Time Magazine International Edition

Closing the Gender Data Gap

DID YOU HEAR the one about how aid workers rebuilt homes after a flood—and forgot to include kitchens? How about the entrepreneur whose product was dismissed by funders as too “niche”—but whose femtech company, Chiaro, is now on track for more than $100 million in 2020? Or the female sexual-dysfunction drug that was tested for its interaction with alcohol on 23 men … and only two women? Not finding any of these funny? Maybe that’s because they’re not jokes.

From cars that are 71% less safe for women than men (because they’ve been designed using a 50th-percentile male dummy), to voice-recognition technology that is 70% less likely to accurately understand women than men (because many algorithms are trained on 70% male data sets), to medication that doesn’t work when a woman

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Time Magazine International Edition

Time Magazine International Edition3 min read
How Nature Reacts To A Total Eclipse
Of all of the animals worth observing during a total solar eclipse, perhaps none are more intriguing than humans. They stop what they’re doing; they stare skyward; they lower their voices to a hush. Some may even shed tears. Other species of animals
Time Magazine International Edition16 min readAmerican Government
Leaders
This February, I spoke at the Munich Security Conference about the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to stand for democratic values and against authoritarianism. Moments later, in an unplanned appearance, Yulia Navalnaya took the stage. And sh
Time Magazine International Edition1 min read
The Leadership Brief
Rachel Botsman, one of the leading experts on trust, believes we’re thinking about it all wrong. We hear a lot that trust is in decline. That’s not your view, is it? Trust is like energy—it doesn’t get destroyed; it changes form. It’s not a question

Related Books & Audiobooks