HR practices sent #DeleteUber trending yet again. In response, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick sent a company-wide email to employees Monday seeking to calm the waters.
In Fowler's telling, harassment and disorder in upper management at the company was the norm, with the number of women in her organization dropping from around 25 percent women to 6 percent during her time there.
SEE ALSO: Horrific harassment story is giving the internet a new reason to #DeleteUberKalanick announced an "independent review" into the allegations Sunday, and his email, the text of which was posted on Twitter by New York Timesreporter Mike Isaac, set out some of the details.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Of course Uber is starting from behind when it comes to addressing inclusive workplace practices. Notably, it is one of the few remaining global tech giants not to release its diversity numbers, though Kalanick said that would change "in the coming months."
In his email, he did reveal that 15.1 percent of employees are women across Uber's engineering, product management and scientist roles.
Kalanick compared that to Facebook's 17 percent. However, he underplayed Twitter's gender balance. In December 2016, Twitter's technical roles were 15 percent women rather than 10 percent as Kalanick cited, a Twitter spokesperson confirmed. Google's current technical balance is 19 percent women, not 18 percent as Kalanick said.
After being approached by Mashable, an Uber spokesperson sent a copy of the employee email with the statistics in question corrected.
Two partners at the law firm Covington & Burling will lead the review, he wrote, which will investigate not only Fowler's claims but "diversity and inclusion" broadly at Uber. Those partners include some high profile talent: Eric Holder, former Attorney General under President Obama, as well as Tammy Albarran.
Holder has experience being called up to help Silicon Valley with diversity issues. In 2016, Airbnb hired him to help address allegations of racial bias on the platform.
From the non-independent side of the bench, Uber board member Arianna Huffington will join the review, as she announced on Twitter Sunday, along with the company's chief human resources officer Liane Hornsey and Uber's associate general counsel Angela Padilla.
Kalanick appears to be leaning heavily on Huffington to manage the crisis, with the media mogul flying to Uber's head office in San Francisco to join the company's all-hands meeting on Tuesday. She'll also conduct "smaller group and one-on-one sessions" to get employee feedback.
How honest employees will feel they can be with an Uber board member remains to be seen.
The original version of Kalanick's full email is below:
"It's been a tough 24 hours. I know the company is hurting, and understand everyone has been waiting for more information on where things stand and what actions we are going to take.
First, Eric Holder, former US Attorney General under President Obama, and Tammy Albarran -- both partners at the leading law firm Covington & Burling -- will conduct an independent review into the specific issues relating to the work place environment raised by Susan Fowler, as well as diversity and inclusion at Uber more broadly. Doing them will be Arianna Huffington, who sits on Uber's board, Liane Hornsey, our recently hired Chief Human Resources Officer, and Angela Padilla, our Associate General Counsel. I expect them to conduct this review in short order.
Second, Arianna is flying out to join me and Liane at our all hands meeting tomorrow to discuss what's happened and next steps. Arianna and Liane will also be doing smaller group and one-on-one sessions to get your feedback directly.
Third, there have been many questions about the gender diversity of Uber's technology teams. If you look across our engineering, product management, and scientist roles, 15.1% of employees are women and this has not changed substantively in the last year. As points of reference, Facebook is at 17%, Google at 18% and Twitter at 10%. Liane and I will be working to publish a broader diversity report for the company in the coming months.
I believe in creating a workplace where a deep sense of justice underpins everything we do. Every Uber employee should be proud of the culture we have and what we will build together over time. What is driving me through all this is a determination that we take what's happened as an opportunity to heal wounds of the past and set a new standard for justice in the workplace. It is my number one priority that we come through this a better organization, where we live our values and fight to support those who experience injustice."
UPDATE: Feb. 21, 2017, 12:38 p.m. AEDT Details added regarding Uber's amended email.
Lenovo ThinkBook Transparent Display Laptop: A translucent, transcendent machineDo not accept New York Mag's climate change doomsday scenarioNYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 27G20 summit shows Trump took U.S. from first to worst on climate change in under a yearThe Great Barrier Reef is not 'in danger,' UNESCO saysBest AirTag deal: Get a 4New reports link Meta and 'momfluencers' in perpetuating child exploitation onlineDonald Trump talked about space and Buzz Aldrin's face says it allNYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 24Tennessee vs. TAMU basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming dealsLELO SIRI 3: LELO just launched a soundGoogle Pay app is shutting down in the US after being replaced by Google WalletNew reports link Meta and 'momfluencers' in perpetuating child exploitation onlineHere's Mike Pence touching space flight hardware you're clearly not supposed to touchWordle today: The answer and hints for February 27PSVR2 support for PC might happen soonMurray Energy to HBO's John Oliver: See you in court!Go behind the scenes of 'Dune: Part Two' with this stunning makingNYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 27SpaceX launches reused rocket and lands it, barely Instead of a suitcase just put everything in this jacket NSFW video of yoga in kilts will massively zen you out Uber CEO's memo on diversity could use a fact checker The worst 'Game of Thrones' villain is heading to the Marvel universe GIPHY's new Black History Month series celebrates hair, love and activism Making friendship bracelets will suck way less with this new gadget Dozens of companies in China have filed trademark claims on Ivanka Trump's name Scottish publisher trolls Milo Yiannopoulos in the most epic way EPA's Scott Pruitt enters a hotbed of anti It's not aliens. It's never aliens. Stop saying it's aliens. #PoCLove hashtag floods timelines with celebrations of diverse love The 'Humans of Payatas' features inspiring stories about people living in its slums After company all J.K. Rowling is a proud dog mom and wants everyone to know it Google's Tilt Brush VR art tool comes to the Oculus Rift Now you can send money internationally through Facebook Messenger Milo Yiannopoulos had a pretty rough Presidents Day From 'Boober' to #DeleteUber, the 12 times Uber disgusted all of us 'Overwatch' teases a possible new hero and it's (probably) not Doomfist Rogue cow running through New York City gives cops a nail
1.6105s , 8222.875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Vagabond Online】,Prosperous Times Information Network