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Revision as of 04:36, 16 November 2017
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Shanley Kane was co-founder, CEO and editor of the quarterly technology journal Model View Culture.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
References
- ^ Prebble, Lucy (March 11, 2014). "Video games must change. Right now they are too white and too male". The Guardian. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
But some women in tech are choosing to do the opposite, opting instead to, lean out to work and create. One of those is Shanley Kane, who along with Amelia Greenhall, left the mainstream tech industry last year to found Model View Culture, a media company providing writing about technology, culture and diversity with a site as crisp and clean as the prose it contains.
- ^ Cain Miller, Claire (April 5, 2014). "Technology's Man Problem". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
Amelia Greenhall and Shanley Kane, technologists and writers, started Model View Culture, a publication about technology, culture and diversity, in which Ms. Kane recently wrote about how myths of tech culture work to "exclude and marginalize minorities."
- ^ Manian, Divya (May 30, 2014). "We Can Finally Talk About Sexism in Tech--So Let's Be Honest". Time. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
Fortunately, we have powerful publications and women shining a bright light onto this murky world. The magazine Model View Culture has been doing a stellar job of highlighting discrimination of all forms that exist in technology. Shanley Kane, Ashe Dryden, Nitasha Tiku, Kara Swisher and Alexia Tsotsis have been consistently highlighting people who perpetuate discriminatory culture.
- ^ Johnson, Bobbie (June 13, 2014). "On Reporting: Setting the record straight". Medium. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
I've known Shanley Kane, the prominent Silicon Valley feminist, writer and publisher for a little while—first through her writing, and then through close friends we have in common. And I've always admired her: The subjects she talks about are important, she is dedicated to them with an admirable ferocity—and she can be wickedly funny. At the same time, her approach is unflinching, and her arguments are full-throttle, which often makes her the center of controversy.
- ^ Spiers, Elizabeth (July 9, 2014). ""Speaking up every. Fucking. Time" How one feminist publisher is taking on the worst of Silicon Valley (and some of her allies, too)". Matter. Medium. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
Kane is the 27-year-old cocreator and now sole proprietor of Model View Culture, an indie website and print quarterly that publishes essays and interviews about tech culture and diversity.
- ^ Pontin, Jason (December 9, 2014). "A Feminist Critique of Silicon Valley". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
Shanley Kane is cofounder and editor of the most interesting and original of new publications that cover technology: Model View Culture, a quarterly journal and media site that offers readers a remorseless feminist critique of Silicon Valley.
- ^ Lyons, Dan (February 2, 2015). "The Shanley Show: Was The Whole Thing An Elaborate Hoax?". Vallywag. Gawker. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
But there was another Shanley Kane. That one runs a publication called Model View Culture, which has published good writing about the culture of Silicon Valley. In interviews Kane could be surprisingly intelligent. She had feminist rhetoric down, the stuff about erasure and marginalization.
- ^ Tsotsis, Alexia (January 29, 2015). "What (Some) Silicon Valley Women Think Of Newsweek". TechCrunch. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
We're making progress, whether it's women like Adi Tartako who grew Houzz to a multi-billion dollar business, Tracy Chou who has moved up the engineering ranks of some of the Valley's best companies, Gina Bianchini who isn't afraid of failure or women like Amelia Greenhall and Shanley Kane, the co-founders of Model View Culture, who rightly decided there needed to be a whole publication dedicated to the systematic marginalization of certain groups in tech.
- ^ Whitaker, Alma (August 21, 2016). "Is It OK to Say Daddy? Let's Ask a Los Angeles Times Columnist From 1922!". Browbeat. Slate. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
Over the weekend, Twitter was in an uproar over the use of the word daddy, a discussion started by Model View Culture founder and CEO Shanley Kane