-- Leo's gemini proxy

-- Connecting to gemini.techrights.org:1965...

-- Connected

-- Sending request

-- Meta line: 20 text/gemini;lang=en-GB

● 10.13.20


●● IBM: The Word “Master” is Rude (Except When We Use It Ourselves)


Posted in Deception, IBM at 10:51 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


One of many (endless) examples of IBM’s double standards


Summary: Pointing out that IBM’s (and Red Hat’s) push to eliminate mostly innocuous words (the word “master” does not imply presence of slaves or a relationship like slavery) doesn’t match the words and behaviour of IBM itself


THE racist past of IBM isn’t something that can be magically purged; IBM tried to purge black people in the days eugenics was a big thing in the US (IBM at least helped implement or assist such ambitions of racial ‘purity’, for profit). Without doing these nefarious things IBM would have likely remained a startup, never to grow, only to perish. It would not exist today.


tried to purge black people in the days eugenics was a big thing in the US


“The bottom line is, IBM is playing manipulative perception games.”Fast-forward one century. The "master race" giant IBM basically says to us that “master” is a “bad word” (or something along those lines, never mind words like “headmaster” or “Master’s Degree”), but IBM still uses the word a lot, even as recently as 3 months ago (IBM Master Data Management Update and Roadmap – YouTube) and IBM’s official video from a few years ago has “Master” all over the place. The first 15 seconds of this video:


"master race" giant

↺ “headmaster”

↺ “Master’s Degree”

↺ IBM Master Data Management Update and Roadmap – YouTube

↺ “Master” all over the place


http://techrights.org/videos/ibm-master.webm


Lots of women in this promotional video (far more than their proportion inside IBM itself). The bottom line is, IBM is playing manipulative perception games. Language sanitisation is part of that. █


their proportion inside IBM itself

playing manipulative perception games


Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.


Permalink  Send this to a friend


Permalink

↺ Send this to a friend



----------

Techrights

➮ Sharing is caring. Content is available under CC-BY-SA.

-- Response ended

-- Page fetched on Tue May 14 04:23:30 2024