I am a white, heterosexual male. I'm as privileged as it gets. I acknowledge this privately, but I should publicly address the fact that others do not benefit in the way I do.
When considering what to write about in this column last week, I chose to pick a different topic because I couldn't find a tech angle for the protests, other than the one I had written about years ago. That was a mistake. This week, as a publication, VentureBeat participated in #BlackOutTuesday, and we also shared some essential reading on race and tech.
Today I'd like to use my column to amplify the voices of black journalists in tech:
- Jared Council -- read his work at the Wall Street Journal and his article "Emotional dam broken for black community, including black journalists".
- Megan Rose Dickey -- read her work at TechCrunch, including "Gig workers in San Francisco are mostly people of color and many are immigrants, according to survey".
- Sidney Fussell -- read his work at Wired, including "Protests renew scrutiny of tech's ties to law enforcement."
- Alan Henry -- read his work at the New York Times (he's at Wired now), including "How to Succeed When You're Marginalized or Discriminated Against at Work."
- Taylor Lyles -- read her work at the Verge, including her article "A smart toilet could identify you by your 'analprint' and detect diseases."
- Samara Lynn -- read her work at Black Enterprise, including "Bots in blackface -- The rise of fake black people on social media promoting political agendas."
- Edward Ongweso Jr -- read his work at Vice, including "Amazon delivery driver says he was fired for asking about coronavirus."
- Bijan Stephen -- read his work at the Verge, including "Coronavirus is changing my relationship with the internet, and I bet it's changing yours, too."
- Kunbi Tinuoye -- read her work at UrbanGeekz (which she founded), including "Make music count: The math EdTech app helping kids stuck at home."
- Jenna Wortham -- read her work at the New York Times, including "Has coronavirus made the internet better?"
Sharing this list is not the end. I will continue to learn, listen, and contribute to the cause as an ally.
ProBeat is a column in which Emil rants about whatever crosses him that week.
