Sexism is not the only theory that fits the facts. Has she ever considered that, <i>maybe</i>, a great many people in corporate tech are assholes?<p>Back when I was working for the man, I had (idiots) sabotage my code over technical disagreements, followed by the the song of "<i>jstewartmobile</i> broke the build!" A little version control sleuthing later, and it's plain for all to see someone else's handiwork where it shouldn't have been.<p>Have a relative who worked at Microsoft. He made the mistake of sharing an idea with his team. At the time, they said it wasn't worth pursuing. At the next eval, they stack-ranked him out of a job, then claimed the idea as their own after he was gone.<p>Used to work with a bunch of printer guys. They had a story about when they were using Adobe's postscript engine and encountered a bug. They forwarded it along to support, no dice. So, they dig deeper, pinpoint the <i>exact</i> bug, and forward it to Adobe's engineer. Months later, no progress. Then, the boss gets pissed, raises holy hell with Adobe, and Adobe sends out an engineer. Guy steps off plane and introduces himself by his school "<i>John Doe, MIT.</i>" He listens to <i>nothing</i> they have to say. JD sits down, starts digging into the problem, and hours later, he acts as though he has genuinely "discovered" what they had already told him months ago.<p>Or read the third comment in this thread w/ 236+ downvotes: <a href="https://github.com/promises-aplus/promises-spec/issues/94" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/promises-aplus/promises-spec/issues/94</a><p>Or read all of the awful ways guys like Larry/Steve/Elon/Jeff/Travis/etc. treat other people. I mean, who in their right mind (if they put any value on kindness) would want to put wind in those guys' sails?