-
5 votes
-
A debate on NSA spying "Spy On Me, I'd Rather Be Safe". Very civil, structured debate between four experts in their fields.
10 votes -
Facebook's retreat from the news has been painful for publishers
11 votes -
Brave Browser launches Tor in the Tab beta
20 votes -
Security gaps identified in LTE mobile telephony standard
12 votes -
The Real Reason Apple and Google Want You to Use Your Phone Less
14 votes -
Why is there a 'gaming disorder' but no 'smartphone disorder?'
29 votes -
We hired a man and a "girl"
A rant honestly, but I thought this might belong in tech since it's a bit more of a tech society thing for me. I'm sure other industries have this issue too, but tech definitely does. If others...
A rant honestly, but I thought this might belong in tech since it's a bit more of a tech society thing for me. I'm sure other industries have this issue too, but tech definitely does. If others disagree, please feel free to move it.
So yesterday, we had two new hires show up and we were informed this in our weekly leads meeting, so this is a pretty private setting. When our manager gave a quick blur of one, it was "we expect a lot from him, he's a bit more knowledgeable, did well on our tech test", that kinda thing. And then, when discussing the woman, he kept referring to her as a "girl", so I pointed out that maybe we should use "woman" instead.
I got made fun of - "maybe we can use lady or female or ..." honestly started tuning it out, can't remember the rest. Also accused of nitpicking.
I've been in the industry for a while now and though in general things are good, every now and then something small like this happens and it makes you check the date (yes it's still 2018, I didn't go back 20 years).
To be fair, I know my manager was being funny, but it's easy to joke at someone else's expense.
Wondering, other's experiences on both sides. Have you noticed changes in your workplace, for better hopefully? Maybe other ways you were discriminated against or singled out?
73 votes -
Exposing the secret Office 365 forensics tool
10 votes -
WPA3 Wi-Fi announced
4 votes -
‘Everyone is breaking the law right now’: GDPR compliance efforts are falling short
19 votes -
Building a Camera That Can See Wifi | Radio Telescope V2 - Part 3 SUCCESS!
14 votes -
A peek inside the Niantic Real World platform
4 votes -
It turns out all kinds of tech companies are working with ICE
7 votes -
Reality Winner, liberty loser: NSA leaker faces sixty-three months in the cooler
9 votes -
Apple engineers its own downfall with the Macbook Pro keyboard
9 votes -
Firefox 61.0.0 released
29 votes -
How computers parse the ambiguity of everyday language
8 votes -
Wikipedia makes the case for Google and Facebook to give back to the Commons, rather than just take
11 votes -
Google and Facebook Are Quietly Fighting California’s Privacy Rights Initiative, Emails Reveal
11 votes -
Antivirus is dead: Long live antivirus!
19 votes -
The wiretap rooms: The NSA's hidden spy hubs in eight US cities
17 votes -
When should a tech company refuse to build tools for the government?
9 votes -
Europe's first solar panel recycling plant opens in France
3 votes -
"We're baking Have I Been Pwned into Firefox and 1Password"
15 votes -
Chinese tech giant Huawei revealed as leading sponsor of travel for Australian MPs
3 votes -
Password manager suggestions?
I'm going to college soon, and I'm in the process of straightening out my accounts and login information. What password managers would any of you recommend? I'm looking for something that can be...
I'm going to college soon, and I'm in the process of straightening out my accounts and login information. What password managers would any of you recommend? I'm looking for something that can be accessed on both desktop (PC) and mobile (Android).
Edit: I have set up KeePass and it looks like a great solution! Thanks for the help.
33 votes -
Apple, Google and Silicon Valley love to say they're ethical. But what do they really mean?
8 votes -
Meet TLBleed: A crypto-key-leaking CPU attack that Intel reckons we shouldn't worry about
13 votes -
Thermostats, locks and lights: Digital tools of domestic abuse
12 votes -
The messy fourth estate
5 votes -
Apple will stop supporting OpenGL and OpenCL in MacOS Mojave
12 votes -
Inside a heist of American chip designs, as China bids for tech power
7 votes -
What do you think of the Cybersecurity Humble Bundle?
19 votes -
In huge privacy win, US Supreme Court rules warrant needed to slurp folks' location data
16 votes -
In major privacy win, US Supreme Court rules police need warrant to track your cellphone
40 votes -
The strife of Brian: Why doomed Intel boss's ex86 may not be the real reason for his hasty exit
2 votes -
Firefox is back. It’s time to give it a try.
93 votes -
Telstra and Optus' week from hell was years in the making
4 votes -
Fox accepts Disney's $71.3 billion offer, days after Comcast bid $65 billion.
31 votes -
Algeria shuts down the internet for two hours to prevent leaks and cheating on exams
9 votes -
Apple will fix broken MacBook keyboards for free under new service program
5 votes -
Twitter 'Smytes' customers
13 votes -
Activism and doxing: Stephen Miller, ICE and how internet platforms have no good options
6 votes -
Brave launches user trials for opt-in ads
8 votes -
Burger robot startup opens first restaurant
5 votes -
The future of robots from science fiction to present day predictions
3 votes -
Airbnb sunsetting react native
8 votes -
California's Net Neutrality bill has been gutted
26 votes -
Google update aims to show you how it uses your data
5 votes